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 by Amy L. Lansky 
			July 04, 2015 
 
 
			 
 
 
			 
 
			 
 You're sitting in a café or standing in line at the supermarket, and suddenly you meet a complete stranger who, for some inexplicable reason, seems like an old friend. You are on the same "wavelength." Your energies mesh, and afterward, you walk away feeling invigorated and optimistic - perhaps even younger! 
 
			That's the power of similar 
			vibrations... 
 
			Entering into a collective experience 
			with others often seems to magnify its effects, because everybody is 
			literally "vibrating" in the same way. Just as two violins playing 
			the same note create a resonance that reinforces and amplifies the 
			sound, the effect of two or more people getting onto the "same 
			wavelength" can create an enhanced experience that exceeds the sum 
			of its parts. 
 
			Both medical studies and practical 
			experience have shown that when patients attend support-group 
			meetings with others who have similar health problems, their 
			collective energy provides a stimulus that enables change and 
			healing to occur. 
 For example, researchers have found that not only can humans use intention to influence the behavior of otherwise randomly-behaving machines, but that connected couples working together - that is, people "on the same wavelength" - have the ability to exert even greater influence. [1] 
 Taking a lead from these results, researchers Dean Radin and Roger Nelson of Princeton placed random-output devices at a variety of intense community venues: music concerts, sporting events, and even Burning Man gatherings in Nevada. 
 
			The results were significant and nothing 
			short of mind-boggling. As the researchers predicted, the machines 
			did indeed deviate from their otherwise normal random behavior in 
			the presence of these collective "high vibe" events. [2, 3] 
 
			One series of studies on the effects of 
			transcendental meditation, for example, found that if enough 
			meditators work together and focus their intentions on a specific 
			goal, they can achieve some pretty amazing things - for instance, 
			lower the amount of violent crime in a city for extended periods of 
			time. [4] 
 His first striking encounter with a "meaningful coincidence" of this kind occurred when one of his patients was describing her dream about a golden scarab beetle. 
 Suddenly, Jung heard a rapping on the window. 
 When he opened it, a rose chafer beetle - the insect most similar to a scarab in Jung's region - flew into the room. 
 
			Jung quickly put two and two together. 
			He realized that the mythological meaning of the scarab - an 
			ancient Egyptian symbol for rebirth - was highly pertinent to his 
			patient's problems, and that the recounting of her dream was the 
			reason why the insect had appeared in waking life. 
 Each field of meaning has a particular vibration to it, and objects, individuals, emotions, symbols, dreams, and events that share this vibration may resonate with one another and then, as a result, co-occur in time and space. If so, this may be what causes a synchronicity. 
 
			In other words, in addition to simple 
			cause and effect ("A causes B causes C"), synchronicity may be 
			another fundamental mechanism that determines how our reality 
			unfolds. 
 
			Here are two pretty amazing examples 
			from my own life. 
 Sheldrake proposed the concept of morphic resonance as a way for similar or related things, such as members of the same species or emotionally connected individuals, to communicate with one another. 
 He then used his theory to explain a variety of otherwise unexplained phenomena - for example, how animals have been able to evolve similarly on very distant parts of the planet, even when no physical contact between populations was possible. [7] 
 After a day of reading and writing about Sheldrake's ideas, I was greeted by my husband returning home from his job at a computer research laboratory in Silicon Valley. 
 
			What?! 
 In fact, Sheldrake's talk was poorly attended. It just so happened that one of the lab's researchers had met Sheldrake in Scotland and had invited him to speak the next time he was in our area. Before I could even finish writing about Rupert Sheldrake, I was sitting and having lunch with him. 
 
			Coincidence? Or synchronicity? 
 In 2013, we decided to drive cross-country from California to Canada for the first time, and we brought along our iPod filled with many thousands of songs to serve as our musical accompaniment. Over the course of our trek, we drove 5,000 miles meandering through the northern states of the USA on our way to Canada. 
 
			At the end of the summer, we headed 
			south to my hometown of Buffalo, New York, to visit with family and 
			friends before flying home to California. 
 I was happy to come back home. And just as we were beginning to see road signs indicating that the Peace Bridge was near, our iPod started playing a song that we had not heard all summer. 
 First we heard the introductory bars of music, and then Ray Charles began singing: 
 As the song continued, I marveled at this amazing "coincidence." 
 
			I felt blessed, transfixed, delighted, 
			charmed. And sure enough, just at the very moment when we hit the 
			center of the bridge where three flags fly - first the Canadian 
			maple leaf, followed by an international flag, and then the American 
			stars and stripes - Ray's voice reached the climax of America the 
			Beautiful: "From sea to shining sea!" Wow... 
 
			Instead, we are all 
			
			active co-creators, and not 
			just in obvious ways. Our individual states of being, and especially 
			our collective states of being, affect everything and everyone 
			around us - indeed, how reality itself unfolds. 
 
			In fact, some spiritual teachers stress 
			that an increase in synchronicities can be a sign that one is on the 
			right path. Knowing this, I was even more thrilled when Ray 
			Charles's voice heralded my return to America. 
 
			They really do have an effect, perhaps 
			even greater than you realize... 
 
 
			 
 
 
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