"People now are experiencing what they thought as coincidences
in their lives. But the truth is there is no such thing as coincidence because everything we experience has a purpose in our
life. If we always encounter such phenomenon like the 11:11, the double or triple digit numbers, and repetitive
symbols, it's about we should realize the truth we are living for a particular purpose. For me, those experiences
would motivate us to discover, and to remember our mission in this life -- the purpose of our existence
in the physical reality."
Synchronicity: It is a term created by Dr. Carl
Jung (1875-1961) in 1930 to denote two separate and dissimilar events that occur at the very same instant and are, in fact,
related. Jung theorized that in synchronicity there is a blending together of incidents that cannot be explained rationally
but is significant and meaningful.
Carl Jung (1875-1961)
The Father of Analytical Psychology
Archetypes are the contents of the collective unconscious.
Carl Jung also called them dominants, imagos, mythological or primordial images, and a few other names, but archetypes seems
to have won out over these. An archetype is an unlearned tendency to experience things in a certain way. The archetype has
no form of its own, but it acts as an "organizing principle" on the things we see or do. It works the way that instincts work
in Freud's theory: At first, the baby just wants something to eat, without knowing what it wants. It has a rather indefinite
yearning which, nevertheless, can be satisfied by some things and not by others. Later, with experience, the child begins
to yearn for something more specific when it is hungry -- a bottle, a cookie, a broiled lobster, a slice of New York style
pizza. The archetype is like a black hole in space: You only know its there by how it draws matter and light to itself.