The Mandela Effect: A Critical Analysis
For the past couple of months, a phenomenon known as the Mandela Effect has taken the internet by storm. Putting it briefly, the Mandela Effect refers to a conflict between the past and people’s memory of the past. Billy Graham, a popular American Christian evangelist, he was alive till Feb 21, 2018 but many people remember Graham’s funeral on TV before 2018. The United States of America is a federal republic consisting of 50 states but why do many people recall the USA including 52 states?
The leading peanut butter in the United States since 1981, Jif peanut butter is a popular snack but an alternate memory recalling it as “Jiffy peanut butter” is widespread. It was a long awaited and historical moment when Leonardo DiCaprio finally won his first Oscar on 2016 but many people remember the ceremony where DiCaprio won the Oscar happening several years earlier. Many Pokémon fans remember
Pikachu, the most iconic character of Pokémon, having a black tip at the end of the tail, well, not in this reality. The evil queen in Snow White and the seven dwarfs going to the mirror and saying “mirror, mirror on the wall who’s the prettiest of all?” but that’s not the case, the actual dialogue is “magic mirror on the wall, who’s the prettiest of all?” Historic events that change or never even happen, certain people being different than they are now, what about human body parts and may be objects you have remembered has changed.
Believe now that there is a direct correlation between déjà vu and the Mandela effect. What I think is kind of happening and this is where it gets a little confusing but I think from doing all the meditation and kind of everything, what we understand it, it’s like we understand that multiple dimensions exist and it’s possible that we exist in these other dimensions. Something is happening in these other realms where like a timeline is either collapsing or like getting destroyed or something else. I believe that what’s happening is that with déjà vu it’s kind of like the past, present and the future converged with our timeline and what we are remembering may actually be remnants of memories from another path, another timeline. The Mandela effect is caused by a massive shift of the
conscious and unconsciousness from one reality to another because god created our reality with numbers and formulas, and because numbers are infinite, there are an infinite numbers of realities. And our unconscious can shift from one reality to next. I believe one way our unconscious makes a shift is by death, I am sure there are other ways that people could learn to recognize to shift realities at will but humanity is not there yet. Some people might be able to shift at will, but as a whole, humanity has not learned how to control
reality jumps, not yet anyway. The people who cannot see the Mandela effect, these people were born in this reality, they did not shift, so they cannot see the changes because to them there are no changes, life is exactly like they remember as they lived this reality from their birth. People that can see the Mandela effect, shifted here from reality we were born in, the reality and life we can remember.
When people die naturally, slowly over time, the Mandela effect doesn’t come to exist because life and death is required to keep the balance between the creation and the creator. The cause of Mandela effect is actually the multi universe theory. Infinite universes in which every possible outcome occurs, meaning there is an infinite number of you and an infinite number of me as well. But since all of the versions of you in all the parallel universes are technically the exact same person, they all share T brain or a consciousness. It
means when you remember something like this but it is not actually like that, you are actually tapping into the memories of different version of you in another universe in which the thing you remember actually is how you remember it. Hence, this is the Mandela effect. The term was preferred by Fiona Broome in late 2009 and refers to a widespread misconception that former South African president Nelson Mandela died in the 1980’s while he was imprisoned. In reality, Mandela was liberated in 1990, very much alive and eventually
passed away in 2013. Many thousands now firmly insist on remembering Mandela’s death in prison complete with news coverage of his funeral and a heartfelt speech by his widow. The term has since expanded to include many hundreds of similar collective mistaken beliefs and theories as to their nature and causes are quite imaginative. Fiona Broome and many others are of the belief that these
misconceptions are the result of “alternate realities”. In other words, they are memories from parallel universes in which history transpired exactly as you remember it but at some point between then and now you allegedly switched into a parallel universe with an alternate history and thus some of your memories. [email protected] Grade: 10 Kanjirowa National School
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