synchronicity
Noun
syn·chro·nic·i·ty \ ˌsiŋ-krə-ˈni-sə-te,
plural synchronicities
Definition of synchronicity
1
: the quality or fact of being synchronous
2
: the coincidental occurrence of events and especially psychic events (such as similar thoughts in widely separated persons or a mental image of an unexpected event before it happens) that seem related but are not explained by conventional mechanisms of causality -used especially in the psychology of C. G. Jung
Another memory that leaked back was one of my father forcing me to help him hide a body of a therapist he had "offed." I'd had recurring dreams about stuffing a carpet into a wall and plastering over it since I was young. I never realized it was an actual memory until my meditation practice was improving. I remembered him picking me up and taking me to my grandmother's house. He made me help drag a body in the house and into the middle of a large, red, expensive looking rug. Then rolled it up and put it back in the car. We drove for a while in silence and where we finally stopped was at a two-story building still being constructed. There was a space in the far back left corner where we stood the carpet on end and squeezed it into a crevice just big enough to fit the rolled carpet then covered it with a sheet of plywood.
There was someone else there waiting in a cement truck with a boom attached for us to move so he could pour cement over the carpet from above sealing it in the concrete. My dad brought me to a quiet spot on the other side of the building and took out his gold pen he always had with him. I remembered him clicking the pen six rapid times and saying I wouldn't remember this. Little did I know this would be the first time I was exposed to hypnotic suggestions. Through later investigating, I discovered some of the LSU law students were taught about hypnosis and my father was one.
Noun
syn·chro·nic·i·ty \ ˌsiŋ-krə-ˈni-sə-te,
plural synchronicities
Definition of synchronicity
1
: the quality or fact of being synchronous
2
: the coincidental occurrence of events and especially psychic events (such as similar thoughts in widely separated persons or a mental image of an unexpected event before it happens) that seem related but are not explained by conventional mechanisms of causality -used especially in the psychology of C. G. Jung
Another memory that leaked back was one of my father forcing me to help him hide a body of a therapist he had "offed." I'd had recurring dreams about stuffing a carpet into a wall and plastering over it since I was young. I never realized it was an actual memory until my meditation practice was improving. I remembered him picking me up and taking me to my grandmother's house. He made me help drag a body in the house and into the middle of a large, red, expensive looking rug. Then rolled it up and put it back in the car. We drove for a while in silence and where we finally stopped was at a two-story building still being constructed. There was a space in the far back left corner where we stood the carpet on end and squeezed it into a crevice just big enough to fit the rolled carpet then covered it with a sheet of plywood.
There was someone else there waiting in a cement truck with a boom attached for us to move so he could pour cement over the carpet from above sealing it in the concrete. My dad brought me to a quiet spot on the other side of the building and took out his gold pen he always had with him. I remembered him clicking the pen six rapid times and saying I wouldn't remember this. Little did I know this would be the first time I was exposed to hypnotic suggestions. Through later investigating, I discovered some of the LSU law students were taught about hypnosis and my father was one.
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