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Sep 15, 2025

Sep 15, 2025

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The FLT Framework

The FLT Framework

A Compass for Navigating Synchronicities

A Compass for Navigating Synchronicities

Framework

Framework

Framework

Tech & Innovation

Tech & Innovation

Tech & Innovation

TL;DR: Start tracking Feeling, Location, and Time (FLT) to document synchronicities. Go beyond journaling and start training your “inner tech” compass for a future where time is perceived as more of a spiral, not just a linear line.

Why FLT Matters Now

Most of us still treat time as a straight line. Past → present → future. But if you’ve explored the world of anthropology, psychology, physics, or even astrology, you will have heard or felt the pull of synchronicities — patterns, alignments, or odd repetitions.

According to some knowledge systems, time behaves more like a spiral. It loops, folds, and connects events across distance. The challenge isn’t whether synchronicities exist. The challenge is whether we can perceive, record, and navigate them with precision.

That’s where FLT (Feeling, Location, Time) comes in.

What is FLT?

FLT is a simple triad for documenting experiences:

  • Feeling: What was the emotional or physical resonance?

  • Location: Where were you when it occurred? (physical or digital coordinates)

  • Time: When did it happen? (note both clock time and, if possible, natural markers like moon phase, season, or planetary transit)

Instead of letting synchronicities slip away, FLT turns them into traceable data points.

How FLT Connects to Boundaries

From Poland shooting down Russian drones, to the assassination of Charlie Kirk, September 2025 has already shown multiple signs of of “boundary testing.” The lesson? Stay clear on what is yours versus what belongs to others.

FLT acts like a calibration tool. By tracking what you feel, where you are, and when it occurred, we begin to see which signals repeat, which ones drain us, and which ones guide us. Over time, you’ll sharpen your ability to sense what is truly yours versus what you’ve absorbed from the collective.

What Interstellar Taught Us

In the movie Interstellar, time is revealed as relative, layered, and non-linear. One of the film’s key insights is that survival depends on perceiving time differently than we’re used to. FLT is a practical step toward that mindset shift. Just as explorers once learned to navigate by the stars, we’re learning to navigate by patterns — feelings, locations, and times — across space-time. And we can use the digital world to enhance (not replace).

Turning FLT Into Practice

  1. Create a Record: Use a notebook or digital tool. I use Notion.

  2. Log Three Data Points:

  3. Spot Patterns: Over weeks or months, review your entries. Do certain feelings cluster at certain times? Do certain locations trigger repeating synchronicities?

  4. Trust the Signal: This isn’t superstition. It’s system training. By tracking FLT, you’re building a personal database of synchronicity—one that will become a compass in future states of complexity.

Why This Matters for the Future

At first, documenting FLT may feel abstract. But think ahead:

  • If time is an illusion (a necessary one), then it can be expanded to a spiral model, where patterns—not linear memory—may become your true navigation system.

  • In a future with digital telepathy (happening now), you’ll need a sharp sense of what thoughts and feelings are yours.

  • When synchronicities accelerate, those who have documented them will be the ones who can orient, not drift.

FLT is your preparation protocol. Start now, before the need becomes urgent.

A Template for You

I’ll be sharing a Notion template below so you can start today. It will let you log:

  • Feeling (with a simple 1–5 scale plus notes)

  • Location (auto-tagged or manual)

  • Time (with natural cycles if you want to add them)

  • Reflection (optional insights)

Think of it as your synchronicity ledger.


Closing Insight: FLT is a compass disguised as a journal. By tracking feeling, location, and time, you train yourself to navigate a future where synchronicity is not anomaly but orientation.


Explore. Test it. You might already be sensing the patterns.


Click here to download the Notion template


TL;DR: Start tracking Feeling, Location, and Time (FLT) to document synchronicities. Go beyond journaling and start training your “inner tech” compass for a future where time is perceived as more of a spiral, not just a linear line.

Why FLT Matters Now

Most of us still treat time as a straight line. Past → present → future. But if you’ve explored the world of anthropology, psychology, physics, or even astrology, you will have heard or felt the pull of synchronicities — patterns, alignments, or odd repetitions.

According to some knowledge systems, time behaves more like a spiral. It loops, folds, and connects events across distance. The challenge isn’t whether synchronicities exist. The challenge is whether we can perceive, record, and navigate them with precision.

That’s where FLT (Feeling, Location, Time) comes in.

What is FLT?

FLT is a simple triad for documenting experiences:

  • Feeling: What was the emotional or physical resonance?

  • Location: Where were you when it occurred? (physical or digital coordinates)

  • Time: When did it happen? (note both clock time and, if possible, natural markers like moon phase, season, or planetary transit)

Instead of letting synchronicities slip away, FLT turns them into traceable data points.

How FLT Connects to Boundaries

From Poland shooting down Russian drones, to the assassination of Charlie Kirk, September 2025 has already shown multiple signs of of “boundary testing.” The lesson? Stay clear on what is yours versus what belongs to others.

FLT acts like a calibration tool. By tracking what you feel, where you are, and when it occurred, we begin to see which signals repeat, which ones drain us, and which ones guide us. Over time, you’ll sharpen your ability to sense what is truly yours versus what you’ve absorbed from the collective.

What Interstellar Taught Us

In the movie Interstellar, time is revealed as relative, layered, and non-linear. One of the film’s key insights is that survival depends on perceiving time differently than we’re used to. FLT is a practical step toward that mindset shift. Just as explorers once learned to navigate by the stars, we’re learning to navigate by patterns — feelings, locations, and times — across space-time. And we can use the digital world to enhance (not replace).

Turning FLT Into Practice

  1. Create a Record: Use a notebook or digital tool. I use Notion.

  2. Log Three Data Points:

  3. Spot Patterns: Over weeks or months, review your entries. Do certain feelings cluster at certain times? Do certain locations trigger repeating synchronicities?

  4. Trust the Signal: This isn’t superstition. It’s system training. By tracking FLT, you’re building a personal database of synchronicity—one that will become a compass in future states of complexity.

Why This Matters for the Future

At first, documenting FLT may feel abstract. But think ahead:

  • If time is an illusion (a necessary one), then it can be expanded to a spiral model, where patterns—not linear memory—may become your true navigation system.

  • In a future with digital telepathy (happening now), you’ll need a sharp sense of what thoughts and feelings are yours.

  • When synchronicities accelerate, those who have documented them will be the ones who can orient, not drift.

FLT is your preparation protocol. Start now, before the need becomes urgent.

A Template for You

I’ll be sharing a Notion template below so you can start today. It will let you log:

  • Feeling (with a simple 1–5 scale plus notes)

  • Location (auto-tagged or manual)

  • Time (with natural cycles if you want to add them)

  • Reflection (optional insights)

Think of it as your synchronicity ledger.


Closing Insight: FLT is a compass disguised as a journal. By tracking feeling, location, and time, you train yourself to navigate a future where synchronicity is not anomaly but orientation.


Explore. Test it. You might already be sensing the patterns.


Click here to download the Notion template


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© Copyright 2025 George (Siosi) Samuels

Subscribe to my AI newsletter

AI signals, essays, and tool/stack reviews. 3x a week.

© Copyright 2025 George (Siosi) Samuels

Subscribe to my AI newsletter

AI signals, essays, and tool/stack reviews. 3x a week.

© Copyright 2025 George (Siosi) Samuels