Synchronicity is not fate; it is a meaningful coincidence that asks for your attention
Sometimes an inner state and an outer event meet with strange precision — you think of someone and they call; a word keeps returning. Jung called this synchronicity. It is not proof of fate; it is an invitation to notice what the moment touches in you.
Meaning, not cause
In Jung’s language, synchronicity describes events linked by meaning rather than by cause. A stopped clock and a piece of news are not causally connected; what matters is the meaning the coincidence carries for the person living it.
Jung was careful here. This is about felt significance, not a hidden mechanism steering the world. The question is not “what does the universe want from me,” but “why did this land in me, now?”
The meaning is yours to find
A synchronicity is not a fixed sign with one correct reading. The same coincidence can mean different things to different people, or nothing at all.
Treating it as an omen (“this means I should quit”) closes it too fast. Treating it as a question (“what was I already feeling when this happened?”) keeps it open and alive.
Start with one small question
What was I preoccupied with, inwardly, just before the coincidence happened?
If I set the idea of a sign aside, what feeling or decision does this moment seem to point toward?