
Déjà vu is not a prediction, it does not tell the future, and it has nothing to do with past lives. It is simply your brain giving a sense of familiarity to a situation that you have not experienced before. For example, you may be talking to someone, or doing something, and suddenly you feel: “Wait… have I been here before?” It is not nostalgia and it is not an accurate memory; it is more like a brief trick of your mind.

Scientists say it happens when your brain makes a small mistake while processing your experiences. Normally, your brain has two “paths” that work in parallel: recognition and recall. Recognition is the feeling that something feels familiar, while recall provides the details that explain why. Déjà vu happens when the feeling of familiarity kicks in, but your brain can’t figure out why it feels familiar. This leaves you with that strange, unexplained feeling.
About 60% of people experience déjà vu at least once in their lives, and it usually becomes less frequent with age. Stress, fatigue, and lack of sleep make it more likely. Although it is usually harmless and passes quickly, in rare cases déjà vu can be accompanied by other neurological symptoms and should be checked by a doctor.

There are also spiritual ideas that people give to déjà vu , saying it is intuition, a warning from the future, or a memory from a past life. There is no scientific evidence for these interpretations, but the feeling is so powerful that it seems like an instant revelation.
Sigmund Freud, the “father of psychoanalysis,” believed that déjà vu is the result of an unconscious fantasy coming to the surface. We cannot process the content of these fantasies with our logical minds, but the feeling of familiarity manages to enter consciousness.
So when you experience déjà vu , don't worry: your brain has simply made a small mistake and given you a "familiar" feeling that has no explanation. It's not a prediction, it's not a mystical sign, and it doesn't tell you the future.






