High Tech Synchro Revisited

(image from Center for Touch Drawing)

On August 12, we posted an entry on high tech synchronicity. Synctxt  is a way to explore synchronicity from your email, phone or wherever and however you are connected to the Internet. It’s described as “a research experiment and self-exploration tool that combines modern technology with the concept of synchronicity as postulated by the psychologist Carl Jung.”

In a nutshell, the technology behind the software grew out of the Princeton Anomalies Research Lab, where it was discovered that humans could influence quantum scale events, even at a distance. Once you sign up, a random event generator is assigned to you 24/7 and periodically it generates a message through email or a text message, written by you. You can create up to 64 messages.Ours consisted of things like: Go with the flow. Relax. Time to withdraw. Whatever we need comes to us. Call so and so. Have you forgotten anything? We also included more specific messages related to our work, family, finances, etc

In the five months we’ve been subscribing, we’ve discovered some rather intriguing elements to this marvel. It actually seems to pick up on emotional/mental energy. You know how some days you bound out of bed, eager to get started with your day? On those days, it’s likely that your synctxt alerts will come in fast and furiously. The messages generated may not always relate to exactly what’s going on in your life,  but when you get a flurry of them, you know for sure that stuff in your life is moving.

It also works on days when you get out of bed as sluggishly as a snail. You feel out of sorts – physically, emotionally, spiritually, whatever. Often, the messages generated on those kinds of days act as butt kickers, as if the universe is telling you to get your act together, to get the show on the road, to forgive the past and just, well, move on.

Then there are the times the alerts seem be tricksters. For instance, on Jan 4-5 South Florida experienced really cold weather (at least for us) – in the low to mid 30s. So on the 5th  we found seven synctxt alerts, a sure sign for a high energy day, right? And two of them said, “Chill.” We had written that message as a reminder to relax, but it addressed the weather situation!

A few days later, there were eight alerts today, and I knew that something had to be moving, shifting. So late that evening, Rob says, “Hey, Whitley Strieber has a new journal entry up. Knowing that my editor had sent Strieber my novel, Esperanza, to Streiber, asking him to blurb it, I  replied, “Oh, c’mon, Whitley, please blurb Esperanza.”

Five minutes later, I received an email from my editor with Strieber’s blurb.

So does synctxt work? It definitely has done so for us. It works especially well if you compose your messages with thought and deliberation and if you update your messages periodically. We plan to continue our subscription!

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11 Responses to High Tech Synchro Revisited

  1. Toumai says:

    thanks for that vote of confidence Musing. From the etymology perspective, the majority of our words begining with 'st' had a root origin of 'str'.

    So your wv: stenesas becomes 'strenesas'. You begin to see 'strain' and 'strenth'. The esas is a bit more difficult. It would be a sort of inner world "emphasis"–sss. It could be "essence". It could be "assets". Or since the inner world seems to like to attach odd humour it could be simply "ass".

    Since the inner world has a cryptic multidimentional way, I would go so far to say it's all of the above.

    Oh and MacGregors, yes, I know it's only $6. But why strain on our assets?

    wv: arcen (the root of ark is arkein/argel– meaning guard, protect, and secret).

  2. Von says:

    Whow!Interesting!

  3. Trish and Rob MacGregor says:

    I love streiber's blog. & Toumai to the rescue on that wv

  4. musingegret says:

    Yep, I'm with Nancy and Gypsywoman—thanks for the reminder and for relating the additional syncs coming your way. Thanks to y'all I've been going to Streiber's blog to check out the weekly interviews—veeeery interesting.

    wv: stenesas (??) I'll need Toumai's interp on this one!

  5. Nancy says:

    I'm so glad you updated us on this, and you've found it to be a positive. I think I'll check it out. Thanks.

  6. Trish and Rob MacGregor says:

    adele – sign up for the free week and see what happens. We constantly change/update our 64 messages, to fit whatever we're doing and working on. I love this little tool, though. If nothing else, it pinpoints high energy days.

  7. Adele Aldridge says:

    Rob and Trish.

    Wow! this message hit me between my psychic eyes. I must have missed your post on August 12th about Syntxt. As it happens my birthday is August 12 and I am now living in Princeton and since the major work of my life is my I Ching Meditations interpretation, how could I ignore something that wants 64 of anything! So I went to the site and signed up.

    My question to you is, since this syntex works the way consulting the I Ching does, and I do that all the time, do you see another advantage for paying the fee? I can certainly see why you would pay for this because it belongs with the research for your book.

    I wonder how many people are signed up.

    Thanks for the post with so many synchronicities just for me. LOL

  8. GYPSYWOMAN says:

    i am SO glad you have reminded us of this – as i had not gotten myself together enough to get started on it – thank you for your message: just do it just do it just do it!!! 😉

    love your messages!!!

  9. Trish and Rob MacGregor says:

    Good point, Toumai!But the price is just $6 a month.

  10. Toumai says:

    And for those of us on limited budgets, posting comments on blog sites and the resulting word verification "message" seem to work pretty good too and they're free!

    wv: ruffsc

  11. Shadow says:

    this sounds mighty intriguing. i believe i'm going to go check it out…

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