Category Archives: law of attraction
Books and Writers
One of the first synchronicities we posted on this blog, on February 4, 2009, concerned travel, books, and writers. Back then, we were casting around for patterns that manifest themselves through synchronicity, drawing heavily on our own experiences, and … Continue reading
The Grasshopper
This story is another one of those quirky synchronicities we all recognize as odd, but it’s anyone’s guess what the deeper meaning is. Maybe it’s just to illustrate how like attracts like! It’s from Mysteries of the Unexplained, but a … Continue reading
Just When You Need It
This story needs a little background. During the mid-1980s, Rob and I led trips to the Peruvian Amazon for travel writers. One of the writers who joined us for the 350 mile trip from Leticia, Colombia to Iquitos, Peru, was … Continue reading
Believed 88
This synchronicity needs a a little background. We took our daughter, Megan, back to college Wednesday to begin her junior year. There was some uncertainty here because of a relationship that ended last year and she was feeling somewhat at … Continue reading
What We Attract
We’re always on the prowl for new synchronicities. So this evening, I ran across this headline: Actor in Ad Battling Swine Flu Comes Down with Swine Flu, a story that reminds me of several earlier posts, like this one, where … Continue reading
Something unusual
I was driving to Home Depot Sunday afternoon, feeling somewhat bored. So I put out a request to the Universe asking for something unusual to happen. Almost a big mistake. Barely ten seconds later, a huge semi-trailer pulled out from … Continue reading
Dark Passages
One of our ‘secrets’ of synchronicity deals with creativity and the law of attraction. When you focus intently on a creative endeavor, you attract like experiences in the outer world. For example, when Trish was writing about a stalker years … Continue reading
Law of Attraction?
Sometimes, synchronicities seem to happen because of our intense focus on something. For instance, in 1982, I was rewriting my first novel, In Shadow, for the umpteenth time, working eight and ten hours a day, totally immersed in the rewrite. … Continue reading