In Jung’s autobiography, Memories, Dreams and Reflections, he relates a story about an apparently telepathic connection to a patient he had been treating. He had gone out to deliver a lecture, then returned to his hotel around midnight, but had trouble falling asleep.
“At about two o’clock…I woke with a start, and had the feeling that someone had come into the room;I even had the impression that the door had been hastily opened. I instantly turned on the light, but there was nothing.” Jung thought that another guest had opened his door by mistake, but when he looked out into the hallway, “it was as still as death.”
“Then I tried to remember exactly what had happened, and it occurred to me that I had been awakened by a feeling of dull pain, as though something had struck my forehead and then the back of my skull.” The next day, Jung received a telegram informing him that his patient had committed suicide, that he had shot himself. “Later, I learned that the bullet had come to rest in the back wall of his skull.”
Jung went on to say that he felt this experience was a genuine synchronistic phenomenon commonly associated with an archetypal situation – in this instance, death. He believed his knowledge of the patient’s death had been made possible because in the collective unconscious, time and space are relative. “The collective unconscious is common to all; it is the foundation of what the ancients call the ‘sympathy of all things…’ the unconscious had knowledge of my patient’s condition.”



















