Pronunciation:  /ˌsiŋ-krə-ˈnis-ət-ē, /
Function: n

the coincidental occurrence of events and especially psychic events (as similar thoughts in widely separated persons or a mental image of an unexpected event before it happens) that seem related but are not explained by conventional mechanisms of causality.

I have always subscribed to the notion that there is a universal gravity that works, not only on our physical bodies, but on ideas and events as well. We are called to the lessons we need through circumstance and the longing of our hearts. There is a magnetism that draws us together, and pushes us forward to the truths we most ought to learn, to know.

This force works on all things, but not in equal measure. Some people are stalwart and determined to stay astride the rails they have laid before themselves into the future. Others are more able to submit to the buffeting energy around them; to accept the call and heed the pull they cannot quantify, but can neither resist. Those who submit are sometimes dashed against the rocks; battered against the obstacles that they encounter. But they are also, at times, lifted from the mundane course of things, and exposed to a view of the human condition, and of their own truth, that is singular in its consciousness altering impact.

Time and again, when this state arises, a seemingly inextricable element of the condition emerges; an uncanny trend of correlation, parallelism, and concomitance becomes impossible to deny. That is to say, in the course of events there is a palpable and appreciable synchronicity.

Synchronicity is the notion of meaningful coincidence occurring in the individual mind, the collective unconscious, and with the energy generated thereby, enacted in corporeal reality.

Our friends at Wikipedia say: “Synchronistic events reveal an underlying pattern, a conceptual framework that encompasses, but is larger than, any of the systems that display the synchronicity.”

This overarching framework can be much more difficult to interpret than the individually meaningful examples thereof; the sudden appearance of a heretofore unknown phenomenon in the lives of several close friends, the concurrence of a newly adopted slang phrase arriving from multiple sources at once.

Or, something like this:

A Life Of Its Own

I have owned my car for months, and cleaned it out any number of times. When I was doing so last week, I started thinking about the nature of magnetism, how and why we are drawn to the things that change us. While I was wandering in these thoughts I noticed, wedged into the seat, a flash of something shiny. I reached down and found two large beads made of magnetite. They stuck to each other, and anything else magnetic. I thought this was both odd and wonderful, to have come across these just at a moment when I was reflecting on the nature of unseen attraction.

My good friend Lyza and I have had an ongoing philosophical conversation about this topic for some years now; we present each other with our empirical data, and reflect on what we think this means in the larger scheme. I decided I would give her one of the magnets as a way of including her, in a tangible way, in this moment. She took the magnet along with her on a business trip just a few days later. She has recently overcome and lifelong fear, bordering on paralysis, of flying. As she sat in the airport lounge waiting for her flight, she took her new bauble out to play with it. She set it on the granite tabletop where it began to swing and turn, seemingly with a life of its own. She found the experience uncanny enough to take a video, and send it my way. Only a short time later, an announcement came from the National Weather Service that the town she was flying into was under a severe tornado warning. The winds would twist and roll, pull and turn, much in the same way the magnet did.

These things, they come together in this way. And it is coincidence; in this wide universe, that is inevitable. But that these things also have meaning, and impact, is undeniable. The forces that draw these occurrences toward us, also work to let them affect us. To, by their very fact, change what we would think, and see, and feel, and know.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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