Explaining the "I Have Seen Them In My Dreams", A Video On Deja Vu, Romance, Synchronicities & 5D...
It’s been a while since I posted on this channel. Life pulled me into a grind season, but this video—and now this piece—has been forming for more than a year. I don’t claim full certainty over what I’m about to explore, but if this topic found you, there’s probably something in it meant for you.
This started with my own mystical experiences. Not because they were extraordinary, but because I didn’t understand them when they happened—and I noticed many people online asking the same questions. Deja vu. Synchronicities. Telepathy. Premonitions. Romance that feels foretold. AI doesn’t really answer these unless you corner it very specifically, so this is my attempt to add a perspective. Think of it as casting a vote into the collective conversation.
I focus mainly on a romantic experience, not because romance is special in itself, but because it exposes how the psyche and reality interact. Romance amplifies patterns that are always there. Also, talking about it feels like exposure therapy.
At the foundation of all this is the split brain. The left and right hemispheres operate differently. If you had to oversimplify, one is more structured and analytical, the other more intuitive and symbolic. When these sides fall out of sync, interesting things start happening.
Before my own story, look at how common these experiences are. Telepathic moments between twins. Premonitions in movies and games. Characters sensing death at a distance. Jung didn’t invent this out of thin air—he named it. Synchronicity is a meaningful coincidence without a traditional cause-and-effect chain. Thinking of something, then encountering it, without a physical sequence linking the two.
These events feel instantaneous. Thought doesn’t move like matter. Matter is capped by the speed of light. Thought isn’t. That alone forces uncomfortable questions about reality, time, and connection.
The simplest proposition I can offer is this: deja vu, synchronicity, telepathy, and premonition don’t really make sense in a single, isolated universe. They fit better in a model where reality exists as many overlapping versions—call it a multiverse, multiplicity, or frequency space.
In that framing, telepathy isn’t one person sending a message to another. It’s resonance. Infinite versions of you tuning into compatible versions of someone else. Everyone is you, pushed out.
That idea becomes clearer when you stop thinking of thoughts as single moments and start seeing them as structures.
My experience began at an event where I met someone—I’ll call her “!”. I knew we wouldn’t meet again. Months passed. No contact. I didn’t even know her name. Then, before a second event, I found myself repeatedly wondering if an unknown person I’d be meeting online would turn out to be her. For days.
When it was her, I wasn’t shocked. It felt obvious. That’s the strange part. The lack of surprise is often the giveaway in deja vu.
What mattered wasn’t that I consciously thought about her, but that one part of my mind was drawn while another part avoided. That internal tension is key. If I had fully leaned in or fully disengaged, I don’t think the experience would have happened.
Thoughts and dreams are the same thing to me—dreams are just thoughts without sensory interference.
A thought isn’t a single neuron. It’s a network. Concepts don’t live in one place; they emerge from patterns of neurons firing together. The idea of a person is a soup: traits, memories, feelings, music lyrics, movie scenes, emotional charge. Neurons get reused. The neuron that represents “black hair” doesn’t belong to one person—it belongs to many.
So when you ask, “How long was I thinking about this person?” the answer isn’t linear. It’s not a timeline. It’s gravity.
Some concepts are heavier than others. A heavy concept is large, emotionally reinforced, frequently activated, and strongly wired. During sleep or daydreaming—when the senses quiet—you don’t fall into the world. You fall into your heaviest inner structures.
That’s psychological gravity.
Attention behaves like mass. Dense concepts pull awareness toward them. The stronger the wiring, the harder it is to escape. This is why certain dreams repeat, why certain people feel familiar, why some thoughts dominate your inner world.
When enough emotional charge builds, it’s like a storm cloud. Eventually it discharges. In my case, it discharged through a real encounter. That discharge felt like deja vu. In French, coup de foudre—love at first sight—literally means lightning strike. For me, attraction came through synchronicity.
If you’ve experienced deja vu around someone, it probably means you like them, or dislike them.
From a grounded, material perspective, all of this can be explained with neurons, wiring, emotion, and attention. Nothing mystical is required. Your inner world eventually reflects outward.
But something is still missing. Thoughts influence the future. They don’t just sit inside the skull waiting.
That’s where the 5D idea enters.
Materialism says matter comes first, then thought. Idealism says thought precedes matter. Until now, everything I’ve described fits inside materialism. The 5D perspective doesn’t reject that—it expands it.
Dimensions are coordinate systems.
1D is a line.
2D is a plane.
3D adds depth.
4D adds time.
5D, in spiritual language, is best understood as a dimension that includes space-time plus alternate states, perspectives, and possibilities. Not “tomato dimensions,” but relevant ones—continuous, connected, and real even if unperceived.
In physics, once you define dimensions, you define fields—values that exist at every point. If you knew all fundamental fields and their values, you could simulate the entire universe. These fields are continuous.
So the bet is simple: if reality is continuous in every dimension we can model, why assume it abruptly stops at 4D?
In that view, alternate versions of you aren’t sci-fi. They’re slight variations. Different choices. Different emphasis. Everyone else becomes a distant version of you, pushed outward.
Everything we experience happens within this framework.
The senses anchor us in 3D.
Thoughts, dreams, premonitions, synchronicities operate in 5D.
A desired reality already exists there.
A deja vu is recognition.
Free will is navigation between versions.
Even this shared 3D moment is nested inside 5D, because we’re always shifting.
Gravity shows up again at the end. Newton’s law works because of mass. In other systems, mass becomes salience, emotional weight, synaptic strength, coherence. Different domains, same structure.
Reality pulls toward what is weighted.
That’s the throughline: attention, gravity, thought, and experience are reflections of the same principle, expressed at different levels.
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