
We are spiritual beings having a physical experience. The purpose of incarnating is simply to give us the unique experiences we need for our progressive evolution toward perfection. Within each of our Earthly experiences, there are important lessons we’ve chosen to learn. On a subconscious level, we are attracting the people and experiences that will teach us these lessons.
You can heighten your awareness to help you recognize and embrace the synchronistic opportunities that are always presenting themselves in the form of people, places and events around you. First of all, commit to engaging in the reality that surrounds you, which might also mean turning off devices. You must also make an effort to disengage from the flurry of thoughts swirling through your head that distract you from fully appreciating your surroundings. A powerful practice I use is to say out loud or in my head, “Moment!” This immediately draws my attention back into the present, and I can more effectively engage with the world around me.
A scientific concept that reinforces the importance of our engagement with others is the quantum theory of entanglement. This theory states that whenever we exchange energy with another living being, that energetic connection will remain intact for all time. This means that every interaction you have with another living being will remain forever imprinted on both of you.
With this in mind, ask yourself: “What type of karmic imprint do I want to leave on myself and others throughout the day?” and “How can I improve the quality of the energetic connections I am making?”
Consider that our paths are predestined. We have come here on Earth to learn the life lessons that will allow us to progress on our paths. As such, we naturally create the experiences that are most likely to help us learn and grow. We attract the people, places and things that are most conducive to our soul’s evolution. Spiritual guides may also place certain people in our path to assist us on our journey. The key to recognizing these people and places as opportunities to learn and grow is to continually search for the deeper meaning of our interactions with them.
We have to ask ourselves questions like, “Why have I been placed in this particular location at this particular time, and how is this situation conducive to my growth?” We also have to explore relationships on a deeper level by asking ourselves, “Why have I been connected with this person and how can we benefit each other?” and “What lessons can we learn from each other?” By making a sincere effort to uncover the meaning behind our everyday experiences and interactions, we can reveal their higher purpose and learn to go with the flow.
Here are three powerful ways to remain open to the synchronistic flow of life’s stream:
- Use the practice of saying, “Moment!” whenever you notice that you have become disconnected from the present moment.
- Be aware of the karmic imprint you are leaving on yourself and others with every reaction and interaction.
- Recognize the people, places and things you have attracted into your life all represent opportunities to learn the lessons that are most conducive to your evolutionary path.
After I began to recognize the divinity within the experiences of my life, I developed a strong faith that everything happens just as it should and for a good reason. Trusting in the divine plan has made me feel much more at peace with the events that unfold around me. I know I have projected these experiences in order to learn the lessons I need for my soul’s evolution and refinement.
Now that I am more capable of taming my mind and controlling the emotions of fear, anger and resentment, I am not experiencing those emotions reflected back to me. As a result, I naturally create more harmony and encounter less difficulty. This perspective has made my life so much smoother and more enjoyable. I’ve also become acutely aware that as I project compassion and kindness, these divine traits are reflected back to me.
This is true across the board and rarely does it fail me. When it does, I am able to see the symbolic nature of the experience and then identify my own personal emotions that, left unguarded, created conflict. Negative feelings, or trapped emotions, that still need my attention and repair are exposed. From this perspective, I am then grateful for the conflict because it revealed lessons I still need to learn. I can commit to learning those important life lessons right then and there, and avoid re-creating another experience just like it!
It’s really that easy. By opening yourself up to the world around you in this way, you are opening to spirit. Aligned with spirit, magical synchronicities will unfold as you meet opportunity at every intersection. The power is in the present moment.
Original article here


In the summer of 2021, I experienced a cluster of coincidences, some of which had a distinctly supernatural feel. Here’s how it started. I keep a journal and record dreams if they are especially vivid or strange. It doesn’t happen often, but I logged one in which my mother’s oldest friend, a woman called Rose, made an appearance to tell me that she (Rose) had just died. She’d had another stroke, she said, and that was it. Come the morning, it occurred to me that I didn’t know whether Rose was still alive. I guessed not. She’d had a major stroke about 10 years ago and had gone on to suffer a series of minor strokes, descending into a sorry state of physical incapacity and dementia.
While some coincidences seem playful, others feel inherently macabre. In 2007, the Guardian journalist John Harris set out on ‘an intermittent rock-grave odyssey’ visiting the last resting places of revered UK rock musicians. About halfway through, he went to the tiny village of Rushock in Worcestershire to gather thoughts at the headstone of the Led Zeppelin drummer John Bonham, who died at the age of 32 on 25 September 1980, after consuming a prodigious quantity of alcohol. A Guardian photographer had visited the grave a few days earlier to get a picture to accompany the piece. It was, writes Harris, ‘an icy morning that gave the churchyard the look of a scene from The Omen’ and, fitting with one of the key motifs of that film, the photographer was ‘spooked by the appearance of an unaccompanied black dog, which urinates on the gravestone and then disappears’. ‘Black Dog’ (1971) happens to be the title of one of the most iconic songs in the Led Zeppelin catalogue.
Jung was the first to bring coincidences into the frame of psychological enquiry, and made use of them in his analytic practice. He offers an anecdote about a golden beetle as an illustration of synchronicity at work in the clinic. A young woman is recounting a dream in which she was given a golden scarab, when Jung hears a gentle tapping at the window behind him and turns to see a flying insect knocking against the windowpane. He opens the window and catches the creature as it flies into the room. It turns out to be a rose chafer beetle, ‘the nearest analogy to a golden scarab that one finds in our latitudes’. The incident proved to be a transformative moment in the woman’s therapy. She had, says Jung, been ‘an extraordinarily difficult case’ on account of her hyper-rationality and, evidently, ‘something quite irrational was needed’ to break her defences. The coincidence of the dream and the insect’s intrusion was the key to therapeutic progress. Jung adds that the scarab is ‘a classic example of a rebirth symbol’ with roots in Egyptian mythology.

