This synchro, which happened to Tim Wallender, is one of the most remarkable I’ve ever run across. We included it in 7 Secrets of Synchronicity. Tim now lives in Memphis, and says this story took place in Wisconsin, around 1995. It’s an incredible instance of an object lost – and then found in a very mysterious way.
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Both me and my brother worked for the same railroad. He was an engineer and I was a conductor at the time. One day we were both working but on different trains. It was the first day that the railroad issued cell phones to the engineers. The engineer I was working with asked me who I thought would be the first one to lose their phone. I said without a doubt my brother would.
A few miles further down the track we had to stop and set out some cars. Mind you, this is approximately 120 miles from where we both started our trip and only my train was to stop there. I set out the cars and engine, and as I looked down in the snow there was a cell phone. My engineer was there also to help with the hoses and we both looked at each other and said, “No way”. Sure enough I open up the case and there was a sticker with my brother’s name on it.
I called him at the hotel he was staying at in Chicago and asked him where his phone was. He said he didn’t know. Turns out his second engine was giving him trouble and it must have fallen out of his pocket when he walked back to check it out.
I don’t know what the odds are of finding your brother’s cell phone 120 miles from where he got it, the same day he got it, and only minutes after telling someone that he would lose it. Or what are the odds of stopping on top of it and looking down in about a three-foot section of rail and finding it?
It’s a remarkable synchro.
I’m hoping this post is a good omen for me today, because I’m having trouble dealing with a bureaucracy that won’t let me use my cell phone!
When I heard the news yesterday about the possible finding of some wreckage of Malaysia Flight 370 on Reunion Island, I scoured synchrosecrets for what Joe McMoneagle and Ed Dames had said. They both had remote viewed the Andaman Islands as the crash site of that poor plane.
This new info supports what they said better than the theory that the plane went down way, way south, towards the Pole. I wonder if they can trace the prevailing current from Reunion and estimate where the crash actually happened?
I need to catch up on this story, Sheila, thanks for the reminder! Good luck with this cell phone!
This is simply too eerie! There MuST be something at work at times such as these…