Déjà vu is usually dismissed within seconds. A strange flicker of familiarity, quickly labelled a brain glitch or a memory error, then filed away so life can continue uninterrupted. Yet the experience itself refuses to cooperate with that explanation. Déjà vu doesn’t feel broken or confused. It feels precise. Certain. Almost informed.
In this expert talk, Paul and Lyn explore a different possibility: that déjà vu is not a malfunction of the mind, but a signal from consciousness itself. Drawing on ideas from quantum theory, identity states, and lived awareness, they examine whether intuition and déjà vu may function as a kind of memory—just not memory anchored in the past. Instead of predicting what comes next, consciousness may be recognising what has already been navigated in another configuration of self.
This conversation challenges linear ideas of time, growth, and identity. It invites a shift away from the idea that we are slowly becoming someone, and toward the possibility that clarity, coherence, and direction are already accessible through alignment. If you’ve ever felt that quiet sense of “I know” without knowing why, this talk offers a framework that doesn’t explain it away—but takes it seriously.