#137 – and Connecting with Coincidence

 

On February 4, the 12th anniversary of this blog, I joined a Zoom meet-up organized by Bernard Beitman. It consisted of participants from different countries who write about, research, or study synchronicities . This  monthly meet-up is part of Beitman’s Coincidence Project, which studies the nature of synchronicities. We shared our ideas and observations about synchronicity, then were paired off with one of the other participants  for synchronicity activities.

Toward the end of the meet-up, the woman in charge of Zoom announced that Beitman’s podcast, Connecting with Coincidence, would begin again soon for the second season. His first season  consisted of 137 episodes.

I exclaimed, “Wow! That’s the DNA of light!”

“It is?” someone asked.

In Deciphering the Cosmic Number: The Strange Friendship of Wolfgang Pauli and Carl Jung, author Arthur I Miller talks about the number 137 – a prime number – and its significance for Pauli. He describes it as the “DNA of Light.” And that’s a perfect description of Beitman’s 137 podcast episodes of Connecting with Coincidence.

Wolfgang Pauli was a theoretical physicist who was nominated by Einstein for a Nobel. He won the prize in 1945 for the “exclusion principle,” which involves spin theory and the periodic table of chemical elements and atomic structure. Thanks to Einstein, who called Pauli his successor, Pauli was offered permanent positions at Columbia and at the Institute for Advanced Study.  In 1946, he was granted U.S. citizenship and could have stayed in the United States just as Einstein had chosen to do. Instead, Pauli returned to Zurich partly because he missed his good friend Carl Jung. The two eventually began collaborating on a study of synchronicity.

Pauli was also known for his connection with the number 137,  one of the unsolved mysteries of modern physics, the value of the fine structure constant . It’s a prime number – a number that can be divided by 1 and by itself. Or, put another way, a prime number is a positive integer that cannot equal the product of two smaller integers.

The number became so puzzling to physicists that the famed Richard Feynman, who won the Nobel Prize in 1965 for his contributions to the development of quantum electrodynamics, said that physicists should put a sign in their offices to remind themselves of how much they don’t know. The sign would be simple: 137.

This number confounded Pauli for much of his adult life. When at the age of 58, he entered the hospital for routine surgery and discovered he would be in room 137, he reportedly told a friend: “I won’t get out of here alive.” And he didn’t. He died before he could be released.

So whenever 137 comes up for you, think of it as the DNA of light. Take note of what you were doing or thinking before it occurred.

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An Incredible Reunion

Here’s a story of how an unlikely coincidence–an amazing synchronicity–that led the  re-union of a husband and wife who were separated during World War II. The story appeared in the book above. Thanks to Jane Clifford of Wales for send it to us.

Marcel Sternberger was a methodical man of nearly 50, with bushy white hair, guileless brown eyes, and the bouncing enthusiasm of a czardas dancer of his native Hungary. He always took the 9:09 Long Island Railroad train from his suburban home to Woodside, N.Y.., where he caught a subway into the city.

On the morning of January 10, 1948, Sternberger boarded the 9:09 as usual. En route, he suddenly decided to visit Laszlo Victor, a Hungarian friend who lived in Brooklyn and was ill.

Accordingly, at Ozone Park, Sternberger changed to the subway for Brooklyn, went to his friend’s house, and stayed until midafternoon. He then boarded a Manhattan-bound subway for his Fifth Avenue office. Here is Marcel’s incredible story:

The car was crowded, and there seemed to be no chance of a seat. But just as I entered, a man sitting by the door suddenly jumped up to leave, and I slipped into the empty place. I’ve been living in New York long enough not to start conversations with strangers. But being a photographer, I have the peculiar habit of analyzing people’s faces, and I was struck by the features of the passenger on my left. He was probably in his late 30s, and when he glanced up, his eyes seemed to have a hurt expression in them. He was reading a Hungarian-language newspaper, and something prompted me to say in Hungarian, “I hope you don’t mind if I glance at your paper.”

The man seemed surprised to be addressed in his native language. But he answered politely, “You may read it now. I’ll have time later on.”

During the half-hour ride to town, we had quite a conversation. He said his name was Bela Paskin. A law student when World War II started, he had been put into a German labor battalion and sent to the Ukraine. Later he was captured by the Russians and put to work burying the German dead. After the war, he covered hundreds of miles on foot until he reached his home in Debrecen, a large city in eastern Hungary.

I myself knew Debrecen quite well, and we talked about it for a while. Then he told me the rest of his story. When he went to the apartment once occupied by his father, mother, brothers and sisters, he found strangers living there. Then he went upstairs to the apartment that he and his wife once had. It also was occupied by strangers. None of them had ever heard of his family.

As he was leaving, full of sadness, a boy ran after him, calling “Paskin bacsi! Paskin bacsi!” That means “Uncle Paskin.” The child was the son of some old neighbors of his. He went to the boy’s home and talked to his parents. “Your whole family is dead,” they told him. “The Nazis took them and your wife to Auschwitz.”

Auschwitz was one of the worst Nazi concentration camps. Paskin gave up all hope. A few days later, too heartsick to remain any longer in Hungary, he set out again on foot, stealing across border after border until he reached Paris. He managed to immigrate to the United States in October 1947, just three months before I met him.

All the time he had been talking, I kept thinking that somehow his story seemed familiar. A young woman whom I had met recently at the home of friends had also been from Debrecen; she had been sent to Auschwitz; from there she had been transferred to work in a German munitions factory. Her relatives had been killed in the gas chambers. Later she was liberated by the Americans and was brought here in the first boatload of displaced persons in 1946.

Her story had moved me so much that I had written down her address and phone number, intending to invite her to meet my family and thus help relieve the terrible emptiness in her life.

It seemed impossible that there could be any connection between these two people, but as I neared my station, I fumbled anxiously in my address book. I asked in what I hoped was a casual voice, “Was your wife’s name Marya?”

He turned pale. “Yes!” he answered. “How did you know?”

He looked as if he were about to faint.

I said, “Let’s get off the train.” I took him by the arm at the next station and led him to a phone booth. He stood there like a man in a trance while I dialed her phone number.

It seemed hours before Marya Paskin answered. (Later I learned her room was alongside the telephone, but she was in the habit of never answering it because she had so few friends and the calls were always for someone else. This time, however, there was no one else at home and, after letting it ring for a while, she responded.)

When I heard her voice at last, I told her who I was and asked her to describe her husband. She seemed surprised at the question, but gave me a description. Then I asked her where she had lived in Debrecen, and she told me the address.

Asking her to hold the line, I turned to Paskin and said, “Did you and your wife live on such-and-such a street?”

“Yes!” Bela exclaimed. He was white as a sheet and trembling.

“Try to be calm,” I urged him. “Something miraculous is about to happen to you. Here, take this telephone and talk to your wife!”

He nodded his head in mute bewilderment, his eyes bright with tears. He took the receiver, listened a moment to his wife’s voice, then suddenly cried, “This is Bela! This is Bela!” and he began to mumble hysterically. Seeing that the poor fellow was so excited he couldn’t talk coherently, I took the receiver from his shaking hands.

“Stay where you are,” I told Marya, who also sounded hysterical. “I am sending your husband to you. We will be there in a few minutes.”

Bela was crying like a baby and saying over and over again. “It is my wife. I go to my wife!”

At first I thought I had better accompany Paskin, lest the man should faint from excitement, but I decided that this was a moment in which no strangers should intrude. Putting Paskin into a taxicab, I directed the driver to take him to Marya’s address, paid the fare, and said goodbye.

Bela Paskin’s reunion with his wife was a moment so poignant, so electric with suddenly released emotion, that afterward neither he nor Marya could recall much about it.

“I remember only that when I left the phone, I walked to the mirror like in a dream to see if maybe my hair had turned gray,” she said later. “The next thing I know, a taxi stops in front of the house, and it is my husband who comes toward me. Details I cannot remember; only this I know—that I was happy for the first time in many years…..

“Even now it is difficult to believe that it happened. We have both suffered so much; I have almost lost the capability to not be afraid. Each time my husband goes from the house, I say to myself, “Will anything happen to take him from me again?”

Her husband is confident that no horrible misfortune will ever again befall the. “Providence has brought us together,” he says simply. “It was meant to be.”

Skeptical persons will no doubt attribute the events of that memorable afternoon to mere chance. But was it chance that made Marcel Sternberger suddenly decide to visit his sick friend and hence take a subway line that he had never ridden before? Was it chance that caused the man sitting by the door of the car to rush out just as Sternberger came in? Was it chance that caused Bela Paskin to be sitting beside Sternberger, reading a Hungarian newspaper’

Paul Deutschman, Great Stories Remembered, edited and compiled by Joe L. Wheeler

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The Firewood synchro

Everyone knows about shortages of toilet paper and paper towels. In South Florida, there are still long empty shelves in grocery stores where in the paper product aisle. But have heard about a shortage of firewood?

That might be a local issue. But here in Palm Beach County, firewood disappeared around the first of the year from all the places where it’s usually readily available. Ace Hardware always has firewood, same with Publix, Home Depot, Lowe’s. Nobody buys firewood in the summer here so the stock of wood never changes for months–summer is about eight months long here. But it all disappeared after our second or third “cool spell,” temps in upper 40s, 50s.  Maybe it’s because we’ve had more cooler weather this winter. Hard to believe that covid would affect firewood supplies, but then again more people are staying home…and some are burning wood in fireplaces, stoves, and…like us…in outdoor fire pits.

We kept looking for weeks. We even looked when we were in Orlando visiting Megan. So think there. No wood, at least not in the Publix. So how did I get that wood in the pic above?

Synchronicity, of course. I accidentally clicked the Offer Up app and what did I see but a pic of a huge pile of firewood. In particular, it was cherry wood and was advertised for using in barbecues and it was expensive.   I wrote the seller and found out that he also sold regular firewood. We agreed on a quantity and a price and the next morning I met him at an intersection in the  nearby rural community of Loxahatchee. Not sure why we met there, but we did and we transferred the firewood from his pickup to my SUV.

End of story. Synchronicity leads me to firewood. Probably the fact that both Trish and I were focussed on finding firewood and talking about how it had disappeared that created the circumstances that “accidentally” led me to a source of firewood.

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February Astrological Forecast

If you’d rather read the forecast, you can find it in the masthead,

Just remember that Mercury went retro in Aquarius on January 30 and won’t start behaving until February 20.

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The Hammered Lamb Synchro

 

 

Several weeks ago  in Orlando, we went to The Hammered Lamb, for dinner. It’s an open place with tables that are socially distanced ,and also dog friendly.We met Megan’s friend, Veronica, there and she had her boyfriend’s dog, Simba, with her. A deaf husky.We had our dog, Nigel, and Megan’s dog, Nika. Before we had left Megan’s house, she changed into her running shoes because it was chilly and we were going to be sitting outside. It’s an important detail in this synchro.

So we get to the restaurant, order lunch, and get the dogs situated. The restaurant is next to a track where trains speed by about every thirty minutes.At one point, Simba, the deaf husky, suddenly slips out of his collar and takes off across the restaurant. Veronica shoots to her feet and chases him. He makes an abrupt 180 and races in the opposite direction – toward the tracks. Megan leaps up and she and Veronica race after Simba. The whistle of an oncoming train echoes.

I sit there, two dogs attached to the leg of my chair, and wonder why I’m not moving. It’s not just that if I get up, the dogs will follow me and drag my chair behind them. Rob is still seated, too, and I know if Nigel and Riley try to follow, he’ll grab their leashes. In my head, I see the deaf husky barreling down the tracks, Megan and Veronica chasing him, and the train charging toward them. I still don’t move.

Rob finally gets up to take a look. I still don’t move. I don’t feel that panicked urgency I feel when Megan is in danger. I don’t feel my heart hammering, adrenaline doesn’t course through me, sweat doesn’t leap from my pores. I wonder if there’s something wrong with me.

Then Rob sits down and before I can ask him anything, Megan and Veronica appear with Simba, who Veronica quickly leashes. They’re shaken. Simba paces. Megan and Veronica talk fast, at the same time, words tumbling over each other.

Megan: Oh my God, oh my God, I thought we were dead.

Veronica: I tripped and hit the ground…

Megan: I saw Veronica pitched forward and I ran faster and saw that train racing toward us, the sound of that whistle deafening. And I get closer to Simba and remember that the way you deal with a charging horse is to make yourself as tall and imposing as possible so I throw my arms into the air…and he suddenly veers off the track….and I grab his collar…”
She pauses for a breath of air. “It’s crazy, but if I hadn’t changed my shoes before we’d left – I was wearing sandals then – I wouldn’t have been able to run after him.

Yes, weather was a factor. The air was too cool to wear sandals outside the house.

But. I’ve known Megan to wear sandals outside when it was in the forties. So, was it precognitive on her part to ditch her sandals and pull on her running shoes?

Was precognition at work when I didn’t move?

Specifics aside, Simba was caught, no one was hurt, and the train hurled on through the city of Orlando.

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Full Moon in Leo

The full moon in Leo on January 28 squares both Uranus and Mars – within one degree for each of them. Squares are challenging. This one could create friction with people in your personal or work environment and the disagreement seems to come out of nowhere. Mars and Uranus also square Jupiter and the sun, so the friction may feel worse than it actually is or could swell quickly. Bet advice: back off.

The good news is that Jupiter and the sun are conjunct in Aquarius, the sign of the rebel, the visionary, the inventor. Any time Jupiter conjuncts the sun, the bottom line is that it should be a lucky day. If nothing else, buy a lottery ticket!

For the impact of this moon on your sun sign, check January’s forecast in the at the top of the blog.

 

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The Nun and the Devil

 

The mysterious 14-line message in the photo above was written in 1676 by a nun who claimed she was possessed by the devil. She didn’t know what the message said and neither did anyone else for centuries. Now thanks to a digital transcription software the message was finally unraveled…and indeed it is devilish.

On Aug. 11, 1676, Sister Maria Crocifissa della Concezione was found on the floor of her cell, her face covered with ink, holding a note written in an incomprehensible mix of archaic letters and symbols. The 31-year-old nun was living at the convent of Palma di Montechiaro in Sicily. She had been a nun since age 15.

In translating the message, researchers first tested their software with some standard shorthand symbols from different languages. They found that the nun’s letter contained a mix of words from ancient alphabets such as Greek, Latin, Runic and Arabic.

“We analyzed how the syllables and graphisms [or thoughts depicted as symbols] repeated in the letter in order to locate vowels, and we ended up with a refined decryption algorithm,” Daniele Abate, director of the team of researchers, told Live Science.

He said the team did not have great expectations for the outcome. “We thought we could just come out with a few words making sense. But the nun had a good command of languages,” he said, adding “the message was more complete than expected.”

The message  describes God, Jesus and the Holy Spirit as “dead weights,” the researcher said. The message goes on to say that “God thinks he can free mortals … The system works for no one … Perhaps now, Styx is certain.”

In Greek and Roman mythology, Styx is the river separating the netherworld from the world of the living.

Abete said the letter suggests that Sister Maria suffered from schizophrenia  or bipolar disorder. “The image of the devil is often present in these disorders. We learned from historical records that every night she screamed and fought against the devil,” Abate said.

For the church of that time, the letter was instead considered the outcome of her struggle against “innumerable evil spirits,”  according to a written account about the occurrence by Abbess Maria Serafica.

According to Serafica’s account of the nun’s behavior written shortly after the incident, the devil would have forced Sister Maria (who was later blessed) to sign the letter. She heroically opposed the demand by writing, “Ohimé” (oh me), which is the only comprehensible word in the letter, Serafica wrote.

***

The researcher expresses certain assumptions, in our opinion, that may not be true. Apparently, there is no record that the nun spoke or understood numerous languages. From Abate’s mainstream scientific perspective, such knowledge would be required to write the message.

From our own research in the realm of the mystical underground, we know that it is possible that she was possessed by a demonic being that ‘dictated’ the note. So we are more inclined to agree with the Abbess Maria Serafica than the software guy.

The other bias is the assumption that the nun must’ve had a mental disorder. Again, that’s not necessarily the case as there are no shortage of examples of people who are possessed voluntarily as practitioners of Santeria, Voodum, shamanism, and more. While some might be mentally unstable, others–including some we’ve written about–are not.

The entire article in Live Science can be found here.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Rob MacGregor: TULPAS, The Mystical Underground

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Precognition

 

The other day I was riding my bike through the neighborhood and decided to head over to the next neighborhood, an equestrian community. I pedaled up onto the sidewalk that runs by the house on the corner and realized the bushes blocked my view of the sidewalk that I would turn onto. I wouldn’t be able to see if anyone was headed my way.

In normal times, this wouldn’t even be an issue because bicyclists were rare. But since the pandemic began, nothing has been normal and people are finding ways to exercise safely. My first thought was that maybe I should return to the street to make that turn because I would have a straight-on view of the sidewalk. And in the event someone was racing toward me, I would see the person first. You can see the curve on the left side of the road. The bushes are taller and thicker now.

Suppose, I thought, I make the shortcut turn and someone on a bike barrels into me? My second thought was whether this might be an instance of precognition?

By then, I was at the turn just seconds before a guy on a racing bike would slam into me. He yelped, “Yikes!” And veered away from me.

A precognition a bit too close for comfort.

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Those Dog Park Benches

 

I haven’t written one of these dog park politics posts for while. So in the waning days of the trump presidency, here goes:

Every afternoon around 3, a loose group of anti-trumpers with dogs meet at our expansive and really cool dog park. As soon as we come in the gate, we unleash our dogs, who run off to do whatever dogs do. We grab our poop bags from the dispensary and walk to the benches at the other side of the park.

I think of it as our area, that of the democrats and independents who recognize trump for the wanna be autocrat he is. Paula. Lloyd. Arlene. Jared. Nathan. Rob. Me. Our kids over the holidays. The occasional snowbird. Our dogs, of course. Paula always brings containers of cold water and a bowl so our area becomes watering hole.

But because the snowbirds have flocked to our area for the gorgeous weather and the equestrian season, we often get to our bench area to find other people there. As our friend Lloyd says, “As soon as we start talking against trump or our gov, Ron DeSantis, the trumpies leave.”

And he’s right.

The other day a young couple was hanging out in our area, with a dog small enough to be in the small dog park. A woman from Breckinridge, Colorado joined us and mentioned how maskless people in Breckinridge, were fined on the spot for being maskless. I said it would never happen in Florida because our governor, Ron DeSantis is an asshole, a mini me trumper.

And the man walking away shouts, “We live in America, not China!”

“What total bullshit!” I shout back, and then Rob shoots to his feet and starts hurling facts and statistics at the guy.

Their shouting fest lasts until the guy and his wife and their little pooch leave the dog park.
Throughout this whole thing, the woman from Colorado, Linda, talked about what she’d encountered politically since the death of her husband eleven years ago, when she’d started moving from state to state, looking for the right place to live. “Isn’t this town for trump?” she asks.

I’ve come to think of these benches as the place where truth lives. Where facts prevail. Where science and reason and the stuff of The Mystical Underground co-exist.

 

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