Point One: everything, even the universe, gets recycled. If we are information, then it follows that, while not necessarily exactly the same chunk, traces will carry over to additional cyclings of the universe.
Where do I get this? Largely from Roger Penrose, who says that black holes, when they pop, send gravitational ripples out to the point where he expects to see signs from previous universal cyclings.
The mind-boggling thing of all this is set up by the following: our universe will exponentially expand to a heat death, when the last of the black holes have collided and popped off. At that point there will be no mass, with only radiation = photons bopping about. If there is no mass, you have no time—you can only have time if there's mass. Now it isn't that you have nothing, you still have a shape, as per conformal geometry.
So? Well we know from the early days, via the cosmic background radiation, that there was no mass then either. It was just really stinking hot, as opposed to the dead universe, which is stinking cold. The idea is that, some how, the dead universe gets squashed and a new cycle begins, from which we might detect the aforementioned black hole gravitational ripples.
All of this looks like recycling. So "you" never totally disappear is my silly, idiotic jump. Another aside, you're constantly recycled anyway, going through perpetual cell death and rebirth—the whole lot in less than 3 weeks. So, really, there is no fixed "you".
Point Two: no way in hell does any of that mean you will experience the same shit twice, in that nothing that complex can be identical. So yes, other galaxies, other planets & life forms, but nothing exactly as it is now. But will you be able to detect ripples from before? At some point, yes.