I take comfort in the fact that there are two human moments that seem to be doled out equally and democratically within the human condition—and that there is no satisfying ultimate explanation for either. One is coincidence, the other is déja vu. It doesn’t matter if you’re Queen Elizabeth, one of the thirty-three miners rescued in Chile, a South Korean housewife or a migrant herder in Zimbabwe—in the span of 365 days you will pretty much have two déja vus as well as one coincidence that makes you stop and say, “Wow, that was a coincidence.”
The thing about coincidence is that when you imagine the umpteen trillions of coincidences that can happen at any given moment, the fact is, that in practice, coincidences almost never do occur. Coincidences are actually so rare that when they do occur they are, in fact memorable. This suggests to me that the universe is designed to ward of coincidence whenever possible—the universe hates coincidence—I don’t know why—it just seems to be true. So when a coincidence happens, that coincidence had to work awfully hard to escape the system. There’s a message there. What is it? Look. Look harder. Mathematicians perhaps have a theorem for this, and if they do, it might, by default be a theorem for something larger than what they think it is.
What’s both eerie and interesting to me about déja vus is that they occur almost like metronomes throughout our lives, about one every six months, a poetic timekeeping device that, at the very least, reminds us we are alive. I can safely assume that my thirteen year old niece, Stephen Hawking and someone working in a Beijing luggage-making factory each experience two déja vus a year. Not one. Not three. Two.
The underlying biodynamics of déja vus is probably ascribable to some sort of tingling neurons in a certain part of the brain, yet this doesn’t tell us why they exist. They seem to me to be a signal from larger point of view that wants to remind us that our lives are distinct, that they have meaning, and that they occur throughout a span of time. We are important, and what makes us valuable to the universe is our sentience and our curse and blessing of perpetual self-awareness.
-
fayeuhngnihnwah reblogged this from youmightfindyourself
-
semblanceofsolace reblogged this from youmightfindyourself
-
devouringcreature reblogged this from ephe
-
incrdblyclose reblogged this from youmightfindyourself
-
nicholaschai reblogged this from youmightfindyourself
-
rose-colored liked this
-
afterthewinters liked this
-
hilleyjames reblogged this from valdean
-
valdean reblogged this from youmightfindyourself
-
steampoweredmedia liked this
-
stephenlovell liked this
-
brocatus reblogged this from youmightfindyourself
-
infindlay liked this
-
hellogoodbai liked this
-
senhoritaspencer liked this
-
steambun-face liked this
-
jasoncwoodson liked this
-
hypsterism liked this
-
analogunicorn reblogged this from youmightfindyourself
-
my-naturalhigh liked this
-
futureautomaton liked this
-
viewsource reblogged this from youmightfindyourself
-
blaqmagic liked this
-
wickedwitnesswizardry liked this
-
eojt liked this
-
christinehoang liked this
-
unfinite liked this
-
unfinite reblogged this from youmightfindyourself
-
shoeshinebrewingco reblogged this from youmightfindyourself
-
wendylouie reblogged this from youmightfindyourself
-
rxbxccxv liked this
-
coastalresonancece liked this
-
anabacus reblogged this from youmightfindyourself
-
imaginedbalance liked this
-
fictionandrealitylounge liked this
-
lanipauli liked this
-
tambourine-girl liked this
-
bonniebrendascott liked this
-
thevonhauslist liked this
-
tayrkay liked this
-
lesceptique liked this
-
phantomtraffic liked this
-
alejandr liked this
-
cosmoses liked this
-
forsakenbytheworld liked this
-
herbt liked this
-
pieskypie reblogged this from youmightfindyourself
-
quandelleadit reblogged this from machomochi
-
keeteebraswell reblogged this from youmightfindyourself
-
keeteebraswell liked this
- Show more notes