…….Have you ever been in a totally new
situation yet felt it was familiar and that you could have experienced it in
the past? Did you meet someone for the first time but had the feeling that you
have met him or her before? Or what about being in a new place but felt like you
have been there before.........I know what you are thinking, “that’s déjà vu”. But here is the bombshell.
It’s not, so think again.
The
total population of our world today exceeds 7 billion. Africa’s population
increases exponentially with almost a billion people in its continent. In West
Africa alone, we have nothing less than 300 million people and counting-At
least ten percent of these people are SEEkERS. Biology gives you a brain; life turns it into a mind.
The human brain has been impeccably designed to possess massive storage
capacity. We have been allowed the freedom to determine what we do with our
memories choosing which one to focus on and which one to ignore. We are already
aware that the hippocampus is responsible for moving short term memory into
long term memory, but how do we explain the science behind memory loss?
Contrary to what you
think you know about this, most memory losses are intentional, a deliberate act
initiated by a group of people with powerful ambitions. They help you remember
but can make you forget and if they feel a little giddy, can erase you
completely. Behind every accident-induced memory loss or “senior moments”
conceals a motive, a reason. That feeling of déjà vu is more than just “new familiarity”.
As a matter of fact, it is a necessity. This organization ensures everything is
put in the order they have designed hence they position agents all over the
world to manage this “business”-this agents call themselves seekers. The best
part about it is you don’t know who these agents are. They are our best friends
and our worse enemies. It could be the vendor just by the corner of your street
or your boss in your place of work. It could be that kind neighbor of yours
that brings chocolates during Christmas or the little girl who begs for alms at
the market place. They are visible and yet invisible and all they do is seek.
Sita was a seeker but this is not her story……………….
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