
Maybe You Remember Other Versions of You Because They Exist
by John & Rachelle Moyer
🎧 Listen to the Discussion
Ever had a dream that felt more like a memory than fiction?
Met someone for the first time but felt a grief or love too deep to explain?
Felt irrational guilt, longing, or clarity about something that hasn't happened—yet?
What if you're not making it up?
What if you're tuning in to another version of you that already lived it?
This deep dive doesn't claim proof. But it does open a possibility: that you might not be imagining past lives or deja vu... you might be remembering a parallel timeline in a multiverse that science is starting to take seriously.
Wait, Is the Multiverse Even Real?
The idea that we live in one single, isolated universe is being challenged at the highest levels of quantum physics.
MIT physicist Max Tegmark outlines four levels of multiverse theory. Level I and II describe vast cosmic expansion with slightly different physical conditions. Level III aligns with the Many-Worlds Interpretation of quantum mechanics, which suggests every quantum decision branches reality. Level IV? Entirely different mathematical structures of reality itself.
In lay terms: for every choice you could have made, there may be a universe in which you did make it.
And some physicists like Sean Carroll and David Deutsch support the idea that these realities aren’t just theoretical—they could be coexisting in ways our consciousness is beginning to access.
What Does That Have to Do With You?
If time is not linear (as Einstein and many modern physicists agree), and the self is not static (as mystics and psychologists have long proposed), then what you call "you" is more like a node in a multidimensional network.
You are not one person. You are a consciousness with access points to many experiences, across multiple layers of space-time.
That dream? That inexplicable memory? That irrational fear? It may be an echo of a version of you who lived it elsewhere.
And through altered states—hypnosis, meditation, trauma dissociation, psychedelics, deep flow—you may temporarily sync with that other self.
Memory as Quantum Entanglement?
In quantum mechanics, entangled particles remain connected regardless of distance. A change in one instantly affects the other. This non-local connection, proven repeatedly in labs, defies our classical understanding of time and space.
So what if your other selves are entangled with you in the same way?
What if emotional memory isn’t just a psychological imprint—but a resonant signal from a version of you that already chose differently?
You wouldn't "remember" the event. You'd feel its frequency.
This would explain why some fears have no origin. Why some longings come out of nowhere. Why healing sometimes feels like reclaiming a fragment of yourself that doesn't exist in this timeline.
Soul Contracts Across Timelines
In metaphysical work, we often speak of soul contracts and karmic entanglements as though they’re linear. But if the soul exists beyond time, then your healing work here might impact more than just your past or future—it might shift a parallel field.
When you choose peace, the echo of that choice could ripple outward into the grid of your quantum selves. What you heal here, may release a pattern there.
As theoretical physicist Michio Kaku puts it, "The multiverse is not a theory, it is a consequence of our best theories."
You may be more connected than you know.
Why This Isn’t Just Sci-Fi Spirituality
We’re not asking you to believe anything. But we are inviting you to feel what might be true:
If you feel like a memory doesn’t belong to you—maybe it’s another you.
If a fear or desire makes no sense here—maybe it echoes from a parallel field.
If you sense yourself shifting timelines—maybe it’s because you are.
Carl Jung believed in the collective unconscious: a field of archetypes and shared memories beyond the individual. The Akashic field could be that same structure, expanded.
What if your subconscious isn’t just personal? What if it’s multiversal?
Final Transmission
We don’t pretend to know how this works.
But if the multiverse exists, and the self is a frequency, then consciousness might be the bridge.
Not a fixed identity, but a roaming signal.
Not a single life, but a symphony of lives—some unfinished, some still unfolding.
And maybe that dream, that pull, that fear, that sudden knowing... is a version of you, waving across the veil.
Not fiction. Not fantasy.
Just resonance.
Suggested Resources
The Fabric of Reality by David Deutsch
Our Mathematical Universe by Max Tegmark
The Akashic Field by Ervin Laszlo
Parallel Worlds by Michio Kaku