Dell Horoscope Magazine issue February 2005
In this article I discuss the numerical potential’s ahead in the 21st century. The following are excerpts.
“Could water becoming priced commodity to be sold to the highest bidder? Numerically speaking the answer is "yes!", evidenced even now as privatization of supplies sets new priorities. The necessity and the cost of clean water will be at the forefront of public debate throughout the century.”
“…the gasoline engine developed through the 19th century only to come into its own of the vibration of the 1900s in the 20th century, and so on. If this holds true, this new century should witness major developments in air and space travel, leading to some fantastic new way of traveling the air.”
I have to admit in this article I looked to fuel cell vehicles as the replacement for the petroleum powered vehicles. I'll just have to wait and see if electric vehicles merely fill in an interim period before we see fuel cell powered cars replace them.
“Pythagorean Rhythms in Numerology”
In 1492 Columbus sailed the ocean blue. So goes the children's rhyme.
It was numerically appropriate that Columbus discovered the Americas towards the beginning of the 1500, a century that vibrated to discovery and learning. As in Shakespeare's plays a prologue is often called for when issuing a new realm of reality, and you can usually find that introduction in the final decade of the century.
Some say it was a Daimler-powered vehicle built in 1892 by the Parisian carriage maker firm of Panhard and Levassor that provided the prologue from the 20th century. One thing is for sure, since 1900, history has become witness to an abundance of autos--breeding throughout Western society -- all vibrating to the dominant number 19 on their birth certificates.
In this scenario, the number 19 represents explosive events. These events can easily be found in the automobile engine with a series of explosions, often in either six or eight, or at times 12 cylinders in succession: Mobile explosions surrounding us throughout the 20th century sputtering and puttering to vibrations identified by Pythagorean numerology.
The number 9 mirrors the dark oil that proved to be the lifeblood of the age of the auto. It is no wonder that the oil industry and the auto grew together to ride supreme to the previous century. "Previous" is the watchword here as changes in the numerical air.
To those of us abiding to the tune of the Gregorian calendar, the year 2000 brought the introduction of a new bandleader with revised arrangements for the old tunes of humanity. The number 20 will remain intact until 2099 and may shed some light on what to expect. This numerical vibration represents items probably have already come to know, but you may be unaware of the potential future they represent. Among them are the elements and actions found in and around liquids, with added emphasis on water and drugs.
So, you might ask, are we going to be writing in vehicles powered hydrogen with droplets of water being omitted from the tailpipe? The numerical answer is yes, and the shadow of the future has already been cast by a burgeoning fuel cell industry. As before, in the late 1800s when our grandparents saw the crude gasoline engine attached to a buggy making its way down wagon-rutted roads, so now you can see early attempts to introduce the fuel-cell vehicle. Most likely those born from the year 2000 forward will find their lives most influence by this change in numerical vibration.
Why would we change from fossil fuel to hydrogen? The numerical answer is that the Western world has lost that 9 in the 19 vibration and along with it goes the oil. Events in the Middle East today could provide the catalyst's change. There is a distinct possibility that a radical Islamic movement could gain control over those oil-rich sands. Numerically speaking, though, with the Muslim calendar set in the 1400s, it is likely they would lose whatever gains there are to be had. The number 14 can vibrate to loss.
Could water becoming priced commodity to be sold to the highest bidder? Numerically speaking the answer is "yes!” evidenced even now as privatization of supplies sets new priorities. The necessity and the cost of clean water will be at the forefront of public debate throughout the century.
As for the drug aspect, one can already see that the pharmaceutical industry is producing remedies for problems you didn't even know you had. National drug chains have done the numbers, as in accounting and projected profits, and they are scrambling be ready to fill the approaching drug prescriptions. Take an inventory of your neighborhood and count all the new drugstores that have gone up in the past few years, often with one on the opposite corner of the other. Like carefully placed chess pieces, they are set and ready to do battle for your prescribed business.
Numerically notable through the decade is the proliferation of zeros. Zero is perhaps the most fascinating digital of all. It has tremendous power and yet no strength. It is something that represents nothing, and without we would all have less. Until this decade fills itself out the numbers, we may see holes or absences in certain areas of our world. A recent case example of the nothing side of zero was the aftermath of 9/11, with all air traffic was suspended and there was an absence of airplanes in the skies over the United States the number 21 can represent airplanes, and in 2001 you can find the absence of those planes via the zeros in the center.
The number two can represent gold. You'll find that in 2002. Sector made significant gains due in part to the projected shortage of the precious metal. The number 3 is so ethereal that one may readily notice the lack of "spirituality" in 2003; however vaporous natural gas appears to be a candidate for the shortage category this year.
With the number 4 representing practicality, we found a lack of this quality being exercised on the world stage throughout the year.
Going forward the number five can represent money. "Brother can you spare a dime", could be the world refrain from 2005. The number 6 can be seen as a "social" number, as it represents gatherings in many situations. The year 2006 can bring with it "social oppression" such as we had not seen in this democracy since its inception. The number 7 represents silver, among other things; in light of the movement of gold in 2002, it will be inching to see how the silver medal markets react to the 2007 vibration.
We live in a world of numbers presenting themselves like notes the musical score. At times they resonate clearly and other times it simply had a melodic tone to our daily lives. We live with numbers everywhere. Numbers don't lie, and everything has a number connected to it in some way. Everything has a vibratory rate and a number that describes that rate. Take note of the numbers that you see around yourself and you will find the core of your existence in its numerical form.
Authors note: It is interesting that the year 1492 saw the all-time high in the adjusted price for gold and that the New World would be the place for the old world to acquire its hoard of gold. The 16th century offered a glimpse of what was to be discovered. I place the two names on each century --i.e., the 1500s and the 16th century, you end up with a nickname that provides a more subdued tone when laid over the stronger vibration. It's as though one number dominates the other, while the other gain strength before going out on some, similar to a Saturn influence. Thus, you see the gasoline engine developed through the 19th century only to come into its own of the vibration of the 1900s in the 20th century, and so on. If this holds true, this new century should witness major developments in air and space travel, leading to some fantastic new way of traveling the air.
© Randy Ruyle 2005