The Nature of Synchronicity


We like to  plug other authors who write about synchronicity. That’s the case with Randi G. Fine, a radio talk show host in Fort Lauderdale, Florida and ‘relationship dependency’ counselor. She’s also an author and her new book, Awaken from Life: Lessons for Discovering your Personal Truths, includes an interesting chapter on synchronicity. She suggests that the amount of synchronicity that you attract into your life is proportional to your own level of awareness.

Here’s an excerpt.

Synchronicities occur much more regularly than most of us are aware. They often go unnoticed because the signs represented to us tend to be symbolic in nature and need deciphering.

Often we find that the timing of these messages, people, and things relate directly to current issues in our lives or information that we are presently in need of.

Think about your life and the amazing ways that things have come together for you: the chance meetings with people that reveal just the information you had been looking for; the trip you took to a foreign country where you ran into someone you knew; the song that came on the radio at the exact time that you needed to hear those words; the book given to you by a friend that sent you on a life-altering spiritual quest; that certain number that pops up wherever you go; or the person you ran into that offered the healing solution to your illness.

Each day we attract “meaningful coincidences” that are there to give us direction. The amount of synchronicities we personally attract is proportionate to our level of conscious awareness. The more attention we pay to these awe-inspiring “coincidences,” the more frequently they will occur.

Whether believer or skeptic we have all experienced these seemingly random occurrences that seem too improbable to be chalked up to just chance. Coincidence or synchronicity, both fascinating phenomena, are uncanny and appear unexpectedly.

How many times have you heard someone say, “There are no coincidences, in response to one of these baffling occurrences? Perhaps you even use the phrase yourself.

To understand why these incidents are not coincidental you must first understand what a coincidence is. Coincidences are experiences where two events coincide that have no relationship to each other. Some sort of pattern or connection associated with the coincidental experiences can be derived, but an obvious explanation for their occurrence cannot be found.

There are skeptics who say that these phenomena are coincidental; that a connection between the experience and one’s reality is merely illusory or selective perception.

Statisticians fall into the skeptic category. They believe that these types of occurrences are not phenomena at all—just manifestations of the law of averages. They say that coincidences are inevitable; with five billion people on the planet there is a reasonable probability that unlikely circumstances of this nature will happen. To quote mathematician John Allen Paulos, “The most astonishingly incredible coincidence imaginable would be the complete absence of all coincidences.”

There are those who follow the supernatural theory of synchronicities but offer different, spiritually based explanations on the matter. They attribute these experiences to karma, fate, or destiny. Some say the experiences come from angels or spirit guides showing us signs that guide us in the direction of our soul’s purpose.

None of these explanations are inaccurate. All these facets of spirituality and supernatural activity are likely to factor into the occurrence of synchronicities.

We recognize a number of spiritual occurrences through our intuition. Those of us who are open and receptive to embracing faith based realities tend to be most in touch with our intuitive, inner knowing perceptions. By paying attention to our inner guidance, we are more likely to know what we are seeking and can more easily recognize the signs that direct us to it. It is our acceptance of intangible realities that allows us to recognize the many synchronistic occurrences that happen to us.

Intuition and synchronicity are interconnected in such a way that it is hard to distinguish where one stops and the other begins. The more synchronicities one notices the more intuitive one becomes; the more intuitive one is the more synchronicities they are likely to recognize. The more awareness one has of his intuition and the synchronistic occurrences happening around him, the stronger his connection to universal energy and knowledge becomes.

Think of synchronicities as communications from the Universe that are there to keep you aligned with your purpose. These signs are indications that your inner world is in sync with your outer world.

The more you believe in the miraculous nature of synchronicities, the more you will notice and experience them. By developing an awareness of the many synchronicities that occur in your life, you will gain the understanding that everything that happens in your life happens for a reason, whether or not the reason reveals itself at the time. You will awaken your spiritual journey and find your life flowing in wonderful ways.

Synchronicities are awe-inspiring, though not all of them play out the way you may hope for. As you experience more synchronicities in your life, try to keep a positive attitude, especially when you are confronted with a seemingly negative outcome. Do not despair. A negative outcome is often put before you as a tool for learning and growing, and may ultimately lead to a positive outcome.

It is important to remember that every event in your life, whether positive or negative has a greater purpose. A lesson that does not turn out the way you would like it to, is simply a lesson that turned out the way it was supposed to. Make it a practice to accept the natural flow of life.

In times of uncertainty, disquietude, and transition synchronicities give us direction. They guide us as we spiritually evolve in the physical world. They are signposts, sometimes subtle sometimes obvious, showing us the most direct route to take, the easiest path to follow, to fulfill the purpose we are here for. They put us in the right place at the right time to cross paths with others who have meaningful messages for us.

We all have stories of how we met the loves of our lives or our best friends, found a new career or the perfect job, began a spiritual path or met the perfect spiritual leader, and discovered we had an illness or unlocked the mystery of an elusive ailment. In more cases than not, a synchronistic experience was involved in that life changing event.

My life story, as told in my memoir Fine…ly, was a series of synchronistic events that led me through a significant amount of pain and adversity, but ultimately delivered me to a place of serenity and joy.

The same can be true for you. By awakening to synchronicities, having patience, and trusting the perfect guidance of the Universe, you will fulfill your purpose for being here.

Be mindful of what happens around you. Through this conscious awareness you will ultimately achieve the loving, peaceful quest of your soul.

 

Posted in synchronicity | 13 Comments

Henri, the Existential Cat

He’s back!

I have been wondering about Henri, perhaps because he so resembles our tuxedo cat, Whiskers, who passed in 2006, and Daz’s tuxedo cat, Sylvester, whose death launched his synchronistic quest.  It appears that Henri has come to the attention of a cat food company. When you watch this, click the X to get rid of the irritating ad. There are four parts to this that you can click through from part 1.

Posted in animals, animals as messengers, cat, synchronicity | 6 Comments

Revisiting UFO Sighting, Chicago O’Hare Airport 2006

 

In the UFO bookazine we’re working on, we’ve got a chapter on mass sightings. Here’s info on  one of the most credible.

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November 7, 2006 was a gray, overcast day in Chicago, with temps around fifty degrees. Around four p.m CST, a ramp employee at Chicago O’Hare International was pushing back United Airlines Flight 446 from Gate C17 and spotted a UFO about 1,500 feet overhead. The employee alerted the flight crew and someone on board reputedly snapped digital photos of the object.

The object was disc-shaped, a dark gray, metallic color,  about 22-28 feet across, and hovered over Gate C17 for at least five minutes before it accelerated at such an enormous speed that it literally punched a hole in the cloud cover so that blue sky was visible.  It was witnessed by pilots, mechanics,  and senior managers from United Airlines. Air traffic controllers had a conversation about the sighting, which was later released through a Freedom of Information request by the Chicago Tribune. Hundreds of ordinary citizens saw it. It was, after all, rush hour in Chicago.

Initially, the FAA was mum. And United Airlines denied that any of their employees had reported seeing the disc. Then, on New Year’s Day 2007, Chicago Tribune reporter Jon Hilkevitch, who covers transportation for the newspaper, ran a front page story about the sighting at O’Hare. His lead had come from Peter Davenport of the National UFO Reporting Center, who had received two written reports from witnesses at O’Hare and had posted them on the organization’s website.

Hilkevitch’s story garnered worldwide attention. He interviewed witnesses – credible witnesses, those who are trained to determine that an object is an airplane and not something else. And they were unanimous in their belief that the object they saw was not an airplane. They all said the disc was soundless, that it hovered over the United terminal for about five minutes,  and that when it shot away, it punched a hole in the sky.

He was approached by researchers from major universities, hungry for information who had been stonewalled by the government agencies. He had been asked to appear on every major news channel, the media was hungry for whatever he had to say.  In leaked footage before an interview on January 1, 2007 with the local CLTV news, Hilkevitch mentioned that United had now reversed their stance and admitted that employees had reported the sightings to them.

But the FAA was sticking to their explanation: It’s a weather phenomenon and they made it clear they wouldn’t investigate any further.

Major media outlets covered this story – MSNBC, ABC, CBS, CNN. Unfortunately, the guy we liked back then – Keith Olbermann – invited astronomer Derrick Pitts of the Franklin Institute to give his take on the event and Pitts basically wrote off the sightings to “holiday cheer.” Gary Tuchman of CNN interviewed “Joe,” a United Airlines employee whose face was shadowed. He said he had worked at O’Hare for awhile, described what he’d said, and stated it was not an airplane not like anything he had ever seen.

The problem, of course, is that none of the mainstream media boys knew how to approach this story.

Leslie Kean, journalist and author of UFOs: Generals, Pilots, and Government Official Go on the Record, revisited the case in her book.  “The safety concerns of the United employees with regards to this incursion of restricted airspace were apparently of no concern to the FAA, which is tasked to protect our airspace and aircraft.”

In the video at the top of the post, Kean goes on to dismantle the FAA’s weather phenomenon theory. This woman was Budd Hopkins’ partner toward the end of his life and she knows her stuff. Her book is fascinating. And because she sticks to witnesses that the mainstream considers to be “reputable” – pilots, military personnel, aviation experts – it’s difficult to discount her basic premise: “In the meantime, to many observers of these patterns of denial, the official dereliction of duty regarding credible UFO reports remains almost as incomprehensible as the flying discs themselves.”

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Every time I thought I found a video of this sighting, I received a message that the video had been removed by You Tube. I ran across one photo taken from Olbermann’s brief mention of this event, but it’s not too clear. So, in the end, we are left with more questions. And my question is this: If you’re going to hover above one of this country’s busiest airports, why not just land? It’s an airport, dude. Air traffic control will guide you in.

 

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11s Everywhere

Today, I had an appointment (randomly assigned by computer) at the motor vehicle department to renew my driver’s license. Because of changes in Homeland Security laws, you now have to present a passport, two pieces of evidence that you live where you say you live, your social security card, and of course, your license. I dislike dealing with bureaucracies, so en route to the department, I stated, aloud, that I would like to experience some sort of synchro.  I mean, if I have to deal with a government agency, I deserved to at least have a synchro, right?

My appointment was for 11:10.  I walked in two minutes early, saw all these people sitting around, waiting, and thought, No, please, I don’t want to waste time waiting.  I glanced at the receipt the woman in the lobby had given me, looked at the computerized board, then heard my number called. Report to window 11.

 Really? An appointment at 11:10 at window 11? I figured this would go well.  The woman at window 11 spoke with a slight accent. Hispanic, I thought, but probably not Cuban. She was cheerful and pleasant and we joked about all the paperwork. Then she opened my passport and smiled.

“How long has it been since you were last in Caracas?” she asked in Spanish.

“1988. I went back with my husband and parents.” And right then I knew she was Venezuelan. “Where in Venezuela are you from?”

“Maracay.”

A map of Venezuela unfolded immediately in my head. Maracay lies south of Caracas, where I was born and grew up. One of our family vacations when I was a kid was to Maracay.  “I went there as a kid. It’s such a gorgeous country, isn’t it?”

Precioso,” she said, as she typed away, entering all my info into the computer.

“But Chavez messed it up.”

She nodded. In Spanish, she explained how she had left Venezuela fourteen years ago, had married an American, and they always talked about how they would travel there when it was safe. “But it was never safe.  We never got there. He died last year.”

It was incredible to me that she could be sitting there at her computer, in her government booth, telling me – a total stranger – about the death of her husband. In her shoes, I would be in a mental ward. Rob gone, me raising Megan by myself,  a divergent path, no thank you. I expressed my  sympathy and asked if she had children. She pulled out her iPhone and navigated to a photo of the cutest 11-year-old girl in a bathing suit and sunglasses, playing to the camera.

“Enjoy it. They grow up too fast,” I said.  “My daughter is twenty-three. Are you ever homesick?”

She thought a moment. “My parents are here. But I am homesick for the country. What about you?”

“Always.” A moment passed. “Do you get a lot of Venezuelans through here?”

“Rarely. Mostly Cubans. And immigrants.” She handed me my passport and other papers. Our eyes locked, a connection happened. Then she said,  “Go stand by the blue curtain so I can get your photo.”

When I left  the building, I marveled at how the universe had manifested my desire rather quickly, all things considered. It’s about seven miles from our house to the closest motor vehicle department. The chances that my clerk would be a Venezuelan were slim.

And from that point forward, my day unfolded with shocking smoothness, ending this evening with a thunderstorm, unusual for April. It kept the cats and Noah inside and drew Rob and I out onto the porch. “This is great for April,” he said.  “April and May are usually our drought months.”

And if it continues, it bodes well for Florida’s hurricane season.

Now it’s 1:01 a.m. and the rain is still falling. I glance out my window, where a light shines down on the most magnificent plant with lavender flowers, and a waterfall from the roof.

In my mind, I am suddenly flying over Venezuela’s Angel Falls with my dad and Rob, the three of us marveling at the tepuis – cliffs, high plateaus  – and the tallest waterfall in the world cascading into utter beauty and majesty.

And it all started at the driver’s license office, with an 11:10  a.m. appointment, at window 11. Now, as I am about to press the publish button, the post time reads 1:11. REALLY?  By the time I’ve over that adrenaline shock, the clock has moved on. All these 11s leave me hopeful, buoyant, in the flow.

 

Posted in 11, 111, 11:11, synchronicity | 16 Comments

Game Change

Note: Good ole Mercury retro played havoc with our radio interview on March 10. Dia finally recorded it – rather than doing it live – and posted it on You Tube. (This post was written before Merc went direct on March 17).

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Our daughter is a true movie aficionado. Mention a movie, an actor or actress, and she can recite verse and chapter and IMDB history. So whenever she comes home for a visit, we end up watching a lot of movies we have missed. One of these was Game Change, a 2012 film based on the book of the same name. It follows John McCain’s 2008 presidential campaign, from his selection of Alaska Governor Sarah Palin as his running mate to their ultimate defeat in the general election.

Julianne Moore plays Palin in this film and she looks so much like Palin, has her voice and mannerisms so perfected, that for a moment when she first appeared on screen, I thought she was Palin. Steve Schmidt, who was McCain’s main advisor during the file, is played by Woody Harrelson, one of those actors whose face you recognize, even if you can’t exactly place him in movies.

Harrelson is  terrific in everything he does and as Schmidt, now an MSNBC contributor (on the moderate Republican side), you understand exactly what he went through trying to educate Palin so that she would be up to snuff on interviews, with speeches, in the public. Ed Harris, who needs no intro,  plays a bewildered McCain who wanted to “do something daring,” something that fit his image as a maverick.

So when his advisors suggested Palin as a running mate, an obscure governor from Alaska who was good-looking and went against party politics on her stance about oil companies and Alaska drilling, McCain followed their advice. The film is interspersed with actual news clips. There’s the famous  Palin/Couric interview, where it’s obvious that Palin’s foreign policy experience rests on her claim that she can see  Russia from her front porch. We also see clips of the VP debate between Biden and Palin.

I came away from this film feeling sort of sorry for Palin,  who apparently didn’t understand the kind of maelstrom into which she would be drawn. But what I felt most of all was gratitude that the McCain/Palin ticket didn’t win. To me, it seems like one of those alternate offshoots of history, that maybe there is a place where these two won and, well, no telling what sort of horrors might be occurring there now.

I mean, really. McCain as prez – we’d be at war with any country who didn’t agree with us on every talking point, and Palin would be urging all of us to retire in Alaska. I’m so deeply grateful that era is over. That’s what I brought away from this movie. That and an appreciation for superb acting and a respect for that adage about how if you don’t grasp your own history, you are doomed to repeat it.

Yuck.

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3 Questions About Synchronicity

On March 31, we were interviewed by Alejandro Rojas of   Open Minds Radio/TV  and the link went up  on April 1. He was the first radio host we’ve spoken with who focused closely on synchronicity. He asked several intriguing questions that prompted this post.  Do aliens experience synchronicity? Do they generate synchronicities? And what, exactly, is the dark trickster as it relates to encounters and abductions?

 Do aliens experience synchronicity?

 To answer this question, we have to ask what synchronicity is for humans. A synchronicity can act as a confirmation, a warning, a wake-up call. It can bring emotional issues and decisions into greater clarity and can signal communication being the living and the dead. It can nudge us to take on a particular creative project, to move or stay put, to get married or divorced or to start a family. And yes, synchronicity can be a trickster, a Smeagol in disguise that blows open our consciousness in some way.

Synchronicity often makes us feel as though the universe is speaking to us. That’s how writer Deirdre Blair probably felt after she won the National Book Award for her biography of Samuel Beckett. “Suddenly, quite a lot of people who didn’t know each other and in several cases didn’t know me, either, were asking what my next book might be and had I thought of writing about Jung?”

In the author’s note at the beginning of Jung: A Biography, she wrote that she was uncomfortable with the way Jung’s name kept surfacing, but recognized the peculiar confluence of suggestions as a synchronicity. She started researching Jung’s life  and work. The irony of her synchronicity was that she was writing about the man who coined the term and wrote extensively about it.

Synchronicity, then, hints at a deeper order in the universe, what physicist David Bohm called the implicated or enfolded order, a sort of primal soup that births everything, even time. He referred to our external realities as the explicate or unfolded order.  So, if this deeper order exists,  then wouldn’t aliens experience synchronicity, too?

Well, it would seem so. But the challenge here is that we don’t know what “aliens” are, what type of reality they inhabit, or the nature of their consciousness. Are they ETs? Inter-dimensional beings?  Are they from a parallel universe? Are they us from the future? Are they somehow connected with the dead?

Abductees tell us they can manipulate human consciousness, can apparently “float” people out windows, through doors, and up into crafts. We are told by abductees that these entities convey information through telepathy and also through images on TV-like screens.  If these abilities are genuine rather than screen memories, then it would seem they have surpassed any abilities that humans have. We can’t possibly know whether they experience synchronicity because we don’t have answers to the most basic questions about who or what they are.

As Whitley Strieber  has said, “these encounters may be our first true quantum discovery in the large-scale world: The very act of  observing it may be creating it as a concrete actuality, with sense, definition, and a consciousness of its own.”

Do aliens generate synchronicities?

We do know that synchronicities are often associated with encounters and abductions, both during and after the event. We wrote about a number of these synchronicities in Aliens in the Backyard. But we’ve found that just in writing about this material, synchronicities occur. For instance, when we were working on Connie J. Cannon’s story about her 1981 abduction to Warner Rob’s Air Force Base,  we happened to check the statistic counter for our blog and were astonished that moments earlier someone from Warner Robins, Georgia, had arrived at our blog by Googling: Warner Robins military secrets.  What are the odds?

It’s likely that the nature of the encounter and abduction material  creates an atmosphere in which synchronicity can flourish. For someone who has experienced an encounter or abduction, the search for answers, illumination and understanding seems to trigger synchronicity. But that doesn’t necessarily mean the entities are generating them.

Can humans generate them?  How would we even begin to do such a thing? It’s not as if you wave a Harry Potter wand and presto-chango, the synchro happens. The most humans can do is to create an inner receptivity, an emotional and intellectual receptivity, that is conducive to synchronicity. But just because it’s unlikely that we can generate synchros, does that mean these entities can’t either?

Not necessarily. Again, it comes back to the  fundamental questions: who or what are they? If they can manipulate our consciousness, our reality,  if they can shape shift and do the other things that abductees claim, then perhaps they can generate synchronicities. Perhaps their intervention in our lives acts as a launchpad for the synchronicities that swirl around encounters and abductions.

And what, exactly, is the dark trickster as it relates to encounters and abductions?

 Smeagol is the personification of the trickster archetype. He usually had a private agenda of one kind or another that prompted him to mislead the hobbits on numerous occasions and to trick them into believing he could be trusted.    

In Native American mythology, the coyote is often depicted as a trickster. He’s cunning, adaptable, a shape-shifter who uses his mischievousness to drive home a point and make people laugh.

The trickster is prevalent in mythology and legend. The Norwegian god, Loki, the son of two giants, possessed great ingenuity but was really a rascal and raconteur who enjoyed stirring up trouble. Loki was a shape shifter who could take various forms- horse, falcon, a fly – and could even change gender.

Diane Fine, one of the lifelong abductees in our book, recounted an encounter with a Loki-type trickster. After attending a rock concert with her husband, she awakened later that night to find herself on a craft with three Grays and a taller enetity. The rock star whom she had just seen was asleep at her feet.

“What’s he doing here?” she demanded.

Telepathically, one of the Grays replied: We thought you liked him,  and the rock star promptly shape-shifted into another Gray.

The dark trickster can also be an ally. In 1991, Diane worked at a marina in California and went up and down stairs frequently. Her left knee developed problems.  One night, she found herself on the familiar surgical table on a craft, with three Grays and a taller being operating on her knee.

“If you can fix my knee, then why not fix my auto-immune disorder?”

The answer, conveyed telepathically, was: We can’t. It’s karmic. The knee is mechanical.

Diane lost consciousness. When she awakened the next morning, she found a small incision in her knee. It healed within two days and her knee has never bothered her again.

The  trickster wears many guises. While we were writing Aliens in the Backyard, we were contacted by Rob’s former agent about a new project. e had recently He Tony had recently launched a new venture, bookazines, a cross between books and magazines, and asked if we would be interested in writing a couple of them. He told us that the editor for these bookazines was Bob Guccione Jr, the son of the man who started OMNI Magazine.

We were floored. Back in the mid-1980s, we wrote for OMNI’s anti-matter section, which covered UFOs, abductions, encounters and everything paranormal. It’s how we got our start as freelance writers. Because of OMNI, we met Betty Hill and Budd Hopkins and our interest in this field burgeoned. For us, things had come full circle.

We even experienced a rather amusing trickster synchro with Alejandro Reyes, the radio host who asked these three provocative questions. We thought that Open Minds would be a great venue for an article about synchronicity and encounters and intended to ask him about it once we received the link for the show. But he beat us to it. When he sent us the link, he invited us to send him a submission.

 

Posted in aliens, aliens in the backyard, radio, synchronicity | 14 Comments

Navajo Nation Rangers

Here’s a video about a law enforcement agency that investigates the paranormal and UFO cases.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=giv0zBPXmYg

Posted in synchronicity | 7 Comments

TED Doubles Down

You may recall we wrote a post here about our surprise in learning that TED, an organization that lets brilliant people speak out about their ideas, removed talks by Rupert Sheldrake and Graham Hancock. Sheldrake questioned mainstream science’s approach to the paranormal and Hancock’s ideas are on the frontiers of science.

TED was heavily criticized for removing those talks from their archives. Their reaction to the controversy, astonishingly, was to double-down by cancelling an upcoming TEDx event in Hollywood entitled, “Brother Can You Spare a Paradigm.” It featured speakers like Russel Targ, Marianne Williamson, Marilyn Schlitz and Larry Dossey.

The Hollywood TEDx event was promoted this way: “(The event) will illuminate the urgent need to change our fundamental value system or worldview to one in which humanity pulls together rather than separately. This view would supersede the current worldview where whoever has the most toys wins. The new view is based on what science tells us about a quantum universe, with everything being interconnected and all of us being interdependent. A new science-based vision won’t take hold, though, until people know and understand that there are more humane alternatives available.”

That description apparently aroused the ire of  some powerful TED backers who ardently defend the validity of mainstream science. In cancelling the event, an email sent to the organizer by TED described the ideas it was presenting as “pseudoscience.”

Futurist Marcus Anthony has written extensively about the TED controversy, including three articles that were published in  Conscious Life News, in which he attempted to show how the controversy could be settled. He also brought this latest TED kurfuffle to our attention.

Marcus writes, “It is now clear that TED is controlled by a narrow and extremist skeptics collaboration which is trying to shut down knowledge and information which challenges scientific materialism. I am of the firm opinion that such ideas should be freely discussed. How else are they to be debated or examined rationally? Suppression will give these speakers and ideas more publicity.”

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More commentary on the TED controversy also appears at Weiler Psi.

Shortly after reading the above description of the cancelled TEDx event, which calls for a greater recognition of how everyone and everything is interconnected and interdependent, I happened upon a blog post in Sacred Spiral of Light, which included this synchronistic comment. Wouldn’t you know, synchronicity comes into play in multiples and ties it altogether!

“For me noticing synchronicity is akin to noticing that we are not separate beings but rather all connected…it is being in touch with the wonder, the magic and the power of the Universe. It is realising that the Universe is in constant communication with us all…if we can but slow down a tad and notice…”

Thank you for that, Elaine.

 

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Happy Easter

In 1919, a WWI soldier, Louis Houghton, brought a suitcase full of hybrid lily bulbs to the southern coast of Oregon. He gave them to family and friends to plant. The climate was apparently ideal for growing the lily, which is native to the Ryukyu Islands of Japan. By 1945, more than a thousand growers were producing bulbs for the commercial market. They have a sales window of only two weeks a year, but Easter lilies are the fourth largest potted plant crop in the U.S.

The lily in the photo above is in our yard. One Easter five or six  years ago, we bought it and later planted in our yard. Even though Easter falls on a different day every year, this gorgeous lily blooms without failure every year during the Easter weekend.

In 2012, for instance, Easter fell a week later than it does this year, on April 8. In 2011, Easter fell three weeks later than this year, on April 24. But year after year, this  lily blooms right on time. How does it know to do that? Is it Nature or magic or both? Or something else altogether?

Happy Easter to all of you!

 

 

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A Saturday Chuckle

This one was sent to us by Nancy McMoneagle. It pretty much sums it up!

 

 

Posted in synchronicity | 4 Comments