Syncronicity Quotes
Quotes tagged as "syncronicity"
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“The more than 2,500 respondents to the WCS that I constructed while at the
University of Missouri reported that they “occasionally” experienced the pain of a
loved one at a distance. In Stevenson’s review of 160 published simulpathity
cases, one-third involved a parent and child. Friends and acquaintances were in-
volved in about 28 percent. Husband and wife pairs were involved in about 14 per-
cent and siblings about 15 percent. The similar relatively high percentages of par-
ent-child and friend-acquaintance simulpathity suggests that emotional bonds,
rather than genetic similarities, facilitate these interactions. Stevenson’s reports are
well-documented by follow-up interviews with both the coincider and the people who witnessed the event.
I decided to name this coincidence pattern simulpathity, from the Latin word
simul, which means “simultaneous,” and the Greek root pathy, which means both
“suffering” and “feeling,” as in the words sympathy and empathy. With sympathy
(“suffering together”), the sympathetic person is aware of the suffering of the
other. With simulpathity, the person involved is usually not consciously aware of
the suffering of the other (except for those pairs with whom this shared pain is a
regular occurrence). Only later is the simultaneity of the distress recognized. No
explanatory mechanism is implied.”
― Meaningful Coincidences: How and Why Synchronicity and Serendipity Happen
University of Missouri reported that they “occasionally” experienced the pain of a
loved one at a distance. In Stevenson’s review of 160 published simulpathity
cases, one-third involved a parent and child. Friends and acquaintances were in-
volved in about 28 percent. Husband and wife pairs were involved in about 14 per-
cent and siblings about 15 percent. The similar relatively high percentages of par-
ent-child and friend-acquaintance simulpathity suggests that emotional bonds,
rather than genetic similarities, facilitate these interactions. Stevenson’s reports are
well-documented by follow-up interviews with both the coincider and the people who witnessed the event.
I decided to name this coincidence pattern simulpathity, from the Latin word
simul, which means “simultaneous,” and the Greek root pathy, which means both
“suffering” and “feeling,” as in the words sympathy and empathy. With sympathy
(“suffering together”), the sympathetic person is aware of the suffering of the
other. With simulpathity, the person involved is usually not consciously aware of
the suffering of the other (except for those pairs with whom this shared pain is a
regular occurrence). Only later is the simultaneity of the distress recognized. No
explanatory mechanism is implied.”
― Meaningful Coincidences: How and Why Synchronicity and Serendipity Happen
“Connect all the dots and understand the occurrence of meaningful coincidences in life”
― A World of Yoga: 700 Asanas for Mindfulness and Well-Being
― A World of Yoga: 700 Asanas for Mindfulness and Well-Being
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