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11:11 The Time Prompt Phenomenon: Mysterious Signs, Sequences, and Synchronicities

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“If you ever wondered about the repeated number sequences you see and what they might be trying to tell you, Jones and Flaxman take you on a rollercoaster ride through the levels of mind and consciousness." —Chellie Campbell, author The Wealthy Spirit and Zero to Zillionaire

Do you wake up every night and see 11:11 on the clock? Or 3:33? 4:44? Does the same number sequence seem to appear throughout your life over and over? Did you know that millions of people all over the world experience the same phenomenon?

These mysterious number sequences are known as “time prompts,” and show up on digital clocks, cell phones, receipts, billboards, advertisements, and other places. They seem like pure coincidence, but what if they are actually messages from a higher source, like angels, guides, or even the Universe itself, urging you to pay attention to something important?

This book explores the many theories about what these number sequences are, including:


The science behind synchronicities, coincidences, and the mathematical nature of reality
Numerical patterns and sacred geometry in nature—such as the Fibonacci spiral, the golden ratio, and DNA sequences
Enter the intriguing world of time prompts. If numbers are the language of the Universe, what are they saying to you?

240 pages, Paperback

First published February 15, 2009

38 people are currently reading
246 people want to read

About the author

Marie D. Jones

89 books62 followers
Best selling author, screenwriter, and producer. Marie has written over 30 non-fiction books, novels, and novellas, and contributed to over 100 anthologies. She is a produced screenwriter and indie filmmaker. She has been on radio all over the world, and on television's History Channel, including "Ancient Aliens." She has spoken at major events and writes frequently for a number of magazines on the paranormal, metaphysics, cutting edge science and Noetics. She is currently focusing on fiction and screenwriting and just re-released a middle grade novel based on her son's true story, BULLIES BEWARE, EKHO IS HERE! as well as a horror novel with Denise A. Agnew, THE DIM, and a paranormal thriller, FREAK. She will be releasing several more novels for adults and kids over the next few years. She has written and edited books for several publishers and ghostwrites, too. She also has a line of fun and funky journals on Amazon.com called ATTITUDENALS and her own ETSY shop of the same name.

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5 stars
30 (18%)
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28 (17%)
3 stars
55 (34%)
2 stars
34 (21%)
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11 (6%)
Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews
Profile Image for Owen Spencer.
128 reviews38 followers
February 14, 2011
This book addresses the odd phenomenon of seeing 11:11 (or 2:22, 4:44, etc.) on the clock more often than seems to make sense. Well, at least that is this book's starting and ending point. In between, taking up most pages, is discussion about a multiplicity of fascinating facts about numbers and ratios involved in science, religion, and the occult. Sounds weird, right? It is, yet some of this stuff is truly amazing and warrants serious attention. It's kind of like an "Idiot's Guide" or "For Dummies" book about mysteries involving numbers. It is quite compelling and well written, but it leaves you feeling unsatisfied because most of the concepts discussed require considerable elaboration to be properly understood, and all this book offers is bite-size info-nuggets that serve as an intellectual snack instead of a psychic supper. This book definitely engaged my mind and elicited a desire to learn more about certain mysteries.
Profile Image for Aevalle Galicia.
30 reviews
August 29, 2012
Decent enough as a beginner book to learn more about several theories about how numbers work in our world, but sloppy and lazy research. The authors use sites like Wikipedia and Suite101.com as research sources WAY too much for it to be considered a serious work. There's also cutsey asides throughout. I gave it 3 stars because of it's readability--but I don't think it would stand up to a research assignment in the standard Freshman composition course in most universities.
Profile Image for Robin.
9 reviews1 follower
June 3, 2018
I’ve always been an 11:11 person, so I HAD to read this book. However, while reading it, I came to the conclusion that you can find a pattern in anything if you’re looking for one. Many of the “connections” in the book feel like the speaker is totally reaching. Hokey even.
Profile Image for Bradley McCann.
98 reviews22 followers
March 2, 2022
Reads as if you've googled the topics within and skim-read whatever came up. The authors refuse to take a stand and decide what they believe. A quadzillion maybes and perhapses.
Profile Image for Timothy.
47 reviews
June 9, 2016
Odd book. Quick read with random content. Some of interest, some not so much. The title is misleading in a way, although it does touch base on the topic.
Profile Image for Dolores of Course.
379 reviews
September 18, 2022
What a frustrating book! I received zero value from my time spent with it. I don’t care what Wikipedia says about this or that or why Sting named his album Synchronicity. I want to know the meaning of the numbers, the reasons we see them and any type of insight that I can’t find doing a quick Google search. Just go visit a few websites. This book is mostly quotes from websites anyway, so cut the middleman and save some time.
Profile Image for Chris.
1,090 reviews1 follower
February 26, 2021
This is less about the weirdness of synchronicities and more of a book to trick you into liking mathematics. I am an astrophysics major and knew 95% of what is mentioned in this book but this book is written for the lay person to gain new appreciation of math. Be warned Math gets weird quickly and can nearly become a religion.
Profile Image for Toofan.
976 reviews18 followers
May 26, 2020
This book brifly covers the time prompt phenomena and continues with a little bit of every thing in association with numbers.
Some parts are interesting and some might be repetitive for some readers.
13 reviews
January 5, 2026
I bought this at Lily Dale during a spiritual healing trip but was a little disappointed in the content. I had a great trip and was hoping to bring a souvenir home that would hold some of that energy.
Profile Image for Amber Morales.
13 reviews
September 24, 2012
This book only had a portion dedicated to what I was interested in researching... but the rest was mostly the history of numbers, a little about sacred geometry and the histories of famous fathers of math.

I was more interested in the numerology behind certain number sequences and synchronicities and what they mean... but this book didn't cater that to me as much as I had expected.

Other than that, it is still informative and a pretty good read...
Profile Image for Will Jeffries.
164 reviews14 followers
April 21, 2011
It was interesting; Just ignore all the fear-based models around 11:11 - I believe a UFO guy teamed up with another woman to write the book - so there is a little fear sprinkled in the text around 11:11.

11:11 is a beautiful symbol and will trigger divine awakenings within your soul, if you allow it.

Enjoy the read.
Profile Image for Radiate Wellness.
52 reviews6 followers
May 5, 2020
If you see number or other synchronicities, you will want to read this book. It is fascinating. I interviewed Marie D. Jones on my podcast, the Radiate Wellness Podcast. This book is a deep dive into the meaning of the synchronicities that have become a global phenomenon.
Profile Image for Janice.
9 reviews2 followers
March 6, 2010
Most of this was derived from all the past books written about 11:11, and numerology.
Profile Image for Caitlin.
33 reviews1 follower
Read
December 29, 2015
Had some interesting points, but this book was so boring, and had hideous sources.
Profile Image for Amber Middlebrook .
113 reviews2 followers
May 9, 2024
Fun number facts. Got a little board of all the theory explanations towards the end of the book. Enjoyed the last puzzle in the book.
Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews

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