Acharya Prashant addresses a question about the phenomenon of déjà vu, which is the feeling that something happening in the present has already occurred in the past. He explains that this feeling is not surprising because, in reality, all of our experiences are repetitive. None of our experiences are truly fresh or original. He uses the example of meeting a new person and feeling like you've met them before; this is because the fundamental experience is a repetition of past encounters, just with a different face, name, and location. He expands on this by stating that all of life is essentially a repetition. We are not only repeating our own personal experiences but also the cumulative experiences of the entire human race. The story of a man meeting a woman, for instance, is an ancient one, repeated by our fathers, their fathers, and so on. This cyclical nature of existence is what India has long realized. The real surprise is not that we sometimes experience déjà vu, but that we live under the illusion that our other experiences are new. We are caught in a circuit, constantly rehashing and recycling the same old things. Acharya Prashant refers to the Gita, where Shri Krishna tells Arjun that he has imparted the same knowledge many times before, but Arjun does not remember. This illustrates that we are constantly going through the same things, but we live in the illusion that time brings something new. Time itself is an illusion because while it makes things appear to change, fundamentally, nothing changes. The only way to experience true newness, originality, and joy is to step out of this stream of time and the cycle of repetition. He encourages the questioner to discover their own originality and write a new story for themselves, rather than just re-enacting the same old script.