Category Archives: synchronicity
Weird Synchro Trip to Barnes & Noble
This afternoon, after working for several hours, I asked Rob if he felt like going to Barnes & Noble. I was hoping to find the newest edition of Mountain Astrologer and to peruse the current releases. When we walked into … Continue reading
Analyzing the ‘library angel’
Bernard Beitman is a visiting professor at the University of Virginia and former chair of the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Missouri-Columbia. He attended Yale Medical School and completed his psychiatric residency at Stanford. He took a look … Continue reading
A Bump for BUMP…
Tonight, Saturday, Nov. 1, I’ll be on Coast to Coast again to talk about BUMP IN THE NIGHT. Actually, it will be early Nov. 2 for me – 1-3 a.m., since Florida is three hours later than Oregon, the site … Continue reading
Adele’s High Strangeness
This story certainly fits the spirit of Halloween! We recently put up a doppelgänger story and one of the comments,by Adele Aldridge, was so intriguing we told her we would like to bring it forward as a post. Her story … Continue reading
Aliens, Fallen Angels & Demons
I received an e-mail recently from Charles Fontaine, the Quebecois man who I wrote about here in the Quebec Encounters series here that later formed the heart of Aliens in the Backyard. Essentially, Charles has concluded that aliens are demons from … Continue reading
The 5th Wave
A couple of weeks ago, I dropped by Barnes and Noble to cruise the shelves and find out what new books were on the market. I usually make note of them and then check out the e-book version, which is … Continue reading
Library Angels Again
As authors, we’re surrounded by books. So it’s not too surprising that some of our synchros relate to the world of literature. Fiction and non-fiction. However, it’s a bit unusual to experience two such synchronicities within a couple of hours, … Continue reading
Revolution & Russell Brand
I think we come into life with an agenda, a checkist, if you will, of things we would like to achieve, experience, and do during our time on the planet in this life. Some of us choose to work on … Continue reading
More Doppelgangers
One evening in 1885, French author Guy de Maupassant was experiencing what many writers do at some point in their careers – writer’s block. He was working on a short story that refused to come together. Suddenly, a figure appeared … Continue reading
Ode to Joy
I came across this on Laure Raines’ blog, Threads of the Spiderwoman, which is like visiting an artist’s rendition of Joseph Campbell:






