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A Deeper Dive Into Deja Vu

For those of you already familiar with the Pryhodko Method know that Deja vu’s are like check points in dream transmission. They tend to occur either before or after a dream transmission occurs in the awake state.

Or sometimes both.

They are used as an awareness check point signaling that you are either entering a transmission or just finished transmitting the SoB signal.

In rare times when your background emotional state is high (i.e. stressed) you can glide in and out of the transition zone and experience a stand alone Deja Vu.

But this we know.

The idea that i want to expand on is what is meant by the term “pure feeling” that i use in the Pryhodko Method.

The reason you feel a Deja Vu is because you are remembering a pure, untranslated feeling that you received in your previous asleep state. Deja vu’s usually occur just before or just after your dream transmission.

Dreams are sensory memories triggered by the incoming SoB signal into the asleep body. But what happens in the zone between the state of Dreaming and No Dreaming?

Let’s call this the transition zone. Rightfully so. This is the zone in which you go from having no dreams to having dreams (and seeing pictures).

In this very small zone an interesting thing occurs.

Here the SoB signal is not strong enough to trigger imagery from your body but it IS strong enough to be received by your body’s biological receiver. Remember that we are not perfect. We don’t all have 20/20 vision, and in the same way our “dream mechanism” is not perfect either. In the perfect scenario every piece of data of the SoB signal would be converted into a dream by triggering memories. In reality, there seems to be a disconnect between the amplitude of the SoB signal that the body receives and the amplitude of the SoB signal that the body requires in order to be able to trigger memories to be able to perceive dreams.

The area between the minimum amplitude to receive a signal and the minimum amplitude to trigger memories is where we have room to allow for Deja Vu’s take place. This is what i call a Pure Feeling experienced.

Your body receives this SoB signal, the pure feeling, but upon waking up from your asleep state you have nothing to remember it by. All you are able to do is remember the dream you just experienced. But why can’t you remember the pure feeling experienced?

I want you to try something. I want you to try to feel HAPPY right now.

Do it.

Feel happy.

Can you?

You might find that it is not easy. This is because we cannot just summon a feeling but instead what we do is we summon a memory that we associate with that feeling. So if you want to feel happy, perhaps you thought of a memory in which you experienced that happiness.

That is a key concept I discovered while working with the Pryhodko Method in that we cannot summon feelings, but instead we summon memories that then trigger the feelings associated with those memories.

The fact that we cannot summon feelings explains why we can never remember the Pure Feeling UNTIL we experience a Deja Vu and it ALL comes back to us like a distant memory.

Think of a Pure Feeling as free-floating. It is not attached to any memory. It’s just there, with no method of retrieval for the body. Your body cannot remember it because there is no associated memory to remember this feeling by.

Then when you experience a Deja Vu, often times it feels like you experienced this EXACT MOMENT days, weeks or months ago. But how do you know this? Based on a feeling?

Your body, while experiencing a Deja Vu, does not know where this feeling came from and tries to put some type of time stamp on it to make sense of the experience. Depending on the SoB signal it received in the previous asleep state, the Pure Feeling could feel like it occured yesterday, last week or a year ago.

But you need to remember one thing.

It’s all a FEELING.

It feels like it was last week.

We are not used to being so easily mislead by our feelings, but Deja Vu’s more often than not mislead us with the time stamp.

Next time you are experiencing Deja Vu’s, I suggest you ignore the supposed time stamp of the Deja Vu and concentrate on the feeling being more of a checkpoint of dream transmission and nothing more. It will save you a lot of heart ache and confusion

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