Saturday 1 November 2014

Synchronicity, Synergy, and Serendipity

Synchronicity, Synergy, and Serendipity

How do we get answers from God, spiritual guidance or our “higher self”?  How can we feel or sense the spiritual in our lives? The answers to these questions may be in the three “S” words the title.  Of course they represent only three of the myriad ways that we may recognize our “Truths”.  For this article, let’s investigate “synchronicity”.  We’ll look at the other two in subsequent presentations.

Synchronicity:  Coincidence of events that seem to be meaningfully related, conceived in the theory of Carl Jung as an explanatory principle on the same order as causality.
                                    American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language

Carl Jung considered synchronicity to be in the same order of importance as the law of cause and effect.

When an incredible number of related or repetitious incidents occur where one might expect only random variety, that is synchronicity. Perhaps you notice a parked car across the street from your house with the numbers 245 in its license plate. On the way to work you catch bus number 245, and then you realize that the novel that you are reading has 245 pages. As you answer the first phone call of your business day, the caller asks to meet for an appointment at 2:45 pm. That is synchronicity. Do you attach special significance to that appointment? That is up to you. I think I would.

I am sure that we all have heard stories of unexplainable coincidences that occurred as if ordered by some strong fatalistic hand. One of my favorites is about Wolfgang Pauli, a leading pioneer in theoretical quantum physics. Pauli had so many unexplained failures of delicate experimental equipment occur in his presence – electronic apparatus would malfunction when he was near and then seemingly correct itself after he left the scene – that his fellow physicists coined the phrase “the Pauli effect” to humorously describe these temporary failures.

One day he got a letter from a Professor J. Franck, an associate from the town of Gottingen in Germany, telling him that at a certain time on a particular day, there had been an unexplained failure of a delicate apparatus in his experiments. He kidded Pauli that he would only have expected such a failure if he, Pauli, was present. Pauli wrote back that he had been visiting a fellow physicist, Nels Bohr, in Copenhagen and at the time of the incident his returning train had actually been stopped in the Gottingen railroad station only a few kilometers away.

Synchronicity is the basis of all of the “arts of divination” from the turn of the Taro cards, the throw of bones, runes, stick and sand in various cultures and even the ominous telling from the Druid’s inspection of animal or bird’s entrails. I know I stand the risk of losing a few of my readers on that remark, but the very existence and persistence of these forms of fortune telling over thousands of years should pique the interest of an honestly open-minded enquirer.

Carl Jung seemed to think that synchronicity was a manifestation of a principle from a reality beyond that recognized by our physical senses.  If we accept that thought precedes matter, then perhaps it is not too surprising that common threads exist between incidents and material things in our lives. Assuming that our thought patterns emit a certain vibration (for lack of a better term) that impresses upon  “pre-physical substance” that forms our physical experience, then it would only be logical that a strong or prolonged attitude capable of producing a specific result would have harmonic effects on normally insignificant random little things about us. These side effects would then reflect the main manifestation. Hence “coincidental” experiences or synchronicity.

In the book “Synchronicity – Science, Myth and the Trickster” by Allan Coombs and Mark Holland, the authors, observe that “there appears to be a link between synchronicity and meditation: as the meditative state deepens, synchronistic coincidents occur more frequently”. For an explanation, they suggest that meditation is a neurologically balanced state. They say that EEG patterns during meditation show a balancing of the right and left hemispheres of the brain. Not only do the EEGs from the two sides of the brain become similar in frequency, but also there appears to be a correlation of the waves, as if they reflect each other and perhaps produce an amplified transmitter that more strongly affects our observed reality.

A teacher and dear friend of mine used to say, “There is nothing that God cannot use to communicate with us.” And so we find our answers to our meditative questions in billboards, the appearance of birds or animals, chance words from waiters and shopkeepers or evening dialogue from very bad movies on TV. The trick is, of course, to be open and observant, and ready to say to yourself “Aha, there is my answer!”

Try it yourself.  When in doubt of your next step in dealing with a present-time situation (opportunity?) explore your choices and then let go entirely.  Proceed with your day with a light heart while staying alert to your surroundings.  Let go and let God.  Be prepared to accept from any event or media.

John Bell

No comments:

Post a Comment