Acharya Prashant explains that the phenomenon of deja vu, where one feels a present experience has happened before, is not an aberration but a reflection of the repetitive nature of human existence. He asserts that most human experiences lack genuine truth or freshness because they are fundamentally the same patterns repeated over time. Whether it is personal relationships or the broader life cycle of birth, work, marriage, and death, individuals are merely reenacting a cumulative script shared by all of mankind throughout history. He references the wisdom of Shri Krishna in the Bhagavad Gita, noting that time is an illusion because it suggests change where none truly exists. While superficial details like names, dates, or faces may vary, the underlying experiences remain the same. This circularity is what Indian philosophy identifies as the cycle of existence. Acharya Prashant suggests that life itself is a continuous state of deja vu, and it is surprising that people do not become weary of such constant repetition. To find true originality and joy, one must step out of the stream of time and the predictable scripts of society. Acharya Prashant encourages the listener to realize that they have been through these experiences countless times before in various forms. Only by recognizing this lack of newness can one potentially transcend the illusion and experience life with genuine freshness. He urges the individual to discover their own originality by leaping out of the ancient, recycled patterns of the past.