MERC RETRO SNAFUS & GIFTS

 

So far, just 3 days into this retrograde, it’s been pretty typical: computer glitches, billing weirdness with Sirius radio,  miscommunication. But there have also been some interesting  things – finding lost objects, for instance.

I had a box of ornaments that contained a bunch I inherited from my first editor, Chris Cox, at Ballantine  Books.  I found them wrapped in colorful pieces of Christmas paper, so they wouldn’t get broken, and had looked in this box a dozen times and hadn’t seen them.

Chris was a terrific person and editor. We became good friends and he and my agent, Diane Cleaver, both of them  also writers, went on one of the Amazon cruises that Rob and I had led for Avianca Airlines back in the late 1980s. I don’t have photos of that trip. But that video gives you a sense of what the Amazon was  like even back when we led these tours for travel writes.

Chris died of AIDS in 1990. His partner, Bill, had died the year before and I still recall that conversation with Chris when he told me Bill had AIDS.

“He’s going blind, Trish. His parents are coming to pick him up and take him back to Minnesota.”

His voice was choked, he started to weep. I didn’t know what to say, what to do. Bill was a senior curator at the New Museum of Art in NYC at the time, a big deal in the art world. I offered whatever solace I could, then we got interrupted and Chris said he’d call back. He eventually did, one Monday after he’d returned from Minneapolis where he flew nearly every weekend to be with Bill. “I want to be with him when he dies.”

And if memory serves, Chris was with him and died not long afterward. Editor Cheryl Woodruff, another Ballantine editor and friend of Chris’s, asked me to speak at his memorial service. We flew to NY. Megan was barely a year old  and while I spoke at that service, he and Meg were at the back, near the doors, and when she started crying, Rob stepped outside with her.

I used this wooden sculpture of the traveler when I spoke about Chris. I bought it on that Amazon trip and it’s how I saw him, a nomad who traveled through many strange worlds as a senior editor at Ballantine. After his death, Cheryl mailed the ornaments to me. So every Christmas as I’m decorating our tree, I think of him. And thank him for being my first editor and my friend.

So this is what Mercury retro often does: you find lost stuff and it triggers memories from the past.

Here’s the Wikipedia entry on Chris:

Christopher Cox was born in Gadsden, Alabama. At 16, he worked for conservative Senator John Sparkman as a page, but would later found a local chapter of Students for a Democratic Society at the University of Alabama.[1]

In the 1970s, he moved to Manhattan and pursued a career with the SoHo Weekly News as both a writer and photographer. Cox, who was gay,[2] is perhaps best known for his collaboration within The Violet Quill.[3] He later went on to become senior editor of Ballantine Books.[4] He appeared in William Shakespeare‘s Two Gentlemen of Verona, and later directed several plays at the Jean Cocteau Theater, New York City.[1][4]

He died of an AIDS-related infection in 1990.[4] His partner, William Olander, had died of the same disease in 1989.[5]

 

 

 

 

Posted in synchronicity | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Nala & Beo

Our two cats, Beowulf and Nala, have such different histories it intrigues me that they are good buddies.

Nala was originally from the Palm Beach County Animal Care & Control and was fostered by our neighbor, Annette, when she was just a kitten. I met her when she could barely crawl. I’d never had a black cat before and fell in love with her. So on Christmas Day 2018, Rob &n Megan brought her to our house and gave her to me as a present.

During Covid, my sister, Mary, asked me to adopt one of the 3 cats whom she had rescued when they were feral some years before. At the time, they lived in her huge cellar in Marietta. So during a trip to visit her, I went down into this spacious cellar and shook a container of treats. The only one of the three who emerged to see who I was and what I wanted was a beautiful black and white cat, Beowulf. He head bumped my leg, I put a handful of cat treats in one of the bowls, and he munched, then looked up at me with these gorgeous topaz eyes and meowed.

When I went back upstairs, I told Mary I wanted to adopt Beo. Several months later, she drove to Orlando with Beo to make the transfer. We stayed a night at Meg’s, then the next day into a carrier Beo went again and we made the three hour drive home. He meowed the entire way. When I released him in the house, he made a beeline for the bedroom, ducked under the bed, and stayed there for 10 days.

When he came out, Nala greeted him and they darted off together into the family room – and through the open door. Ever since, the two of them dart outside in the morning and sometimes Beo chooses to stay outside overnight, relishing his newfound freedom. He doesn’t go far – out backyard, our neighbors’ backyard, the driveway. But it’s the stars, the moon, the smell of freedom that lures him.

He’s the more vocal of the two cats, Nala is the more loving. He likes Nigel, often head bumps with him and any other dog that comes into the house, instantly announcing, “Ok, dude, you’re here, you don’t have to chase me. Besides, I can climb trees.”
But Nala is the more loving, sidling up to Nigel for a lick, a nudge, a love pat. When she sleeps on our bed at night, she relishes being stroked, petted. Beo, on the other hand, endures a pet or two then nips at my hand.

I don’t think there’s any synchronicity here other than the fact that writing about this helps me clarify it in my own head. These relationships among animals of different species fascinate me.

In the early 2000s, we had Kali, a dusky conure, 2 different cats, and a different Golden, Jessie. Rob taught Kali to ride on Jessie’s back, pluck a treat from the counter and drop it into Jessie’s mouth. The cats  watched in awe. This gang all got along. A dog, bird, cats. They were friends.

Can we humans ever manage to overlook our glaring differences and become friends like our pets do?

Posted in synchronicity | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

Mercury Retro Aleert

So, here we are. December 12 at 11:09 PM PT and on December 13 at 2:09 AM, good ole Mercury turns retro in Sagittarius. I hear the collective groan, Ugh. It doesn’t turn direct again in Capricorn, on  January 1, 2024.

So, follow the three Rs REVISE, REVIEW, RECONSIDER.  Don’t start anything new,don’t sign contracts, and if you need to travel do so with the understanding that everything is in flux. Your ticket to San Francisco may get you to Chicago. Your ticket to Hawaii? Well, maybe you’ll end up in Japan for the holidays.

You get the idea.  Mercury is a trickster who turns everything upside down when it’s retrograde.Mercury rules the conscious mind, communication of all types,  how we learn and educate. It’s left-brain. Give me the facts, please. But when it’s retro, those facts become twisted or misunderstood or even non-existent.

Mercury rules Gemini and Virgo.

Good luck, everyone.

Posted in synchronicity | Tagged | Leave a comment

Theresa Cheung: Empower Your Inner Psychic

https://soundcloud.com/themysticalunderground/tmu-0179-theresa-cheung-empower-your-inner-psychic


Join Trish and Rob for a conversation with…

Theresa Cheung. Since graduating with a Master’s degree in Theology, she has written books on dreams, the afterlife, and other spiritual matters since graduating with a Master’s degree in Theology. Her Dream Dictionary A to Z (Harper Collins) is considered a classic in its field, and her Dream Decoder card pack is stocked in the Freud Museum’s gift shop in London and elsewhere. Her latest title, Empower Your Inner Psychic (Harper Collins) appeared at number 15 on all books on Amazon UK. Theresa has three brand new titles coming out in 2024. She also hosts White Shores, the podcast for spiritual beings. Born into a family of traveling spiritualists, Theresa has dedicated her life to mainstreaming the transformative power of dreamwork and tuning into what is invisible and unseen in our lives.

Home

Posted in synchronicity | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Heads up, Rocky!

A couple of short synchros from the past week.

I’m writing a book about a meteorite hunter, who is sort of the Indiana Jones of cosmic rocks. Well, at least Spielberg thinks so. He saw Michael Farmer on a documentary years ago and sent him a signed Indiana Jones cap in which he wrote under the brim: Michael, To a 21st Century Indiana Jones – Steven Spielberg. So one of the chapters I’m just finishing in the book deals with a meteorite that broke up over the town of Aguas Zarcas, Costa Rica in February of 2019. A larger piece happened to fall  through the roof of a dog house. Fortunately, the dog was home. But the shepherd was already aptly named: Rocky.

# # #

In mid-November this year, daughter Megan and I were watching a time travel movie on Netflix called The Adam Project when I accidentally hit a button on the remote and we got knocked off the movie. For some reason, the TV went right to the SciFi Channel and what was showing but…Back to the Future. That’s the kind of synchro that happens to me sometimes and I write it off as a funny coincidence. But the next day, the same thing – or rather something similar – happened. Once again, the remote accidentally went to the SciFi channel and what was on but…Back to the Future. Again.

Posted in synchronicity | Tagged | 1 Comment

A Collective Madness

 

Years back, I was an avid fan of The Twilight Zone and One Step Beyond –  which we watched in Venezuela as Un Paso Al Mas Alla. It turns out that One Step Beyond is now on Prime, Roku, and You Tube, 39 episodes that began in 1959. The narrator is as good as Rod Serling on Twilight Zone. His voice is almost hypnotic.

I remember that on a particular night of the week,  my sister, Mary,  and I would run into the living room or the kitchen, wherever our parents were, and announce that Un Paso Al Mas Alla was on. Bring the popcorn!

These episodes were just 30 minutes. Short, enjoyable, eerie. & I think it was on one of these where we watched a story about a peaceful, loving town where, one night a year, they were permitted to indulge in a collective madness.

The people went totally batshit, killing each other, smashing windows, stealing whatever they could get their hands on. They tortured each other with glee, blood ran in the streets. Of course, this was the late 1950s, so they didn’t show the blood. But you get the idea.

In many ways, it seems that the country now has  been seized by a similar collective madness that has lasted much longer than a single night. It may have begun the night that trump came down the escalator with melania to announce his candidacy for president and that was in, what? 2015? 2016? Now it’s nearly 2024.  I’d hoped this collective madness had ended with the insurrection on J 6, but it seems to have only gotten worse.

It’s likely that Trump will be  the Republican nomination for president in spite of his 91 federal indictments and the civil charges against him  If  he were any other American citizen, he would be seriously gagged by being tossed his jail for his repeated attacks on judges, law clerks, election workers and anyone else connected with these indictments and civil cases whom he perceives as an enemy.

The trump malignancy has spread throughout most of the republican party and is now evident in their chosen Speaker of the House, Michael Johnson,  a deeply religious, hardline conservative and an ally of trump’s. Against abortion, of course, and with a long history of LGBTQ rhetoric, this guy is the epitome of how the trump malignancy has spread.

Then you have the other politicians and governors like DeSantis who seem to think that if they mimic  Trump and become even more right wing, it increases their chance at the presidency. But as governor, Desantis acts like an entitled king, banning books, dictating how children are educated, denying women the right to make decisions about their own bodies and health care. When he planned to run for the presidency, he got the Florida legislature to toss out the law that stated if a Fla gov ran for the presidency, he or she had to cease being governor. The legislature now acts like his personal genie in the bottle, granting him his every wish.

This collective madness hasn’t lasted for just a single night like it did in One Step Beyond.  It has persevered and spread, just like Covid did. And maybe that’s the whole thing: this collective madness is very much like a pandemic.

Posted in synchronicity | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

WHITE NOISE

 

This incident could also fit under global synchronicities. But t really illustrates how tuning into the future through creativity has no time limits.

The movie White Noise had a world premier at the 79th Venice International Film Festival on August 31, 2022. It was then released in select cinemas on November 25, 2022, before its streaming release by Netflix on December 30, 2022. It’s based on Don DeLillo’s 1985 novel, which won the National Book Award.

According to Salon, “Shortly after Noah Baumbach adapted and directed a film version of “White Noise,” now streaming on Netflix, starring his partner Greta Gerwig and Adam Driver, a freight train carrying hazardous chemicals derailed in rural Ohio. The story is still developing, and the environmental impact may not be fully known for years, but the tragedy bears an eerie resemblance to many elements of the film.”

This synchronicity falls under the 4th secret in our book 7 Secrets of Synchronicity. It’s The Creative. “Creativity lies at the heart of synchronicity.” Over the years, we’ve discovered that creatives often foretell the future through their work. This one is classic in that sense. Think about it. A novel written in 1985 presages an event 38 years in the future:

Both the novel and the movie are set in Ohio, in the fictional town of Blacksmith. The movie was filmed almost entirely in Ohio. In the film, a tanker truck loaded with toxic, flammable material crashes into a passing train because of the truck driver’s drunk driving. The train derails in the countryside, the tanker is crushed, and releases a viscous substance. “A fireball erupts. The rest of the film deals with the aftermath of the crash, in both large and small, personal ways.”

The real event involving a rain derailment happened on February 3, 2023 in East Palestine, Ohio, a town near the Pennsylvania border. A Norfolk Southern train – with 20 cars containing hazardous materials – derailed, caught fire, and created a horrendous cloud of toxic material.

In both the film and real life, residents are ordered to evacuate, then to shelter in place.
In real life, the derailed and burned cars contained dangerous chemicals including butyl acrylate, ethylhexyl acrylate, isobutylene, and vinyl chloride, a substance that NPR described as “a carcinogen that becomes a gas at room temperature.” Since it breaks down in the sun, it can cause headaches and dizziness.As NPR writes, “People who breathe the chemical over many years may also experience liver damage.”

Here’s another weird facet of this synchronicity: some of the residents of East Palestine were extras in the movie.

When this happens to you, when your creativity delivers an actual scene from the future, you feel like you’ve entered The Twilight Zone.

 

Posted in synchronicity | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Adrian Duncan: Global Astrology


Join Trish and Rob for a conversation with…

Adrian Duncan is an astrologer and author who lives in Copenhagen. He has
pursued a full-time astrology practice since 1985. He is a former editor of the Astrological Journal and author of “Doing Time on Planet Earth” and “Astrology: Transformation and Empowerment.”

His work can be found at astrowow.com, which features articles, videos, astrology reports, and astrology software.

And the you tube version:

Posted in synchronicity | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

AI’s Best Synchro

 

I asked Bard, Google’s AI, what the best synchronicity was that it knew about. Here’s the response:

Synchronicity can manifest in many different ways, and each individual’s experience is unique. However, there are some synchronicities that stand out as particularly meaningful and impactful. Here is one such example:

A woman named Sarah was struggling with a difficult decision about her career. She had been offered a promotion at her current job, but she also had a strong desire to start her own business. She was feeling very conflicted and unsure of what to do.

One day, Sarah was walking to work when she saw a billboard for a business seminar on entrepreneurship. She had never considered taking such a seminar before, but she felt an inexplicable urge to attend. The seminar was held the next day, and Sarah decided to go on a whim.

During the seminar, Sarah was struck by the speaker’s passion and enthusiasm for entrepreneurship. She felt a spark of inspiration and began to see her own potential as a business owner. After the seminar, Sarah decided to take the leap and start her own business. She was nervous and afraid of failure, but she was also excited about the possibilities.

A few months later, Sarah’s business was thriving. She was incredibly happy and fulfilled with her work, and she knew that she had made the right decision. As she reflected on her journey, she realized that the billboard had been a synchronicity, a meaningful coincidence that had led her to her true calling.

Sarah’s story is just one example of how synchronicity can play a powerful role in our lives. By paying attention to the synchronicities around us, we can open ourselves up to new possibilities and discover our true potential.

The story is pretty good, but not the best synchronicity I’ve heard or experienced.

Posted in synchronicity | Tagged , | Leave a comment

The Domes

In the late 1980s, Rob and I had the good fortune of knowing several Fort Lauderdale psychics – all of them deceased now. One evening, we were at Tony Grosso’s home in nearby Pembroke Pines. Tony was a real eccentric, a powerful empath, a gay man who didn’t want anyone to know he was gay. Artist and psychic Renie Wiley was also there.

Tony had a unique system for his readings that involved color and he and Rob eventually co-authored a book on color divination, The Rainbow Oracle. Renie had worked as a psychic consultant with local cops and we wrote a piece on her for Fate Magazine called Psychic Detective. We later observed her working with the police to locate  a missing young girl, Christy Luna. But on that particular evening, we were just four people intrigued by what the future might hold for us – as individuals, as a human collective. Renie suggested that she progress us into the future to see if we could pick up anything on what life would be like.

Renie was a Sagittarian, a physically tall and imposing woman who also happened to be my astrology mentor, the woman who taught me stuff you don’t find in books or on websites these days. For her, astrology was an art, ancient and sacred. She read our daughter’s chart when Megan was just three days old and I have to say that now, 34 years later, much of what she said has transpired. But that’s for another post.

Whenever the four of us got together, weird stuff evolved, things none of us had anticipated. That evening, I remember, we were talking about what the world might be like in 20 or 30 years or even beyond. Renie said, “Well, guys, let me progress you into an undetermined future and let’s see what you pick up.”

So that’s what she did. She had a beautiful voice, soft, hypnotic, and as she spoke, I suddenly saw myself as a very tall woman – bald – living in a dome because the external world was so toxic. Life in the dome wasn’t exactly a panacea – bureaucracy abounds in every time frame, it seems – and there were outliers who lived in caverns outside the dome whose lives had evolved quite differently.

The dome scenario was confirmed a couple years after that progression when I ran across a book by Chet Snow and Helen Wambach, Mass Dreams of the Future. Wambach, a psychologist, had progressed 2,500 individuals in Europe to 2100 and asked them to describe what their lives were like. In the three scenarios that emerged, the population of the planet was greatly reduced. In one scenario, survivors lived in huge domes that protected them from the toxic air outside.

This progression has always stuck with me. And the summer of 2017- and  of hurricanes – Harvey, Irma, Maria, all either cat 4s or 5s- and the quakes in Mexico and Japan and elsewhere – suggested that were in the beginning throes of climate change. The kind of climate change that drives people inland in droves because it’s no longer safe to live on the coasts.

As Irma approached Florida as a cat 5, with the early forecasts taking her up Florida’s east coast, we decided we should evacuate to Atlanta, where my sister lives. But gas was scarce and the idea of getting stranded on the interstate scared me. So we opted for a friend’s place north of Orlando. We had enough gas to get there. I removed everything from our walls, wrapped stuff in garbage bags, found high spots for Megan’s paintings. In the end, we decided to stay.

Friends who evacuated said it took eight hours to get to Orlando (a drive that usually takes about 2.5 hours), and 18 hours to reach southern Georgia. Cars ran out of gas on the turnpike and were abandoned.   At one point, when Irma’s winds reached 185 mph – and stayed there for 36 hours, breaking all kinds of records – we figured we’d made a big mistake by not evacuating.

The largest evacuation in U.S. history was underway.

As Irma closed in on Cuba, she stayed on its coast longer than expected and made that northward turn later than forecasts had predicted – and that saved Florida’s east coast. But it tore apart Florida’s west coast, then turned inland as a cat 1 and the eye went over Orlando.

When natural disasters happen back to back, as Harvey and Irma did and, later, Maria and the Mexican quake, the psychological and psychic toll it takes is considerable. Your body slams into survival mode. And for me, standing on the back porch during parts of Irma and listening to and seeing the wind and rain tear through our yard, I wondered about the dome in that progression so many years before. And I knew I had my next novel.

What is life like in these domes, centuries in the future?

As a result of this progression, I wrote White Crows, a Mira Morales novel, where Tango Key is visited by time travelers from a future where people live in domes.

Available at Amazon

Posted in synchronicity | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment