Coincidences
are homing beacons. They are secret handshakes from the universe. They are
extraordinary sources of guidance and direction.
The
great psychologist Carl Jung lived by coincidence. and achieved a profound
understanding that through the study of coincidence we will come to grasp that
there is no real separation between mind and matter at any level of reality — a
finding confirmed by the best of our physicists. He taught that the incidents
of our lives and the patterns of our world are connected by meaning, and
that meaningful coincidence may guide us to the hidden order of events.
Jung
was so fed up with the reflexive dismissal of coincidence as only coincidence that he labored heroically to give us a new vocabulary
with which to describe both the phenomenon and its character. He coined the
word “synchronicity” and it has since achieved wide circulation. The term is
unsatisfactory. It refers to things happening at the same time, but an interesting
run of coincidence can play out over a longer period.
But
“synchronicity” sounds scientific and respectable, and I often use it to get
round the difficulty of talking about these things in a state of semantic
confusion where we routinely dismiss things as “only” coincidence, or insist
that an incident “wasn’t” coincidence”
when what we mean that it was coincidence, and it was important.
Coincidence
multiplies when our thoughts and feelings are strong and focused enough to set
up a magnetic field. Roberto Calasso describes how this works in the life of
writers in his recent book La Folie Baudelaire: “The writing of a book gets under way when the writer
discovers that he is magnetized in a certain direction…Then everything he comes
across – even a poster or a sign or a newspaper headline or words heard by
chance in a café or in a dream – is deposited in a protected area like material
waiting to be elaborated.” This has been my experience when engaged in bringing
through a book. The world gives me story after story, lead after lead, and the
shelf elves became hyperactive.
The idea that coincidences are important
is troubling to some in the psychiatric community. ”Ideas of reference” –
referring to the delusion that everything perceived in the outer world relates
to the individual perceiving – are defined as a symptom of psychotic illnesses
including schizophrenia. Determined not to be overawed by Jung’s learned
borrowings from Greek, a Swiss psychiatrist named Klaus Conrad made up the word
“apophenia” to describe a psychotic condition he defined as the “unmotivated
seeing of connections” accompanied by a “specific experience of an abnormal
meaningfulness.”
Conrad’s
Greek was not as good as Jung’s. The word he wanted is apophrenia, which means “away from the mind.” But he left out the “r” in the
Greek stem phrēn, so his coinage — meant to categorize a kind of
nonsense — is itself nonsense. The mislabeled condition (mentioned in the title
of a rock song and in William Gibson’s novel Pattern Recognition) is a disorder of compulsive pattern recognition that produces
paranoid fantasies.
There
are people who find meaning and inspiration in the cracks on a wall, and people
who are simply cracked. The difference between them may be as extreme as that
between Leonardo da Vinci (who urged his apprentices to study cracks in the
walls) and the nut portrayed by Mel Gibson in Conspiracy Theory. When we navigate by synchronicity with discernment, we move effortlessly into
creative flow. When we project our delusions onto the world around us, we put
ourselves in a place of blockage and pain. It is the release or constriction of
creative flow that will tell us whether we are on the right track (though let’s
note that the release may involve a necessary redirection of flow).
- Adapted from The Three “Only” Things: Tapping the
Power of Dreams, Coincidence and Imagination by Robert Moss. Published by New World Library. This book is now available in French, Spanish, Swedish, German, Russian, Lithuanian, Turkish, Chinese, Japanese, and Korean editions.
1 comment:
I think all these three are inter-related. When we think something in our mind, it has a powerful impact which in turn appears in the world as a co-incidence. The power of mind is great.
Post a Comment