
July 13,2026, via email
JennySchiltz.org
Massive Timeline Convergence Happening
Since the Solstice, we have been experiencing a massive timeline convergence. Multiple timelines have begun folding back into one another. Some are merging while others are dissolving altogether. They don’t disappear quietly, though; they bring emotional residue with them.
People from the past come to mind, old memories surface unexpectedly, and grief that felt complete suddenly asks to be acknowledged again. Places we’ve lived, relationships we’ve outgrown, dreams that never unfolded, even versions of ourselves we thought we’d left behind seem to be rising to the surface all at once.
Every timeline, even the ones that ultimately dissolve, shaped us. The emotions and lessons were real even if we don’t have conscious knowledge of them.
Many people ask me what the purpose of multiple timelines is. The easiest way I can explain it is to imagine earning a four-year college degree, except instead of taking four years, you complete it in one. While you’re consciously living one timeline, other aspects of you are simultaneously experiencing others. Each timeline carries its own lessons, experiences, and emotional understanding.
Then comes graduation. Everything converges. The learning integrates, the emotional wisdom combines, and what was gained across all of those timelines becomes available to you.
I believe this is where we are now. The convergence is happening. As these timelines fold back together, they bring with them the emotional residue and lessons they carried. It can feel overwhelming at times. Understand that the memories don’t always fold back in, just the emotion.
A side effect is that this has made people’s minds incredibly loud. It is constantly thinking, revisiting conversations, replaying decisions, and questioning whether something was missed, whether the wrong path was taken, or whether they should somehow be further along than they are. There can be a quiet disappointment, not only in themselves, but in this entire process.
Dreamtime is intense as well, and many are processing incredible amounts while attempting to get a good night’s rest.
The truth is, the mind struggles with collapsing timelines. It wants to reconcile the gap between what our conscious mind remembers and what our emotional fields are feeling. It searches and searches, and when no memory is found, it creates a story.
Every experience we have had served a purpose; even the timelines that are now dissolving taught us something about ourselves. They revealed our hopes, our fears, our joys, our attachments, and where we had unknowingly given our power away.
The mind wants to analyze every thought, determine where it came from, and build a story around why we’re feeling the way we are. But the story isn’t the important part; the EMOTION is.
As these timelines continue to merge, do your best not to get caught trying to figure out which timeline an emotion came from. Pay attention to the base emotion instead. Is it grief? Disappointment? Fear? Relief? Excitement? Let yourself experience it before the mind rushes in to explain it.
We don’t have to revisit every memory or understand every timeline as it dissolves. We just have to allow what surfaces to move through us instead of becoming another identity, another belief, or another story about who we are.
The more we can STAY with the emotion without immediately needing an explanation, the more easily it can complete its movement through us. Not everything that surfaces is asking to be understood. Sometimes it is simply asking to be felt.
When we stop trying to figure everything out, we create space for our system to complete the integration that is already underway.
Other side effects of the converging timelines can be lost items, missing time, conversations, emails, texts, etc. Another side effect can be accidents. I have had multiple people say that a car appeared out of nowhere and they narrowly avoided an accident.
Please be present and aware as we move through this incredible time.
