A synchronicity is a meaningful coincidence — two things happening at the same time with no causal connection between them, yet feeling unmistakably related. Carl Jung coined the term. Most people have experienced it. Almost no one tracks it.
Exact— You hear the same word or phrase from two separate sources at (or about) the same time, with no chance of one influencing the other. You're reading a book and someone across the room says the word you just read. A song lyric matches a text message arriving at that exact moment.
Nuanced— Something feels synchronistic but can't be pinned to an exact phrase. A theme keeps appearing. A person keeps coming up. A feeling arrives from two directions at once.
A single synchronicity is a curiosity. A year of them is a pattern.
This app is built around one question: if you actually tracked these moments, what would you learn? How often do they happen? Do they cluster around certain places, certain people, certain states of mind? Are there seasons, or cycles?
You can't answer those questions from memory. You can from a log.
Every moment you log is private by default. When you choose to share one publicly, you control how precisely your location is recorded — down to the neighborhood, the approximate area, or not at all. Exact coordinates are never stored for public entries.
Future versions will let you connect with others and see patterns across the community.
Jeremy Pollock, San Francisco. Built for personal use and opened up because it seemed like something other people might want too.