11-09-2024, 01:07 PM
(11-08-2024, 09:56 PM)l0st Wrote: I think multiverse theory may be correct and that at least some of us, intentionally or unintentionally, can jump timelines. I see no other explanation for many of my observations. Kinda like that movie "Jumper".
I'll tell you why:
As creepy as this may sound, I've "kept tabs" on some old friends over the years. Nothing serious... Just look them up, see what they're up to. Maybe drop a line or a catch up phone call. Nothing serious. In the last 3 or 4 years or so, many of my old contacts have seemingly disappeared. I mean no trace online whatsoever. I initially thought this was just evolution of the Internet, changes to search, etc. However, some of these people... I knew them quite personally... Knew personsl details that might allow me to find them through alternate means... Well, it's like some of these people never existed. Literally no trace. People I dated for an extended period... Can't even find legal records like they were never born.
Whatever timeline I am on now, I don't know these people. And, people seem to know or recognize me whom I've never met. I've had several instances of people yelling out a name at me like they're calling for me and know me yet I do not know them - and the names are incorrect. I also don't recognize my family members anymore. They do not seem tbe my family even if they appear the same.
On the side of conspiracy theory, I do have to wonder if the research at places like CERN had permanently altered timelines, at least for some of us.
I'm trying to think through the logic of it. If those missing friends were only friends on some other timeline, and their lives on this one took a different path and now no longer intersect yours, then wouldn't your life also have taken a different path? As in, when you "timeline jumped", you'd suddenly have a different apartment, job, whatever, because the people in your past who influenced you and your choices suddenly no longer had, and the life you "jumped into" would be different as a result. If the jump rewrote your memory of the circumstances of your life so that you didn't notice such changes, then why would certain memories of past friends remain? It seem your observation is more consistent with the idea that you are living in a simulation, or a slice of it, all your friends were really NPCs, or at least presented to you as such, projected from their slices, and the simulation is capable of rewriting provable history at any point, juggling how things must have intersected to achieve the desired current-state consistency. Sorry if that tastes like a poison red pill -- please don't spiral with the thought, I imagine it isn't the first time its occurred to you (or me) though.