Synchronized Chaos’ First April Issue: Where Memory Meets Tomorrow

Image c/o Omar Sahel

First, a few announcements.
Sandra Tabac invites poetry and art submissions for an international Hands of Love anthology.

Also, The Arab Poets Forum has recently published the book “Alphabet of Pain… Letters Bleeding Meaning”, a remarkable poetic encyclopedia featuring 212 poets from around the world, presented in two volumes spanning 800 pages.

The cover artwork is created by Iraqi visual artist Nada Askar, and the cover design is by Lebanese artist Layla Beiz Al-Mashghariya. Several Synchronized Chaos contributors, including Taghrid Bou Merhi, Mirta Ramirez, Eva Petropoulou Lianou, Dildora Xojyozova, Binod Dawadi, and Kujtim R Hajdari, are published in this collection.

Now, for this month’s first issue, Where Memory Meets Tomorrow.

Image c/o Yana Ray

This issue is beautiful, rich, and international. There’s a strong throughline of memory, devotion, identity, and renewal running across continents and genres.

For this month’s first issue, we are proud to present a collection of voices that span styles and topics, each offering a meditation on what it means to live, remember, and hope.

Vo Thi Nhu Mai opens with a heartfelt tribute to her mother, honoring the quiet love and lifelong dedication of a teacher. From Uzbekistan, Orzigul Ibragimova calls her people forward with intelligence and determination, while Namozova Sarvinoz Erkin qizi explores the nation’s ongoing transformation toward an eco-friendly, energy-efficient future. Sevara Abduxalilova reflects on the legacy of Mirzo Ul’ugbek, the great Central Asian astronomer whose vision still resonates across time, as Botirova Gulsevar Muzaffar qizi honors political leader and poet Zahiriddin Muhammad Babur, known for promoting education and national development. Munisa Islomjonova celebrates her native Uzbekistan through verse.

Image c/o Linnaea Mallette

The power of words themselves comes into focus in Harinder Cheema’s celebration of poets as messengers of peace and inspiration, echoed by Soumen Roy’s prayer to poetry as a source of healing and transcendence. Jamoliddinova Dilnozaxon Mirhojiddinovna discusses how countries and social groups form communication and speech traditions. Olimova Shahina Botirjon qizi discusses strengths and weaknesses of different methods for teaching foreign languages. Hamdamova Sevara Saidmurodovna outlines modern philological theory about the power of language beyond literal meaning. Türkan Ergör sharpens her focus to highlight the pain of a world without trust and truth. Rev. Dr. Jitender Singh speaks to human unity across race, color, nationality, or creed. Manik Chakraborty and Mesfakus Salahin and Mahbub Alam each issue urgent calls for peace, reminding us of our shared humanity in a fractured world. Graciela Noemi Villaverde depicts the pain of words felt but never sent. Christina Margeti speaks to war and childhood, what humanity destroys and what we strive to protect. Faleeha Hassan reviews Saudi directors Meshal Al-Jaser and stars Adwaa Badr and Yazeed Al-Majioul’s film “Naga” (Purity) which, through the tragedy of a betrayed and rebellious young woman, shows the weight of a society imploding upon itself as it punishes the existence of femininity. Asadullo Habibullayev brings violence down to a smaller scale, reminding us that how we treat each other at the interpersonal level matters. At the same time, poet Nilavronill decries how poets have failed to stop the world’s violence with their words.

Themes of love and devotion weave throughout the issue. Sandro Piedracita reflects on the distinction between selfless love and possessiveness, while Eva Petropoulou Lianou honors the tender, enduring bond between mother and child. Nazokat Jumaniyozova offers a moving elegy for her grandfather, and Danijela Ćuk pays tribute to Eva Petropoulou’s tireless support of fellow writers. Saparboyeva Laylo Xajibay qizi relates a folktale-like story of grief, justice, fate and renewal. Joseph Ogbonna expresses his spiritual devotion in the Easter season and his thanks for Christ’s humble sacrifice. Maqsudova Anora Alisherovna’s poem urges heartfelt sincerity and reflection when people observe Ramadan. Sarvinoz Bakhtiyorova relates the tale of a now-adult son who sacrificed his own body for his mother. Jahongir Murodov expresses his tender care and respect for his mother. Xojamurodova Nigina urges sensitive souls to continue loving and not lose heart in a brutal world as Ms. Kim Sun Young shares how longing for a lost love is persistent, like a weed in her heart and Do’sanova Dilnoza Xolmurod qizi reflects on heartbreak and regret.

Other contributors turn toward time, myth, and the natural world. Ananya Guha evokes deep, mythic landscapes, while Sayani Mukherjee and Lan Xin draw on the imagery of spring—its motion, memory, and rebirth. Ankica Anchie Biskupović finds unity in flowing water, and Elaine Murray immerses herself in nature’s quiet revelations. Ms. Koo Myongsook reflects in stillness on a mountain as a metaphor for life. David Kokoette’s desert journey and Duane Vorhees’ meditation on absence and longing remind us of the inner landscapes we all traverse. Maja Milojkovic laments the steady decline of her powers due to old age. Aziza Jorayeva expresses heartbreak, loneliness, and grief. Dr. Prasanna Kumar Dalai speaks to autumn, night, longing, and confession. Siyoung Doung expresses the mystery of our existence and the beauty of finding small moments of beauty and meaning. Dr. Tomasz Laczek urges us to make the most of the lives we have and live for something that matters.

Image c/o George Hodan

This issue also engages with contemporary life and its tensions. Abdumaxamediva Gulchexra looks at the positive and negative effects of American cultural influence on traditional Uzbek culture. Patricia Doyne sharply critiques the current U.S. administration, while Bill Tope employs satire to confront its institutional excess and brutality. J.K. Durick reflects on individuals navigating vast, impersonal systems, even systems invented for fun, such as professional sports, engaged yet estranged. Peter Cherches plays the absurdist blues for us in his poem that’s equal parts exile ballad, street song, and darkly comic cabaret. Christopher Bernard kicks off the first installment of his children’s story Otherwise, with a mixture of philosophy, mystery, and middle-grade energy.

Science, education, and personal determination appear in compelling ways. Urokova Nargiza discusses ways to protect against new types of viruses. Jorakulova Gulshoda Uchqun qizi examines disease detection through the lens of blood cell analysis, while Abduhalilova Sevdora Xayrulla qizi advocates for reconnecting physical education with nature. Nabiyeva Xilolaxon Axrorjon qizi discusses how to make fuel composition less toxic and more environmentally sustainable. Choriyeva Oynur analyzes the role of music in helping students concentrate and learn. Anarboeva Madina Ulmas qizi highlights her accomplishments in the Uzbek national sport of kurash. Laylo Yo’lbarsova highlights the role of personality in determining suitability for different careers. Priyanka Neogi asserts her self-determination, strength, self-respect, and independence. Maxsudbekova Farogat Izzatbek qizi valorizes self-assurance, personal dignity, and individuality. Toshmamatov Javohir tells a story of perseverance through the journey of a computer science student, Jumayev Akmal G’ulom o’g’li discusses ways to get young people more involved in shaping the future of Uzbekistan and to help them take their place in the workplace, and Gulhayo Abduqahhorova considers the choices that shape life after college.

Artistic memory and cultural reflection round out the issue. Mark Young presents his signature altered geographies, while Brian Michael Barbeito revisits the world of hockey through personal recollection. Mykyta Ryzhykh captures the intensity of first awakenings—moments that divide life into before and after. Jacques Fleury offers a haunting vision of beauty, resilience, and power embodied in a goddess who still fades from view while he can only watch. Ms. Im Sol Nae looks at death not merely as an ending, but as a transformation, a communal aesthetic experience.

Image c/o Dany Jack Mercier

Finally, editor Cristina Deptula contributes a review of No One Dreams in Color by John Biscello, a work that meditates on consciousness, grief, the creative process, and the fragile boundary between reality and imagination.

Together, these works form a tapestry of voices, which are urgent, reflective, and deeply human. They remind us that across distance and difference, we are united by our search for meaning, our capacity for love, and our enduring hope for renewal.


Prose from Brian Michael Barbeito

The Hockey Pins

The first memory was of a Toronto Maple Leafs hockey pin, blue and white, just the outline of the leaf if I remember correctly. And there was another one, circular with a blue background and a white leaf, again, if I recall correctly. This was all practically another lifetime ago, the late 1970’s and early to maybe middle 1980’s. I liked those pins, and some had a safety pin type apparatus at the back while others had a straight metal part that one put a clip or metal end on. 

A few times my cousin and I walked to one of the convenience stores and bought a pin or two. I can see in the mind’s eye the other NHL teams, smart and well-made pins, twenty-one teams then. I recall The Philadelphia Flyers one, The Washington Capitals, those two especially for some reason. And there was another All Stars one, maybe designating the NHL all-star game held once a year, I think. 

Later, having achieved the highest level for my age group, Major, also called AAA, the teams I played for, Mississauga Blackhawks, Wexford Raiders, and Toronto Red Wings, went on numerous tournaments. Sometimes the organizations gave each player a bunch of pins to trade with the other teams. I’d end up with many pins from all over. I put them on cloth, a few cloths in fact, for safe keeping. These cloths with all kinds of hockey pins I had for a long time but have misplaced them. Sadly, I don’t know where they went. 

The hockey pins represented sport and skill, of the heroes and greats, and later of my teams and travel and experience on the ice against all these teams. That was one level but there was a more simple and yet magical level also and it was the colour and style, the metallic feel and weight of the pin. They could go on jackets or sometimes trucker hats. I can’t remember what exactly made me remember the pins, but something somehow did. Maybe a dream. Maybe something in real life. Maybe some angel of sport or pin or an angel of time itself…

Poetry from Danijela Ćuk

For Dear Eva Lianou Petropoulou

Dear Eva is a woman, a queen so rare,

the one who makes this world more rich and fair,

poetry is her everlasting flame,

and in her work, there is no end to claim.

She lifts up poets from all lands afar,

their verses shining bright like every star,

she knows no bounds, no borders to her art,

for love’s sweet fragrance flows from all her heart.

For poetry she lives, all souls unite,

her deeds reflect her spirit pure and bright,

for Eva is a woman strong and wise,

who conquers worlds through verses that arise.

She shares her peace across the world so wide,

through poets’ hearts where gentle dreams abide,

and so I thank her deeply, from my soul,

for through her, my own verses reach their goal.

Warm greetings now from Croatia I send,

with humble lines to you, both muse and friend,

may we remain, as we have been till now,

united by her poetic love somehow.

Poetry from Vo Thi Nhu Mai

THE TEACHER’S DAUGHTER

(Vo Thi Nhu Mai, Australia)

since I was not brought there by chance

but chose the road her footsteps made for me

I lifted chalk as if it were a vow

spoken between the past and what will be

her consistent strength still remains in my hands

something took me years to understand

If I stand now, the place her shadow fell

it is not her shadow, but a kind of light

that stays in the corners of each room

in the desks that are filled with curiosity and youth

in every mind that asks to be believed

the same thirst of knowledge that she tried to spread

fortune did not divide our worlds apart

though hers was framed by hometown and open air

and mine by screens that hum with distant lives

still, something human that is quite the same

the need to be seen without a doubt

to hear a voice say, you are more than this

though I could turn away and choose differently

I follow her career, her mission of education

but from a knowing deeper than what I understand

that love can live in the work we keep on daily

and somewhere in each word I give away

her life continues, powerfully through the passion of mine

Võ Thị Như Mai is a Vietnamese poet, translator, editor, critic, and Senior Teacher based in Perth, Western Australia, whose work spans more than two decades of bilingual writing and cultural advocacy. She is the author of five poetry collections and three children’s books published in Vietnam and Australia and has led over ten internationally published bilingual translation projects introducing Vietnamese poets to global audiences. Her writing explores themes of belonging, memory, heritage, and the quiet beauty of everyday life, blending Vietnamese imagery with a universal emotional resonance. An active member of the HCM Writers Association and the Perth Poetry Club, she is also a committed supporter of emerging writers and cross-cultural literary exchange. In 2025, she was honoured in Spain as one of the Top One Hundred Most Influential Literary Figures and received two Awards of Commendation from the Vietnamese Consulate General in Australia and the Foreign Affairs in Vietnam for her outstanding contribution to promoting Vietnamese culture and language abroad.

Essay from Laylo Yo’lbarsova

The Relationship Between Personality Typology and Career Choice

Andijan State University
Psychology Department
Yo‘lbarsova Laylo
Email: layloyulbarsova@gmail.com
ORCID: 0009-0002-1446-3287

Abstract: This article examines the influence of individual psychological characteristics of a person on the process of career choice. The main objective of the research is to identify the correlational relationship between personality typology (including temperament, character accentuations, and cognitive styles) and professional success. It is scientifically substantiated that a professional environment that does not correspond to an individual’s personality type can lead to psychological stress and professional burnout. The findings of the study can serve as methodological recommendations for career guidance centers and psychologists working in educational institutions, especially in guiding young people in choosing appropriate professions.

Keywords: personality typology, temperament, cognitive styles, career choice, professional success, psychological compatibility, burnout

Introduction

Today, choosing a profession that corresponds to an individual’s psychological typology is extremely important not only for personal success but also for the socio-economic stability of society. The compatibility between a person’s temperament, character type, and cognitive style with the requirements of their chosen profession increases work productivity and helps prevent professional burnout.

However, in practice, many young people choose their careers not based on their personal characteristics, but rather on external factors such as the prestige of a profession, financial benefits, or random decisions. This leads to dissatisfaction with their profession in the future and contributes to workforce instability.

In particular, under the conditions of a modern labor market characterized by emerging professions and a rapidly changing social environment, the psychological mechanisms linking personality typology and career orientation have not been sufficiently studied. Existing theories are often general in nature and do not fully meet the dynamic demands of today.

Therefore, the aim of this article is to analyze the relationship between psychological personality types and career preferences, as well as to develop scientifically grounded recommendations for the effective use of human capital.

This study focuses on analyzing the mechanisms of interaction between personality typology and career choice. It has a theoretical-analytical and comparative nature. During the research process, classical psychological theories of personality classification, modern career guidance methodologies, and scientific articles were used as sources.

Systematic analysis, psychological comparison, and logical generalization methods were applied in the study. The research was carried out in several stages:

  • First, existing psychological literature on the topic (Holland, Jung, Eysenck theories) was thoroughly studied; 
  • Then, professional tendencies characteristic of different temperament and character types, as well as mismatches observed in practice, were comparatively analyzed; 
  • Finally, general conclusions regarding an effective career choice model based on psychological profiling were formulated. 

In recent years, several studies have been conducted on personality traits and professional adaptation. For example, A.N. Ivanov (2021) examined this issue from a cognitive-behavioral perspective using surveys and testing methods, concluding that intellectual potential plays a decisive role in career choice. However, the influence of temperament on emotional stability was not sufficiently addressed in the study.

S.R. Qodirova (2022) analyzed this problem based on J. Holland’s typological concept. A significant difference between these approaches lies in their focus: the former emphasizes cognitive factors, while the latter focuses on personality types

Analysis and Results

The conducted research identified the following key results demonstrating the relationship between personality typology and career orientation:

1. Compatibility of personality types and professional inclination

The analysis showed that a person’s psychological type is a fundamental factor determining professional success. According to J. Holland’s typological model, the following trends were observed:

  • Intellectual and investigative types show an 85% tendency toward scientific and analytical activities; 
  • Social types demonstrate the highest level of adaptation in professions involving human interaction (education, psychology, medicine). 

2. Temperament and professional stability

Based on the theories of C. Jung and H. Eysenck, the role of temperament characteristics in career choice was comparatively analyzed, and the results were generalized.

Conclusion

This study scientifically examined the relationship between personality typology and the process of career choice. The results indicate that individual psychological characteristics play a crucial role in determining career direction.

In particular, a practical connection was identified between Carl Jung’s personality typology (introversion and extraversion) and John Holland’s career model. The findings show that extroverted individuals tend to choose socially oriented professions, while introverted individuals prefer professions requiring independent and analytical work.

The results also confirm that choosing a profession based on personal characteristics positively influences professional success, job satisfaction, and personal development.

Based on the study, the following conclusions were drawn:

  • personality typology is an important criterion in career choice; 
  • psychological diagnostics are necessary for making the right career decision; 
  • it is essential to strengthen an individual approach when guiding young people in career selection. 

In the future, it is advisable to conduct research on a broader audience and apply modern psychological methods in this field.

References

Jung, C. G. (1971). Psychological types. Princeton University Press.

Holland, J. (1997). Making vocational choices: A theory of careers. Prentice Hall.

Maslow, A. (1987). Motivation and personality. Harper & Row.

Gʻoziyev, E. (2002). General psychology. O‘qituvchi.

Do‘stmuhamedov, Sh. A. (2010). Fundamentals of occupational psychology. Fan.

Qodirov, B. (2005). Psychology. O‘qituvchi.

Davletshin, M. G. (2006). General psychology. O‘qituvchi.

Essay from Aziza Jorayeva

Torment in the Heart

I became a captive among sorrows,

My head struck against stone again and again.

In the life I live, I am but a poor soul,

No one ever reached out a hand to me.

Trials have broken my strength,

My face no longer smiles at any joy.

What remedy can I seek now?

Is there still a chance for me to love?

Juraeva Aziza was born on March 26, 2000, in Uzbekistan. She graduated from Kokand University in 2023 with a degree in Primary Education.

Poetry from Lan Xin

Phoenix Whispers of the Ancient Trees

Poem by Lan Xin

Internationally renowned writer, poet and translator, member of the Chinese Writers Association. The only female inheritor of UNESCO-listed Dongba Culture, International Disseminator of Dongba Culture and practitioner of Chinese culture’s global outreach. Winner of the Italian Francesco Giampietri International Literary Award, President of Lanxin Samei Academy and Dean of Yulong Wenbi Dongba Culture Academy.

A thousand years ago

we took root together in this ancient temple

Century after century quietly passed

we became the most devoted ancient trees in all the world

Over this thousand years

through the silent turning of the four seasons

through the unpredictable cycles of life

we have witnessed this ancient temple

rise and fall fall and rise enduring all hardships

We watch beings come and go burn incense and pray

with thousands of wishes in their hearts

Yet our watch has never wavered

not even for a single moment

The butterfly bush blooms pure white in winter and spring

the golden osmanthus shines bright gold in autumn

the red plum blossoms blushing pink in the bitter cold

the Chinese crabapple bursts into rose-red in spring

the incense cypress wears eternal green all year long

Whether the temple is full of voices or completely still

whether incense burns prosperous or only broken walls remain

we stand root to root heart to heart silently guarding one another

Even if the halls collapse and only we are left in heaven and earth

we still firmly believe —

one day the phoenix will come stepping upon light

to reunite with us after a thousand years

Now heaven rewards this thousand year of waiting this endless longing

At last she has arrived —

the phoenix draped in ten thousand rays of golden light

Amidst total desolation she recognized us at first sight

Amidst utter ruin she chose us without hesitation

Amidst broken walls she restored the temple’s thousand-year glory

Amidst silence and loneliness

she made incense burn again and life flourish once more

Amidst the dust of years

she made this sacred land known to all renowned across the world

From this day on

we shall live and die with the phoenix never to be parted

This is the place where the golden phoenix returns to rest

This is the place where the golden phoenix spreads her wings and soars

If the world shall give us a new name

then bestow upon us —

Phoenix Ancient Trees!

Interpretation 

This poem takes the thousand-year-old ancient trees as silent witnesses and the phoenix as a symbol of light and rebirth. It speaks of the deepest bond between human and nature, and writes of waiting, guardianship and faith across time. This is the guardianship of life to life, the call of soul to soul, a great love that transcends race, borders and time.

May this pure deep feeling from the East by poet Lan Xin awaken the truest kindness and peace in the world and let love and light shine upon all humanity.