1 00:00:01,480 --> 00:00:04,280 Speaker 1: Welcome to Stuff you Should Know, a production of I 2 00:00:04,360 --> 00:00:13,200 Speaker 1: Heart Radio. Hey, and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh 3 00:00:13,240 --> 00:00:17,080 Speaker 1: and there's Chuck, and Chuck's a seven and I'm a nine, 4 00:00:17,280 --> 00:00:22,400 Speaker 1: and this is stuff you should know. Yeah, did you 5 00:00:22,440 --> 00:00:24,880 Speaker 1: figure your years out? Are you a nine? Uh? It 6 00:00:24,960 --> 00:00:29,040 Speaker 1: depends on my UM seven nine for my birth. I'm 7 00:00:29,040 --> 00:00:34,120 Speaker 1: a nine for my UM birth as well my life 8 00:00:34,200 --> 00:00:37,120 Speaker 1: cat number. We're both nines, but you're a you're seven 9 00:00:38,240 --> 00:00:41,960 Speaker 1: for your destiny number if I figured years out, Hey, 10 00:00:42,000 --> 00:00:45,240 Speaker 1: we're all that. That means this all makes sense now, Yeah, 11 00:00:45,280 --> 00:00:47,360 Speaker 1: that's why we were meant to be together on the show. 12 00:00:47,560 --> 00:00:54,360 Speaker 1: It was preordained by the spirit herself. So we're talking 13 00:00:54,360 --> 00:01:00,160 Speaker 1: about numerology, which I guess an overarching definition would be, um, 14 00:01:00,440 --> 00:01:06,440 Speaker 1: it's a pseudo scientific practice in which people base things 15 00:01:06,480 --> 00:01:10,240 Speaker 1: on numbers, like your destiny and who your romantic partner 16 00:01:10,280 --> 00:01:13,160 Speaker 1: should be, and maybe what job you should have and 17 00:01:13,200 --> 00:01:15,679 Speaker 1: stuff like this. Uh. And I just want to say 18 00:01:15,680 --> 00:01:19,080 Speaker 1: at the beginning of this that there are many different 19 00:01:19,160 --> 00:01:22,440 Speaker 1: kinds of numerology, and depending on where you're from, and 20 00:01:22,440 --> 00:01:25,280 Speaker 1: there are many different methods and many different charts, and 21 00:01:25,360 --> 00:01:27,400 Speaker 1: like we're not going to get too far into the 22 00:01:27,440 --> 00:01:31,360 Speaker 1: weeds on those because it's all fake, because it would 23 00:01:31,360 --> 00:01:35,640 Speaker 1: just be a super long, like four our episode on numerology. 24 00:01:36,360 --> 00:01:39,760 Speaker 1: So this is kind of just an overarching how you know, 25 00:01:39,800 --> 00:01:42,360 Speaker 1: that's what we do. It's it's basically how what numerology 26 00:01:42,440 --> 00:01:44,880 Speaker 1: is and how it works, and and not all the 27 00:01:44,959 --> 00:01:49,360 Speaker 1: specificities of each system. Yeah, because your brain starts to 28 00:01:49,400 --> 00:01:51,280 Speaker 1: melt a little bit when you start getting into all that, 29 00:01:51,520 --> 00:01:53,320 Speaker 1: and they're all kind of the same. It's just different 30 00:01:53,800 --> 00:01:56,440 Speaker 1: variations of sort of the same thing. And I think 31 00:01:56,480 --> 00:01:58,880 Speaker 1: the fact that there's so many variations there are supposed 32 00:01:58,920 --> 00:02:03,160 Speaker 1: to arrive at a press slice figure kind of also 33 00:02:04,360 --> 00:02:06,480 Speaker 1: warns the person to take the whole thing with a 34 00:02:06,480 --> 00:02:09,360 Speaker 1: grain of salt. But it's apparently way more popular in 35 00:02:09,400 --> 00:02:12,320 Speaker 1: twenty one century America than I realized. How is it? 36 00:02:12,520 --> 00:02:14,840 Speaker 1: Oh yeah, I man going to Bustle and The Cut, 37 00:02:14,960 --> 00:02:18,680 Speaker 1: and um, there's numerology dot com and there's a lot 38 00:02:18,960 --> 00:02:23,240 Speaker 1: a lot of sites that have if they're not like 39 00:02:23,320 --> 00:02:27,160 Speaker 1: overtly dedicated to numerology, they have like whole sections dedicated 40 00:02:27,200 --> 00:02:29,760 Speaker 1: to numerology and all that stuff. So the cool kids 41 00:02:29,800 --> 00:02:33,280 Speaker 1: doing it, I think. So I can't tell if it's 42 00:02:33,320 --> 00:02:36,560 Speaker 1: the Millennials or gen Z or I don't know, but 43 00:02:36,680 --> 00:02:40,639 Speaker 1: you're not on their Supreme sweatshirt talking about numbers. That's right. 44 00:02:41,400 --> 00:02:44,120 Speaker 1: I just met someone who works with them, who works 45 00:02:44,120 --> 00:02:47,600 Speaker 1: for Bustle for it, works for Supreme, and we should 46 00:02:47,600 --> 00:02:52,600 Speaker 1: shout out to it's uh master guitar player and is 47 00:02:52,639 --> 00:02:55,960 Speaker 1: this stuff you should know? Fan Matt Sweeney, who in 48 00:02:56,000 --> 00:02:59,320 Speaker 1: the mid nineties had the indie rock sort of math 49 00:02:59,440 --> 00:03:04,520 Speaker 1: rock band and Chavez and now has played with everyone 50 00:03:04,560 --> 00:03:07,600 Speaker 1: from Johnny Cash to Adele. I know him from his 51 00:03:07,639 --> 00:03:09,440 Speaker 1: work with Bonnie Prince Billy and I just saw them 52 00:03:09,480 --> 00:03:11,000 Speaker 1: live and I just got to hang out with Sweeney. 53 00:03:11,400 --> 00:03:14,480 Speaker 1: Had a great four hour dinner with Matt and his 54 00:03:14,560 --> 00:03:17,240 Speaker 1: girlfriend j R. And j R works for Supreme and 55 00:03:17,280 --> 00:03:19,520 Speaker 1: was telling me all about it. Well, that's fantastic. I 56 00:03:19,560 --> 00:03:21,880 Speaker 1: have someone I'd like to shout out. Let's do it. 57 00:03:22,080 --> 00:03:25,680 Speaker 1: I'd like to shout out listener Jimmy McCleod, who deend 58 00:03:25,800 --> 00:03:30,200 Speaker 1: out took um guitar lessons from the same Toledo metal band. 59 00:03:30,240 --> 00:03:34,840 Speaker 1: Guitar that's me. I saw that that was ramusic in Toledo. 60 00:03:34,920 --> 00:03:38,120 Speaker 1: I was like, oh my god, this is all absolutely correct, 61 00:03:38,600 --> 00:03:40,840 Speaker 1: And he said yes. Indeed, like this guy was in 62 00:03:40,920 --> 00:03:43,400 Speaker 1: attentive at best. He would just go out and and 63 00:03:43,600 --> 00:03:45,440 Speaker 1: talk to people in the store in the middle of 64 00:03:45,760 --> 00:03:47,440 Speaker 1: in the middle of the lessons, I was like, yeah, 65 00:03:47,480 --> 00:03:50,600 Speaker 1: that's right, so thank you for that. That was putting 66 00:03:50,600 --> 00:03:53,400 Speaker 1: all those pieces together for me. My brain don't work 67 00:03:53,480 --> 00:03:56,960 Speaker 1: so so good. Yeah, multiple shoutouts. Is there anything else 68 00:03:57,000 --> 00:03:59,920 Speaker 1: we can talk about that's not numerology. I've got one 69 00:04:00,040 --> 00:04:02,920 Speaker 1: other one. This is a long time overdue, but our 70 00:04:03,040 --> 00:04:08,120 Speaker 1: friends at Flathead Flathead Like Cheese sent us an entire 71 00:04:08,400 --> 00:04:13,440 Speaker 1: wheel of their hopping mad Gouda, which is maybe the 72 00:04:13,480 --> 00:04:16,679 Speaker 1: best cheese anyone's ever made. Good stuff, and I believe 73 00:04:16,720 --> 00:04:18,960 Speaker 1: they give discounts to stuff you should Know listeners or 74 00:04:19,000 --> 00:04:20,560 Speaker 1: every once while they have the stuff you Should Know 75 00:04:20,640 --> 00:04:25,080 Speaker 1: sale or themes sales. So flat Head Like Cheese because 76 00:04:25,160 --> 00:04:28,000 Speaker 1: they're great, and thanks to the Loses for introducing us 77 00:04:28,040 --> 00:04:31,440 Speaker 1: to them. It's right me, Mike, Okay, that's it for 78 00:04:31,480 --> 00:04:34,640 Speaker 1: shout outs, Bunny, all right, that's it. So how do 79 00:04:34,680 --> 00:04:39,320 Speaker 1: we even get oh supreme right, all right, let's talk 80 00:04:39,320 --> 00:04:43,480 Speaker 1: about numerology. So there is a thought among some people 81 00:04:44,120 --> 00:04:47,159 Speaker 1: that numbers have these mystical properties. That's the basis of 82 00:04:47,200 --> 00:04:49,680 Speaker 1: the whole thing, the basis of the whole thing, and 83 00:04:49,720 --> 00:04:53,760 Speaker 1: that that some people even think that these numbers, like 84 00:04:53,960 --> 00:04:56,760 Speaker 1: all things on the planet, have an inherent vibration and 85 00:04:56,800 --> 00:05:02,760 Speaker 1: a unique vibration. And if you guide your life by 86 00:05:02,920 --> 00:05:07,200 Speaker 1: numbers that have vibrations that are in sync with one another, 87 00:05:08,400 --> 00:05:12,560 Speaker 1: then you can lead a more complete life and lead 88 00:05:12,600 --> 00:05:15,200 Speaker 1: your best life. Yeah, and the way that ties into 89 00:05:15,320 --> 00:05:20,120 Speaker 1: numbers is the idea that that numbers basically run everything. 90 00:05:20,160 --> 00:05:25,520 Speaker 1: That that that the properties that an individual number has 91 00:05:26,400 --> 00:05:29,200 Speaker 1: can be attributed to things that are associated with that number. 92 00:05:29,279 --> 00:05:33,039 Speaker 1: And you can break everything down into a number. And 93 00:05:33,080 --> 00:05:35,200 Speaker 1: if you can break something down, if you can divine 94 00:05:35,279 --> 00:05:39,520 Speaker 1: something's number, you can figure out what lies ahead for them, 95 00:05:39,560 --> 00:05:42,800 Speaker 1: what their personality types going to be, what their challenges are, 96 00:05:43,440 --> 00:05:48,240 Speaker 1: um and it depending on some numerology systems, you could 97 00:05:48,279 --> 00:05:51,360 Speaker 1: figure out what you're lucky day is, what numbers you 98 00:05:51,400 --> 00:05:54,200 Speaker 1: should play in the latto, like all sorts of different stuff. 99 00:05:54,440 --> 00:05:56,839 Speaker 1: But the idea goes well beyond, you know, like picking 100 00:05:56,880 --> 00:06:00,760 Speaker 1: something at roulette. It's it's like the idea numerology is 101 00:06:00,880 --> 00:06:04,440 Speaker 1: very much akin to astrology, where based on your name, 102 00:06:04,680 --> 00:06:07,120 Speaker 1: your date of birth, and a few other factors that 103 00:06:07,160 --> 00:06:11,599 Speaker 1: are inherent to you. If you combine those into a number, 104 00:06:12,200 --> 00:06:14,840 Speaker 1: you can figure out what number you're associated with, and 105 00:06:14,920 --> 00:06:18,719 Speaker 1: hence what your destiny will be. That's basically the general 106 00:06:18,760 --> 00:06:24,279 Speaker 1: basis of all numerological systems, right, and that The father 107 00:06:24,480 --> 00:06:32,240 Speaker 1: of Western numerology is Pythagoras, the Greek philosopher born in 108 00:06:32,279 --> 00:06:37,520 Speaker 1: five sixty nine BC who studied numbers and studied music 109 00:06:37,640 --> 00:06:41,320 Speaker 1: and art and all kinds of things. But I think 110 00:06:41,360 --> 00:06:45,400 Speaker 1: one of the things Pythagoras like to do is say, like, hey, 111 00:06:45,480 --> 00:06:49,760 Speaker 1: you can actually take the the pluck of a of 112 00:06:49,839 --> 00:06:53,520 Speaker 1: a leer string and you can break that down into 113 00:06:53,560 --> 00:06:57,320 Speaker 1: a number, Like that unique vibration of that note has 114 00:06:57,360 --> 00:06:59,479 Speaker 1: its own number that we can assign to it. That 115 00:06:59,640 --> 00:07:02,800 Speaker 1: was huge, Yeah, I mean he was coming at it 116 00:07:02,880 --> 00:07:06,400 Speaker 1: through some interesting angles at first, I think, And this 117 00:07:06,480 --> 00:07:09,120 Speaker 1: was in five sixty nine, This was the twenty first century. 118 00:07:09,600 --> 00:07:11,480 Speaker 1: This is when this probably sounded about a good as 119 00:07:11,520 --> 00:07:14,280 Speaker 1: good as anything. Yeah. Pythagoras and his followers known as 120 00:07:14,320 --> 00:07:17,440 Speaker 1: the Pythagoreans, they that that that school, and I think 121 00:07:17,480 --> 00:07:20,960 Speaker 1: Southern Italy um like they were. They were some of 122 00:07:21,000 --> 00:07:25,720 Speaker 1: the first people to really apply a study of mathematics 123 00:07:26,400 --> 00:07:31,560 Speaker 1: UM and geometry in particular. UM. I think beforehand, geometry 124 00:07:32,040 --> 00:07:34,880 Speaker 1: was I saw it described as basically a loose set 125 00:07:34,880 --> 00:07:37,200 Speaker 1: of principles that that you could use to like build 126 00:07:37,200 --> 00:07:39,120 Speaker 1: a house with or something like that. It wasn't like 127 00:07:39,160 --> 00:07:42,640 Speaker 1: a like math in and of itself until Pythagoras came 128 00:07:42,680 --> 00:07:46,440 Speaker 1: along and they started realizing like, oh wait, like math 129 00:07:46,520 --> 00:07:49,840 Speaker 1: exists on its own, like it's its own thing, and 130 00:07:49,840 --> 00:07:52,840 Speaker 1: started studying it like that, and started finding it everywhere, 131 00:07:52,880 --> 00:07:55,520 Speaker 1: and started like, like you said, you know that I 132 00:07:55,560 --> 00:08:01,160 Speaker 1: saw um a description that the that that Pythagoras and 133 00:08:01,200 --> 00:08:07,160 Speaker 1: the Pythagoreans figured out that um, that music like resonant, 134 00:08:07,280 --> 00:08:12,600 Speaker 1: like music that's not discordant, but the good stuff UM 135 00:08:12,840 --> 00:08:17,080 Speaker 1: is uh like it follows whole integers, and that he 136 00:08:17,120 --> 00:08:20,400 Speaker 1: figured it out by hearing how different hammers in a 137 00:08:20,440 --> 00:08:24,400 Speaker 1: blacksmith's shop harmonized. And he went and looked, and he 138 00:08:24,440 --> 00:08:27,600 Speaker 1: saw that they were those hammers were related mathematically. One 139 00:08:27,720 --> 00:08:29,880 Speaker 1: was say, a one pound hammer, and the other one 140 00:08:30,040 --> 00:08:33,240 Speaker 1: was part of a whole integer, like a half pound hammer. 141 00:08:33,679 --> 00:08:36,560 Speaker 1: And he realized there's such a thing as octaves, and 142 00:08:36,600 --> 00:08:39,000 Speaker 1: that like, these were the discoveries they were making and 143 00:08:39,040 --> 00:08:41,440 Speaker 1: so as did some really cool stuff. It is and 144 00:08:41,480 --> 00:08:43,400 Speaker 1: like just stuff we take for granted is like just 145 00:08:43,400 --> 00:08:45,920 Speaker 1: a matter of fact today, like they were figuring out. 146 00:08:46,559 --> 00:08:49,440 Speaker 1: They also seemed to have taken a lot of maybe 147 00:08:49,559 --> 00:08:52,760 Speaker 1: mushrooms at the time. And then it got weird. They 148 00:08:52,760 --> 00:08:56,439 Speaker 1: were drinking reindeer p I'm not sure, but they really 149 00:08:56,800 --> 00:09:00,199 Speaker 1: went down the rabbit hole with numbers and start did 150 00:09:01,120 --> 00:09:04,240 Speaker 1: finding these things everywhere, and came to the conclusion that 151 00:09:04,440 --> 00:09:08,080 Speaker 1: numbers were the basis of the fabric of existence in 152 00:09:08,400 --> 00:09:11,640 Speaker 1: life and the universe and everything, and that the the 153 00:09:11,280 --> 00:09:14,720 Speaker 1: the answer to the purpose of life, the perfect purpose 154 00:09:14,760 --> 00:09:18,360 Speaker 1: of existence, was forty two. All right, I think that's 155 00:09:18,360 --> 00:09:20,960 Speaker 1: a good set up, Thank you. All right, well's let's 156 00:09:20,960 --> 00:09:23,840 Speaker 1: take a break now and we'll talk more. We'll maybe 157 00:09:23,840 --> 00:09:26,720 Speaker 1: shout out some more personal friends and friends of the show, 158 00:09:26,760 --> 00:09:57,960 Speaker 1: and then we'll also talk about numerology. Alright. So you 159 00:09:58,000 --> 00:10:01,120 Speaker 1: mentioned the Pythagoreans, the people who us into and followed 160 00:10:01,160 --> 00:10:05,040 Speaker 1: Pythagoras there in southern Italy and studied with him. They 161 00:10:05,120 --> 00:10:08,880 Speaker 1: also came up with some some legit bedrock math that 162 00:10:08,920 --> 00:10:12,360 Speaker 1: we still think of today and used today. Like if 163 00:10:12,400 --> 00:10:15,400 Speaker 1: you've ever heard of the Pythagorean theorem. It's still very 164 00:10:15,400 --> 00:10:19,200 Speaker 1: popular in math class. In maths. Yeah, everybody's got that 165 00:10:19,280 --> 00:10:23,400 Speaker 1: T shirt when they're in sixth grade. Uh huh uh 166 00:10:23,400 --> 00:10:26,640 Speaker 1: and that's the old uh. In a right triangle, the 167 00:10:26,679 --> 00:10:28,640 Speaker 1: square of the length of the hypothenuse is equal to 168 00:10:28,640 --> 00:10:31,000 Speaker 1: the some of the squares of the other two sides. 169 00:10:31,920 --> 00:10:37,920 Speaker 1: A squared plus B squared equals C squared. And it's 170 00:10:37,960 --> 00:10:39,800 Speaker 1: it's interesting that they were coming up with all this 171 00:10:39,880 --> 00:10:43,400 Speaker 1: bedrock stuff and this really cool stuff about figuring out 172 00:10:44,160 --> 00:10:48,400 Speaker 1: mathematical mathematical proportions of musical harmonies like you were talking about, 173 00:10:49,000 --> 00:10:51,600 Speaker 1: and like, I'm so down with all that. And then 174 00:10:51,679 --> 00:10:55,040 Speaker 1: someone goes, hey, you know, if you add up a 175 00:10:55,080 --> 00:10:58,559 Speaker 1: series of odd numbers beginning with one, the result is 176 00:10:58,559 --> 00:11:02,880 Speaker 1: always going to be a square number. And everyone went, oh, man, 177 00:11:03,080 --> 00:11:09,040 Speaker 1: that's right. And then Pythagoras said, yeah, all his number. 178 00:11:09,200 --> 00:11:13,040 Speaker 1: And then they all together said, all his number, that's 179 00:11:13,080 --> 00:11:15,520 Speaker 1: exactly how And from there things got a little weird, 180 00:11:15,760 --> 00:11:18,840 Speaker 1: and some people here, all his number and they say, well, 181 00:11:18,880 --> 00:11:22,360 Speaker 1: that means that you can just measure everything in the 182 00:11:22,520 --> 00:11:25,679 Speaker 1: entire world and you can describe it in terms of 183 00:11:26,000 --> 00:11:29,440 Speaker 1: math and numbers and proportions. Fair enough, that's basically the 184 00:11:29,480 --> 00:11:33,240 Speaker 1: basis of our understanding of like geometry and physics. Yes, 185 00:11:33,360 --> 00:11:35,800 Speaker 1: and then other people said no, no, no no, all his number, 186 00:11:35,800 --> 00:11:39,840 Speaker 1: man means like everything in the world is made of numbers. 187 00:11:40,240 --> 00:11:44,720 Speaker 1: That tree is a number. You are a number because 188 00:11:44,720 --> 00:11:47,880 Speaker 1: they're licking those toads. Yes, and in the background of 189 00:11:47,960 --> 00:11:53,080 Speaker 1: reindeer peas quietly into a bucket. So bucket is then 190 00:11:53,120 --> 00:11:56,520 Speaker 1: distributed into small mugs. That's that second part of all 191 00:11:56,640 --> 00:12:01,360 Speaker 1: his number is um. That's that's the basis of numerology. 192 00:12:01,400 --> 00:12:03,880 Speaker 1: And that's where it kind of veers away from science. 193 00:12:04,200 --> 00:12:07,760 Speaker 1: And I was reading this, Um, Veers, it takes a 194 00:12:07,800 --> 00:12:12,160 Speaker 1: really hard turn. Ye, didn't that what Veers means? I 195 00:12:12,200 --> 00:12:14,520 Speaker 1: think veer is a very gentle turn. Oh, I thought, 196 00:12:14,559 --> 00:12:17,840 Speaker 1: I think, okay, Corene's away from science. Yeah, there what 197 00:12:17,880 --> 00:12:21,000 Speaker 1: you're looking Okay? All right? Um, So I saw a 198 00:12:21,040 --> 00:12:24,920 Speaker 1: really interesting article on b v D M B B 199 00:12:24,920 --> 00:12:28,240 Speaker 1: B b v D b b g D open mind. 200 00:12:29,480 --> 00:12:32,520 Speaker 1: I can't remember, um, but they were they were talking 201 00:12:32,520 --> 00:12:35,760 Speaker 1: about Pythagoras and the Pythagorines and how they're like this 202 00:12:35,840 --> 00:12:40,040 Speaker 1: full chrome where numbers went from mystical things having a 203 00:12:40,120 --> 00:12:44,320 Speaker 1: mystical quality to bringing them into science and then taking 204 00:12:44,320 --> 00:12:48,520 Speaker 1: it right back into mysticism again, which is really odd, 205 00:12:48,559 --> 00:12:51,320 Speaker 1: but that's that's really what happened. And it was part 206 00:12:51,480 --> 00:12:53,800 Speaker 1: partially because they got so wrapped up in the idea 207 00:12:53,840 --> 00:12:56,800 Speaker 1: that all his number and they were a really weird 208 00:12:56,840 --> 00:12:59,880 Speaker 1: group of people. They met their end really violently, um 209 00:13:00,160 --> 00:13:04,360 Speaker 1: in southern Italy, uh, where their their school was sacked 210 00:13:04,400 --> 00:13:07,760 Speaker 1: and burned. At least fifty of them were killed. Um. 211 00:13:07,800 --> 00:13:10,720 Speaker 1: But like you said, they had created like a real 212 00:13:10,800 --> 00:13:14,080 Speaker 1: foundation for our understanding of math and the idea that 213 00:13:14,200 --> 00:13:17,040 Speaker 1: math was this thing that exists out there waiting for 214 00:13:17,120 --> 00:13:19,920 Speaker 1: us to discover and that it has a lot to 215 00:13:19,960 --> 00:13:23,640 Speaker 1: do with our life. But that the mystical qualities associated 216 00:13:23,720 --> 00:13:29,199 Speaker 1: kind of died with Pythagoras and the Pythagoreans. That's right, Um, 217 00:13:29,240 --> 00:13:30,880 Speaker 1: I guess I mean, should we get into a little 218 00:13:30,920 --> 00:13:35,679 Speaker 1: bit of kind of what they were laying down there? Yeah, alright, 219 00:13:35,760 --> 00:13:40,560 Speaker 1: So they were studying these mathematical concepts and they said, 220 00:13:40,559 --> 00:13:42,200 Speaker 1: all right, here's what we're gonna do. We're gonna sort 221 00:13:42,280 --> 00:13:45,680 Speaker 1: numbers into buckets, into categories. Not not the reindeer p bucket, 222 00:13:46,400 --> 00:13:50,920 Speaker 1: but into mathematical categories, so levers we can pull. Yeah, 223 00:13:51,000 --> 00:13:53,560 Speaker 1: let's just say, let's say one, four, and nine are 224 00:13:53,720 --> 00:13:59,600 Speaker 1: square because, uh, if you take pebbles, the corresponding number 225 00:13:59,640 --> 00:14:02,520 Speaker 1: of little pebbles or rocks or whatever, you can arrange 226 00:14:02,520 --> 00:14:07,440 Speaker 1: them into a square. Again, geometry coming into play. Um, one, three, six, 227 00:14:07,480 --> 00:14:10,760 Speaker 1: and ten are triangular because one, three, six, or ten 228 00:14:10,840 --> 00:14:16,079 Speaker 1: little pebbles can be arranged into regular triangles. The use 229 00:14:16,120 --> 00:14:18,480 Speaker 1: of one is both the square and a triangle. It's like, 230 00:14:19,080 --> 00:14:21,040 Speaker 1: I dispute that too. You're gonna have to pick one 231 00:14:21,160 --> 00:14:24,280 Speaker 1: or the other. Pythagoreans alright, so it would be falling 232 00:14:24,280 --> 00:14:25,960 Speaker 1: apart for you already if you were back there, just 233 00:14:26,240 --> 00:14:29,160 Speaker 1: there though, just there everything else. I was like, yeah, yeah, 234 00:14:29,280 --> 00:14:32,280 Speaker 1: all is number, Give me some more, baby, Uh, two, 235 00:14:32,320 --> 00:14:35,880 Speaker 1: six and twelve or oblong. So the corresponding number is 236 00:14:36,080 --> 00:14:39,480 Speaker 1: a rectangle. And so they're doing this kind of thing, 237 00:14:40,200 --> 00:14:45,320 Speaker 1: and then they start getting into non numerical stuff and saying, 238 00:14:45,360 --> 00:14:49,440 Speaker 1: all right, odd numbers are masculine. Even numbers are feminine. Uh, 239 00:14:49,800 --> 00:14:54,120 Speaker 1: the number one is creative because if you add multiple ones, 240 00:14:54,280 --> 00:14:59,200 Speaker 1: you can create any other number. Bro, what what else 241 00:14:59,280 --> 00:15:03,600 Speaker 1: is there? Well? To um, so odd is masculine, even 242 00:15:03,760 --> 00:15:06,160 Speaker 1: are feminine. Like you said, so two is the first 243 00:15:06,200 --> 00:15:12,160 Speaker 1: feminine number. It represents duality there two. Um. Three is 244 00:15:12,200 --> 00:15:14,840 Speaker 1: the first masculine number because like you said, one is 245 00:15:14,880 --> 00:15:18,960 Speaker 1: its own thing. It's a creator number. And so uh 246 00:15:19,000 --> 00:15:25,680 Speaker 1: five yeah, five is the is represents marriage because it's 247 00:15:25,720 --> 00:15:28,760 Speaker 1: where the first masculine number in the first feminine number. 248 00:15:29,120 --> 00:15:32,440 Speaker 1: Um add up to just stuff like that, Like these 249 00:15:32,480 --> 00:15:35,320 Speaker 1: people clearly a way too much time on their hands 250 00:15:36,160 --> 00:15:39,960 Speaker 1: to think of something like that, um. And so like 251 00:15:40,320 --> 00:15:43,520 Speaker 1: each number one through nine, this is very important because 252 00:15:43,760 --> 00:15:46,360 Speaker 1: we didn't say it earlier when we introduced numerology, but 253 00:15:47,120 --> 00:15:52,040 Speaker 1: in numerological systems, one through nine are the prime and 254 00:15:52,080 --> 00:15:55,000 Speaker 1: I don't mean that mathematically, the most important, the most used, 255 00:15:55,040 --> 00:16:01,320 Speaker 1: the most useful numbers, right, Um, So one through nine 256 00:16:01,360 --> 00:16:04,000 Speaker 1: are the ones to focus on, and that also came 257 00:16:04,040 --> 00:16:08,440 Speaker 1: directly from the Pythagoreans. They focused mostly on the numbers 258 00:16:08,440 --> 00:16:11,920 Speaker 1: one through nine as well, right uh. And I think 259 00:16:12,000 --> 00:16:13,680 Speaker 1: a goal for a lot of these charts is to 260 00:16:13,720 --> 00:16:18,520 Speaker 1: get your number down to one of those single digits eventually, right. Yeah, 261 00:16:18,640 --> 00:16:21,600 Speaker 1: that was for for most systems, and with most numbers 262 00:16:21,880 --> 00:16:23,760 Speaker 1: we'll talk about it, but yes, you ultimately want to 263 00:16:23,760 --> 00:16:27,120 Speaker 1: get it down to one of those single digit numbers. Yeah, yeah, 264 00:16:27,200 --> 00:16:29,640 Speaker 1: because you can't be ten because ten is a sacred number. 265 00:16:30,120 --> 00:16:33,160 Speaker 1: Because someone said, you know, if you add up the 266 00:16:33,200 --> 00:16:37,960 Speaker 1: first four digits, it equals ten. Bro, And they did 267 00:16:38,000 --> 00:16:39,720 Speaker 1: stuff like that. They did stuff like that. But also 268 00:16:39,760 --> 00:16:41,160 Speaker 1: I just want to point out one of the other 269 00:16:41,160 --> 00:16:43,240 Speaker 1: things they did that. I'm like, I didn't even know 270 00:16:43,280 --> 00:16:46,080 Speaker 1: these existed, so I'm I'm still impressed. They were the 271 00:16:46,080 --> 00:16:50,240 Speaker 1: first ones to detect perfect numbers. And a perfect number 272 00:16:50,280 --> 00:16:52,920 Speaker 1: is a number where the divisors add up to form 273 00:16:53,080 --> 00:16:56,480 Speaker 1: the number. So six is a perfect number because if 274 00:16:56,520 --> 00:17:00,360 Speaker 1: you add as divisors devisors being one, two, and three, 275 00:17:01,440 --> 00:17:04,639 Speaker 1: they add up to six. So I mean there is 276 00:17:04,680 --> 00:17:07,240 Speaker 1: some neat stuff that is actually I think useful that 277 00:17:07,320 --> 00:17:09,560 Speaker 1: came out of it. But yes, other of other other 278 00:17:09,640 --> 00:17:12,199 Speaker 1: stuff is like, yes, ten is sacred because if you 279 00:17:12,240 --> 00:17:14,159 Speaker 1: add up one to three and four it comes up 280 00:17:14,200 --> 00:17:16,600 Speaker 1: to ten. It's like, what about five, six, seven, eight, 281 00:17:16,640 --> 00:17:21,200 Speaker 1: and nine? Jack, just canna ignore those? Yes, yes, we 282 00:17:21,320 --> 00:17:24,600 Speaker 1: are yes. The number ten also led to the list 283 00:17:24,600 --> 00:17:28,040 Speaker 1: of ten fundamental opposites um a few of which are 284 00:17:28,800 --> 00:17:32,840 Speaker 1: one and many rest in motion good and evil stuff 285 00:17:32,880 --> 00:17:36,440 Speaker 1: like that. Yeah, straight and crooked, sure, light and dark, 286 00:17:36,520 --> 00:17:40,520 Speaker 1: straight and crooked, yin and yang. That's not in there, 287 00:17:40,560 --> 00:17:44,680 Speaker 1: is it? You had to look? All right? So look, 288 00:17:44,720 --> 00:17:48,960 Speaker 1: here's the thing. Because there was a really ironic end 289 00:17:48,960 --> 00:17:54,040 Speaker 1: to the Pythagoreans because they look too hard into numbers 290 00:17:54,080 --> 00:17:58,400 Speaker 1: and how numbers related to the universe, that they actually 291 00:17:59,560 --> 00:18:03,480 Speaker 1: found that everything doesn't fit into some neat and tidy 292 00:18:03,560 --> 00:18:07,480 Speaker 1: box like they thought. And supposedly one of the Pythagoreans 293 00:18:08,200 --> 00:18:10,920 Speaker 1: was kind of hanging around doing some equations and formula 294 00:18:11,000 --> 00:18:12,960 Speaker 1: at some point and tried to come up with the 295 00:18:13,000 --> 00:18:17,400 Speaker 1: square root of two and discovered the existence of irrational numbers. 296 00:18:17,480 --> 00:18:20,639 Speaker 1: And an irrational number is a number that has a 297 00:18:20,720 --> 00:18:25,760 Speaker 1: non repeating, non terminating decimal. It just goes on infinitely 298 00:18:26,040 --> 00:18:30,160 Speaker 1: like pie is an irrational number. The square root of two, 299 00:18:30,200 --> 00:18:32,440 Speaker 1: like the Pythagorines figured as an irrational number, and it 300 00:18:32,520 --> 00:18:36,520 Speaker 1: can't be represented in a simple fraction like every other number. 301 00:18:37,440 --> 00:18:40,520 Speaker 1: Rational numbers is what they're called. And apparently when they 302 00:18:40,600 --> 00:18:43,960 Speaker 1: found this out, it kind of like their worldview crumbled. 303 00:18:43,960 --> 00:18:47,359 Speaker 1: Do all his number thing crumbled because they couldn't figure 304 00:18:47,359 --> 00:18:52,760 Speaker 1: out how this would apply to like an orderly, beautiful universe. Um. 305 00:18:52,880 --> 00:18:56,159 Speaker 1: And apparently they even before they were sacked and burned 306 00:18:56,400 --> 00:19:00,200 Speaker 1: and killed. They the school kind of like fell into 307 00:19:00,320 --> 00:19:02,840 Speaker 1: dark times once they figured out there were such things 308 00:19:02,840 --> 00:19:06,280 Speaker 1: as irrational numbers. Yeah, that's what happens when you're in 309 00:19:06,280 --> 00:19:09,600 Speaker 1: a cult. Yeah, kind of your face with reality and 310 00:19:09,640 --> 00:19:13,520 Speaker 1: it usually doesn't go very well. So after the death 311 00:19:13,520 --> 00:19:19,679 Speaker 1: of Pythagoras and the Pythagoreans, um, the mysticism, all this 312 00:19:19,720 --> 00:19:22,040 Speaker 1: stuff kind of faded away a little bit and was 313 00:19:22,119 --> 00:19:26,159 Speaker 1: resurrected in the eighteen hundreds, um, kind of notably with 314 00:19:26,480 --> 00:19:30,159 Speaker 1: the writings of a book from Mrs l. Dal Baallyette 315 00:19:31,000 --> 00:19:34,439 Speaker 1: a k A. Josie. I don't get it that was 316 00:19:34,440 --> 00:19:40,159 Speaker 1: her name, Okay. I think her husband's name was l. 317 00:19:40,320 --> 00:19:44,480 Speaker 1: Dal Her name was Joseph Jane Josie Balliette. So I 318 00:19:44,520 --> 00:19:47,399 Speaker 1: was looking up anything on this this person, and like 319 00:19:47,520 --> 00:19:51,280 Speaker 1: she is just nowhere. Um. But she wrote a bunch 320 00:19:51,320 --> 00:19:53,520 Speaker 1: of books, but very little is known about her except 321 00:19:53,520 --> 00:19:55,720 Speaker 1: she died at age eighty four in Atlantic City. I 322 00:19:55,800 --> 00:19:59,000 Speaker 1: read very interesting. But she was the first one to 323 00:19:59,080 --> 00:20:02,800 Speaker 1: kind of come along and say vibrations, right. Yeah, And 324 00:20:02,880 --> 00:20:04,320 Speaker 1: you know, there were there were other people that were 325 00:20:04,359 --> 00:20:07,080 Speaker 1: writing books and stuff. It didn't like completely completely go away. 326 00:20:07,760 --> 00:20:11,000 Speaker 1: But I think these books that talked about vibrations and 327 00:20:11,000 --> 00:20:14,359 Speaker 1: that talked about music and numbers and colors being you know, 328 00:20:14,359 --> 00:20:17,240 Speaker 1: because there's a little bit of synesthigious sort of thrown 329 00:20:17,240 --> 00:20:19,320 Speaker 1: in here as well. If some of this kind of 330 00:20:19,359 --> 00:20:23,880 Speaker 1: sounds familiar with colors and numbers representing like the same thing. 331 00:20:25,000 --> 00:20:27,959 Speaker 1: And so she was talking about everything and all these 332 00:20:28,040 --> 00:20:33,800 Speaker 1: numbers having vibrations. Uh, people, food, a tree, a bicycle, 333 00:20:33,880 --> 00:20:36,920 Speaker 1: anything has a vibration. And if you and this idea 334 00:20:37,080 --> 00:20:39,280 Speaker 1: that I spoke about earlier, if you want to live 335 00:20:39,320 --> 00:20:43,320 Speaker 1: in harmony in the world, then your environment should and 336 00:20:43,359 --> 00:20:46,280 Speaker 1: the numbers of your environment that have been assigned need 337 00:20:46,320 --> 00:20:50,800 Speaker 1: to match your own vibration in your own number. And 338 00:20:51,280 --> 00:20:53,959 Speaker 1: you know, this is where it definitely this is kind 339 00:20:54,000 --> 00:20:57,000 Speaker 1: of what we think of as modern numerology at this point. Yeah. 340 00:20:57,080 --> 00:21:00,680 Speaker 1: One thing, one interesting thing about vibrations, especially sleep about 341 00:21:00,760 --> 00:21:04,480 Speaker 1: like an old timey nineteenth century writer, new age writer 342 00:21:04,640 --> 00:21:09,240 Speaker 1: basically talking about vibrations, um is that that's that's actually 343 00:21:09,280 --> 00:21:13,600 Speaker 1: the basis of some of the theories of how subatomic 344 00:21:13,720 --> 00:21:17,720 Speaker 1: particles behave vibrations, like string theories, based on the idea 345 00:21:17,800 --> 00:21:21,479 Speaker 1: that subatomic particles are actually vibrating strings of energy that 346 00:21:21,600 --> 00:21:25,880 Speaker 1: vibrate at different frequencies, and that those differing frequencies produce 347 00:21:26,080 --> 00:21:30,080 Speaker 1: their shape or their form um, which is I just 348 00:21:30,119 --> 00:21:33,200 Speaker 1: find that endlessly fascinating that it's almost, in some weird 349 00:21:33,240 --> 00:21:38,240 Speaker 1: way predicted string theory. But is it just one of 350 00:21:38,320 --> 00:21:41,679 Speaker 1: those things where it's like, yeah, I mean vibrations, especially 351 00:21:41,760 --> 00:21:45,879 Speaker 1: if you're into things like music, Um, it's not like 352 00:21:45,960 --> 00:21:48,160 Speaker 1: that far of a stretch or was it like, yeah, 353 00:21:48,160 --> 00:21:52,040 Speaker 1: they were tapped into some sort of weird preternatural understanding 354 00:21:52,080 --> 00:21:57,679 Speaker 1: of subatomic physics. Yeah, super interesting. Pythagoras also believed that 355 00:21:57,800 --> 00:22:00,639 Speaker 1: this vibration could have had some thing to do with 356 00:22:00,680 --> 00:22:03,439 Speaker 1: what was called the music of the spheres, which is 357 00:22:03,960 --> 00:22:06,960 Speaker 1: what he believed like the planets were embedded in these 358 00:22:07,000 --> 00:22:11,840 Speaker 1: transparent physical spheres, and the distance between them corresponded to 359 00:22:11,880 --> 00:22:15,080 Speaker 1: these musical ratios, and these are the sounds that the 360 00:22:15,119 --> 00:22:18,280 Speaker 1: planets that these vibrations that the planets in the Sun 361 00:22:18,280 --> 00:22:20,720 Speaker 1: make while orbiting the Earth. Were the little off on 362 00:22:20,760 --> 00:22:23,280 Speaker 1: that one when they wasn't that on the Golden Records? 363 00:22:23,320 --> 00:22:25,840 Speaker 1: Didn't Carl Sagan create like an homage to that on 364 00:22:25,920 --> 00:22:29,120 Speaker 1: the Golden records. I think so I knew it sounded familiar. 365 00:22:29,200 --> 00:22:32,359 Speaker 1: We talked about it before. I do also want to 366 00:22:32,480 --> 00:22:34,320 Speaker 1: shout out a company if you're looking to get a 367 00:22:35,160 --> 00:22:40,520 Speaker 1: kind of the best wind chime that you can buy. No, 368 00:22:40,760 --> 00:22:43,040 Speaker 1: there's a company out of Boston called Music of the Spheres. 369 00:22:43,280 --> 00:22:46,040 Speaker 1: Oh cool, and they're amazing, like you can get it's 370 00:22:46,240 --> 00:22:49,840 Speaker 1: I've got several sets in different places and they they're 371 00:22:49,880 --> 00:22:51,760 Speaker 1: just I wanted to shout them out for a while, 372 00:22:51,800 --> 00:22:55,040 Speaker 1: because when someone just makes something great, you know this, 373 00:22:55,160 --> 00:23:00,080 Speaker 1: This ain't no uh big box wind chime. Wind chimes 374 00:23:00,080 --> 00:23:03,280 Speaker 1: are us these beautiful sounds. No, it's a Music of 375 00:23:03,320 --> 00:23:05,480 Speaker 1: the sphere. So so wait a minute. You're you're poking 376 00:23:05,520 --> 00:23:07,320 Speaker 1: fun at people who are talking about how ten is 377 00:23:07,359 --> 00:23:09,520 Speaker 1: a holy number because one through four it up to 378 00:23:09,560 --> 00:23:12,400 Speaker 1: ten and you have multiple wind chimes at your house. 379 00:23:12,760 --> 00:23:16,040 Speaker 1: I love wind chimes. I got one of those big 380 00:23:16,080 --> 00:23:18,640 Speaker 1: doggers at my camp, like way up in a tree, 381 00:23:19,280 --> 00:23:20,760 Speaker 1: and these things, I mean, it took a lot to 382 00:23:20,760 --> 00:23:22,760 Speaker 1: get them up there. They're heavy, but they're like five 383 00:23:22,760 --> 00:23:27,000 Speaker 1: ft long. They're these I'm sure the girls are really 384 00:23:27,000 --> 00:23:31,520 Speaker 1: happy you've moved in. Hey, we still bears despite the chime. 385 00:23:31,720 --> 00:23:34,280 Speaker 1: Oh is the bear back? Has it been back? No? 386 00:23:34,400 --> 00:23:36,480 Speaker 1: But I put the chime up and the bear came afterwards, 387 00:23:36,520 --> 00:23:38,359 Speaker 1: So I think they're attracted to it. I got you 388 00:23:38,840 --> 00:23:45,840 Speaker 1: sase bears come get a picnic basket. So, uh, where 389 00:23:45,840 --> 00:23:50,840 Speaker 1: are we here? Well, we're talking about modern numerology, right, Yeah, 390 00:23:50,880 --> 00:23:53,000 Speaker 1: I guess we should talk a little bit about I mean, 391 00:23:53,000 --> 00:23:54,440 Speaker 1: should we take a break and then talk about that? 392 00:23:54,480 --> 00:23:56,160 Speaker 1: I think you're right, Chuck, I think all right, we'll 393 00:23:56,200 --> 00:23:57,920 Speaker 1: take a break and we'll talk about sort of modern 394 00:23:58,000 --> 00:24:01,560 Speaker 1: numerology and how we come up with our own numbers 395 00:24:01,600 --> 00:24:31,679 Speaker 1: and what that even means right after this? All right, 396 00:24:32,040 --> 00:24:34,400 Speaker 1: So we talked to talk about how one through nine 397 00:24:34,400 --> 00:24:39,119 Speaker 1: are inherently important to UM modern numerologists and the Pythagoreans 398 00:24:39,160 --> 00:24:42,160 Speaker 1: to right correct, and that each of those numbers one 399 00:24:42,200 --> 00:24:46,280 Speaker 1: through nine has its own vibration, and those vibrations give 400 00:24:46,359 --> 00:24:55,919 Speaker 1: that number certain property. And I'm talking properties like um leadership, harmony, karma, wisdom, curiosity, 401 00:24:56,760 --> 00:25:04,400 Speaker 1: like intangible but important properties that humans could conceivably possess 402 00:25:04,960 --> 00:25:10,000 Speaker 1: numbers in these numbers, different numbers inherently have. That's right, 403 00:25:10,240 --> 00:25:13,639 Speaker 1: And depending on what system you're using, there is going 404 00:25:13,680 --> 00:25:17,359 Speaker 1: to be a chart that where a letter corresponds with 405 00:25:17,400 --> 00:25:20,560 Speaker 1: the number is usually and can be as easy as 406 00:25:20,680 --> 00:25:25,120 Speaker 1: A as one, B as two, and so on and uh, 407 00:25:25,280 --> 00:25:26,840 Speaker 1: like we said, there there are a lot of different 408 00:25:26,880 --> 00:25:30,080 Speaker 1: kinds of charts. So depending on which system you're using, 409 00:25:30,119 --> 00:25:33,160 Speaker 1: you're going to use that chart and and what you're 410 00:25:33,160 --> 00:25:36,840 Speaker 1: gonna do is eventually end up with that single digit number. 411 00:25:37,040 --> 00:25:41,640 Speaker 1: So unless there are a couple of exceptions of that, right, well, yeah, 412 00:25:42,040 --> 00:25:44,200 Speaker 1: we'll get to those. But there there are a couple 413 00:25:44,280 --> 00:25:45,920 Speaker 1: of different numbers that you can get. You can use 414 00:25:45,920 --> 00:25:50,160 Speaker 1: your name like your first, middle and last name by birth. Um. 415 00:25:50,280 --> 00:25:52,040 Speaker 1: I saw here in this article where it said you 416 00:25:52,040 --> 00:25:54,760 Speaker 1: have to use your birth name. Nicknames and change names 417 00:25:54,760 --> 00:25:59,280 Speaker 1: don't count. But I also saw other places where when 418 00:25:59,320 --> 00:26:02,520 Speaker 1: you change your name and that changes your destiny and 419 00:26:02,600 --> 00:26:05,760 Speaker 1: so you're supposed to refigure that. I saw one place 420 00:26:05,840 --> 00:26:10,240 Speaker 1: that allowed for nicknames in addition to given names, but 421 00:26:10,320 --> 00:26:14,000 Speaker 1: almost everywhere else said no, your birth name is the 422 00:26:14,040 --> 00:26:16,639 Speaker 1: one that's important. And the reason they gave is the 423 00:26:16,680 --> 00:26:20,119 Speaker 1: same reason that's in this article. That before you're born, 424 00:26:20,359 --> 00:26:23,640 Speaker 1: you basically communicate to your parents what your name should be, 425 00:26:24,359 --> 00:26:27,800 Speaker 1: so that your given name is going to suit your 426 00:26:28,000 --> 00:26:31,320 Speaker 1: your numerological number and that you're destined to have. Yeah, 427 00:26:31,320 --> 00:26:33,080 Speaker 1: that's where you get it from. That's where your parents 428 00:26:33,119 --> 00:26:35,680 Speaker 1: get your name from. Is actually from you little psychic 429 00:26:35,720 --> 00:26:39,040 Speaker 1: baby in the womb. Yeah, And I think the idea 430 00:26:39,200 --> 00:26:41,000 Speaker 1: is if you use your name to come up with 431 00:26:41,000 --> 00:26:43,160 Speaker 1: a number, Like there's a couple of different numbers. There's 432 00:26:43,160 --> 00:26:46,359 Speaker 1: your name number and then your birthdate number, and your 433 00:26:46,440 --> 00:26:49,520 Speaker 1: name number is kind of your personality and the interview 434 00:26:50,160 --> 00:26:53,680 Speaker 1: where your birth number is your what can has been 435 00:26:53,680 --> 00:26:56,720 Speaker 1: referred to as like your life path number or your 436 00:26:56,760 --> 00:27:00,760 Speaker 1: destiny number. And using these two numbers, you can kind 437 00:27:00,760 --> 00:27:03,720 Speaker 1: of if you're into this kind of thing, you can 438 00:27:03,760 --> 00:27:06,359 Speaker 1: make decisions on how to move forward in your life 439 00:27:06,560 --> 00:27:08,920 Speaker 1: and align these numbers with the rest of your life. Yeah. 440 00:27:08,960 --> 00:27:11,439 Speaker 1: I saw the destiny number and will explain how you 441 00:27:11,480 --> 00:27:14,680 Speaker 1: get that. That's derived from your name. That that's how 442 00:27:14,720 --> 00:27:18,159 Speaker 1: you'll reach the goals that are part of your life 443 00:27:18,160 --> 00:27:23,120 Speaker 1: path number. Right, So, um, it's actually really interesting stuff. 444 00:27:23,280 --> 00:27:27,120 Speaker 1: Um to start with the destiny number also called the 445 00:27:27,200 --> 00:27:32,040 Speaker 1: expression number. Um, you take that full name. Uh. From 446 00:27:32,040 --> 00:27:34,240 Speaker 1: what I saw from birth, I hadn't seen that You're 447 00:27:34,240 --> 00:27:38,760 Speaker 1: you're choosing a different name, altered your path that's pretty interesting. Um. 448 00:27:39,080 --> 00:27:41,560 Speaker 1: But if you stick with just your your chosen name, 449 00:27:41,600 --> 00:27:44,000 Speaker 1: it has to be your full given name at birth, first, 450 00:27:44,080 --> 00:27:46,040 Speaker 1: middle and last name. And if you'll have the middle name, 451 00:27:46,160 --> 00:27:48,440 Speaker 1: that's okay. You can just see your first and last 452 00:27:48,520 --> 00:27:52,240 Speaker 1: name and that when you add up the numbers UM 453 00:27:52,280 --> 00:27:57,600 Speaker 1: from the corresponding letters UH from from each of your names, 454 00:27:57,840 --> 00:28:01,480 Speaker 1: you come up with UM three members. You add this together, 455 00:28:01,520 --> 00:28:04,560 Speaker 1: so for example, Chuck, your first name, Charles is thirty. 456 00:28:04,720 --> 00:28:08,120 Speaker 1: Wayne comes up to twenty three. Brianthagoras is my other 457 00:28:08,240 --> 00:28:12,400 Speaker 1: middle name, briant Um adds up to twenty six. If 458 00:28:12,400 --> 00:28:15,560 Speaker 1: you add those together, you get seventy nine. Well, seventy 459 00:28:15,640 --> 00:28:18,800 Speaker 1: nine is virtually meaningless as far as numerology is concerned, 460 00:28:19,119 --> 00:28:22,240 Speaker 1: so you want to add seven and nine, you get sixteen, 461 00:28:22,560 --> 00:28:26,000 Speaker 1: getting closer, but still not not really useful. So you 462 00:28:26,040 --> 00:28:28,240 Speaker 1: had one in six and now we finally come to 463 00:28:28,320 --> 00:28:33,560 Speaker 1: your true destiny number, Chuck, which is seven. Right, So 464 00:28:33,680 --> 00:28:38,440 Speaker 1: seven is my uh destiny number. And if you look up, 465 00:28:38,520 --> 00:28:41,920 Speaker 1: you can look up like attributes for each of these numbers. 466 00:28:41,920 --> 00:28:43,880 Speaker 1: And this is where it's basically I mean, if you're 467 00:28:43,880 --> 00:28:50,200 Speaker 1: thinking this sounds like astrology and horoscopes or the zodiological 468 00:28:50,440 --> 00:28:53,000 Speaker 1: birth calendars. Like, you're right, all of this stuff is 469 00:28:53,040 --> 00:29:00,240 Speaker 1: kind of that. So seven means uh is magic, wisdom, intelligence, mystery, solitude, 470 00:29:00,320 --> 00:29:04,120 Speaker 1: that's you all over. What's your number? I'm a nine, 471 00:29:04,200 --> 00:29:07,840 Speaker 1: and interestingly there's different. Well, I'm a nine from my 472 00:29:08,920 --> 00:29:11,360 Speaker 1: life path number. I'm not sure from my name number. 473 00:29:11,720 --> 00:29:14,400 Speaker 1: All right, so we're both nines on the life path number, 474 00:29:15,320 --> 00:29:18,479 Speaker 1: which I looked up a thing that said your life 475 00:29:18,520 --> 00:29:20,960 Speaker 1: path number is a number of completion resolution. Those with 476 00:29:21,160 --> 00:29:24,120 Speaker 1: number nine and this for both of us tend to 477 00:29:24,160 --> 00:29:27,880 Speaker 1: have a humanitarian and almost a utopian quality to their being. 478 00:29:28,840 --> 00:29:33,040 Speaker 1: Because we're compassionate and philip philanthropical, we are likely to 479 00:29:33,040 --> 00:29:35,160 Speaker 1: be drawn towards global issues that deal with the helping 480 00:29:35,160 --> 00:29:38,440 Speaker 1: of the whole human kind in the world. But Josh, 481 00:29:38,960 --> 00:29:41,560 Speaker 1: we need to be wary of over extending ourselves and 482 00:29:41,640 --> 00:29:45,360 Speaker 1: sacrificing too much of ourselves uh, and losing the greater 483 00:29:45,440 --> 00:29:48,320 Speaker 1: perspective in the pursuit of pursuit of our goals. We 484 00:29:48,360 --> 00:29:51,760 Speaker 1: have to learn to say no sometimes. In other words, yeah, 485 00:29:51,800 --> 00:29:53,560 Speaker 1: we've gotten better about that over the years, and that 486 00:29:53,720 --> 00:29:56,560 Speaker 1: is definitely and that well, that's because we're there following 487 00:29:56,800 --> 00:30:01,920 Speaker 1: our our um, we're following destiny numbers towards our life 488 00:30:01,920 --> 00:30:06,040 Speaker 1: path number. So what that you just kind of like 489 00:30:06,120 --> 00:30:08,520 Speaker 1: said of something I think is really important to point 490 00:30:08,520 --> 00:30:10,920 Speaker 1: out about numerology that you're gonna encounter if you get 491 00:30:10,920 --> 00:30:15,160 Speaker 1: a numerological reading, is the number has the best of 492 00:30:15,200 --> 00:30:18,440 Speaker 1: you and the stuff you need to avoid. It's all 493 00:30:18,560 --> 00:30:21,760 Speaker 1: encompassed in that one number. And you have multiple numbers, 494 00:30:21,800 --> 00:30:24,040 Speaker 1: so each of those have things to avoid, things to 495 00:30:24,160 --> 00:30:26,960 Speaker 1: focus on, things to improve on, things to things that 496 00:30:27,000 --> 00:30:28,720 Speaker 1: are going to challenge you in your life, which I 497 00:30:28,720 --> 00:30:32,240 Speaker 1: find pretty interesting. Yeah, And you know it gets more 498 00:30:32,280 --> 00:30:34,840 Speaker 1: complicated than that too. If you want to drill down. 499 00:30:35,600 --> 00:30:39,400 Speaker 1: There are numerologists you use these big charts and diagrams 500 00:30:39,440 --> 00:30:42,640 Speaker 1: that end up kind of looking like at astrological charts. 501 00:30:43,560 --> 00:30:48,840 Speaker 1: And you know that's when they're sort of drilling down to, um, 502 00:30:48,960 --> 00:30:51,800 Speaker 1: how you relate to people in your family maybe, or 503 00:30:51,840 --> 00:30:54,720 Speaker 1: to the person you're married to, or if you want 504 00:30:54,720 --> 00:30:57,959 Speaker 1: to find if you want to find a romantic partner, 505 00:30:58,280 --> 00:31:00,760 Speaker 1: or avoid negative tendencies, or just find out what you're 506 00:31:00,840 --> 00:31:04,200 Speaker 1: lucky number lucky day is. Yeah, and also there's um 507 00:31:04,480 --> 00:31:07,920 Speaker 1: some systems that I've seen multiple places that just rely 508 00:31:08,360 --> 00:31:13,120 Speaker 1: almost like shorthand on the date of your birth, So 509 00:31:13,160 --> 00:31:15,360 Speaker 1: the day of the month that you were born on, 510 00:31:16,240 --> 00:31:19,160 Speaker 1: like that's it. So like I was born on July fifteen, 511 00:31:19,560 --> 00:31:22,360 Speaker 1: so that would make me a six. And that's it. 512 00:31:22,440 --> 00:31:24,360 Speaker 1: That's what they use. They don't do the name thing. 513 00:31:24,440 --> 00:31:26,720 Speaker 1: They don't do your whole birthday. They just do the 514 00:31:26,800 --> 00:31:28,600 Speaker 1: day of the month that you were born on, almost 515 00:31:28,680 --> 00:31:31,920 Speaker 1: like much much more like a zodeological sign or astrological 516 00:31:32,000 --> 00:31:35,040 Speaker 1: sign um. And so as a six, I can do 517 00:31:35,120 --> 00:31:37,320 Speaker 1: things like I need to look for foods that are pale, 518 00:31:37,320 --> 00:31:39,960 Speaker 1: purple and blue. Those are going to vibrate with me 519 00:31:40,040 --> 00:31:44,960 Speaker 1: most most harmoniously. I should live in a city, maybe 520 00:31:45,000 --> 00:31:49,720 Speaker 1: Madras or Baton Rouge, surprising to me. And then I 521 00:31:49,760 --> 00:31:53,040 Speaker 1: should associate mostly with number fives. It turns out that 522 00:31:53,120 --> 00:31:56,720 Speaker 1: I'm most harmonious with them. Is you me a five? 523 00:31:57,400 --> 00:31:59,720 Speaker 1: I don't know. I know she's a three, I think 524 00:32:00,120 --> 00:32:03,520 Speaker 1: because yeah, she's thirty, so she's a she's a ten. 525 00:32:04,640 --> 00:32:07,280 Speaker 1: That's very nice, Emily, and we are ten's that's why 526 00:32:07,320 --> 00:32:12,640 Speaker 1: we married them. Let's just go with eleven. Mine goes 527 00:32:12,680 --> 00:32:16,120 Speaker 1: to eleven. Uh, I love that um. And this is 528 00:32:16,440 --> 00:32:18,120 Speaker 1: this is actual in the House of works article. I 529 00:32:18,160 --> 00:32:20,360 Speaker 1: can't believe you found one that we haven't mined yet. 530 00:32:20,520 --> 00:32:24,840 Speaker 1: But this is from Tracy Wilson. Are are still colleague 531 00:32:24,880 --> 00:32:27,120 Speaker 1: almost in former because we just don't see them anymore? 532 00:32:27,160 --> 00:32:32,520 Speaker 1: Which of the of the virus? But are you about no, no, no, 533 00:32:33,200 --> 00:32:35,760 Speaker 1: over at stuff you miss in history class with Holly right, 534 00:32:35,800 --> 00:32:39,600 Speaker 1: are you about to out her from as as a numerologist? No, 535 00:32:40,560 --> 00:32:46,400 Speaker 1: as a determined Harry Potter fan. Oh, I didn't even 536 00:32:46,480 --> 00:32:49,320 Speaker 1: think about that. This all makes sense. Now there's a 537 00:32:49,320 --> 00:32:51,240 Speaker 1: lot of Harry Potter in this There is a lot 538 00:32:51,320 --> 00:32:54,760 Speaker 1: of Harry Potter, and this articles all makes sense now. 539 00:32:55,280 --> 00:32:58,080 Speaker 1: Casey's defense was written in two thousand eight, when like, 540 00:32:58,840 --> 00:33:03,520 Speaker 1: you know, the kind of thing that's super hip. But uh, yeah, 541 00:33:03,600 --> 00:33:06,200 Speaker 1: it's pretty funny how much Harry Potter pops up. Yeah, 542 00:33:06,240 --> 00:33:09,440 Speaker 1: she's Harry Potter as the example of like forming that 543 00:33:09,680 --> 00:33:11,440 Speaker 1: or finding Harry Potter's number and all that. And in 544 00:33:11,480 --> 00:33:14,360 Speaker 1: the intro to she talks about her maiam e practicing 545 00:33:14,440 --> 00:33:17,920 Speaker 1: or rhythmancy. Yeah, which is a big deal in Harry Potter. 546 00:33:18,440 --> 00:33:22,960 Speaker 1: But I brought it up because Tracy referred to uh, 547 00:33:23,000 --> 00:33:24,880 Speaker 1: and she's probably not the first, but she referred to 548 00:33:25,200 --> 00:33:29,959 Speaker 1: numerology as a version a kind of applied mysticism, And 549 00:33:30,000 --> 00:33:33,360 Speaker 1: I like that definition basically where you correlate a mystical 550 00:33:33,400 --> 00:33:37,440 Speaker 1: symbol with somebody's life. Uh. I think that kind of 551 00:33:37,480 --> 00:33:41,200 Speaker 1: says it best. Yeah, I mean there's a lot of 552 00:33:41,240 --> 00:33:44,720 Speaker 1: things you could do UM that kind of fall under 553 00:33:44,760 --> 00:33:48,120 Speaker 1: the New Age umbrella as far as like numerology astrology, 554 00:33:48,200 --> 00:33:50,400 Speaker 1: where you can you can look at it a couple 555 00:33:50,440 --> 00:33:54,960 Speaker 1: of ways, like you can give responsibility responsibility for your 556 00:33:54,960 --> 00:33:59,680 Speaker 1: life over to your numerological number or your astrological sign, 557 00:34:00,600 --> 00:34:03,240 Speaker 1: associate with some people and stay away from other people 558 00:34:03,360 --> 00:34:05,360 Speaker 1: or certain foods or whatever, and just kind of like 559 00:34:05,920 --> 00:34:08,799 Speaker 1: not have to think about life quite as much or 560 00:34:09,040 --> 00:34:12,480 Speaker 1: make your own decisions. That's like the bigger criticism of 561 00:34:12,640 --> 00:34:15,920 Speaker 1: New Age stuff, But there's a much more generous way 562 00:34:15,960 --> 00:34:19,000 Speaker 1: of interpreting it too, and saying like, you know, if 563 00:34:19,040 --> 00:34:21,880 Speaker 1: you're feeling a little lost or unmoored or unrooted and 564 00:34:21,960 --> 00:34:24,319 Speaker 1: you're trying to like figure out what direction to kind 565 00:34:24,320 --> 00:34:28,080 Speaker 1: of set your compass in, you could do worse than 566 00:34:28,400 --> 00:34:31,480 Speaker 1: you know, doing your numerological sign and being like, oh, 567 00:34:31,560 --> 00:34:34,239 Speaker 1: I should focus on being more creative and need to 568 00:34:34,280 --> 00:34:38,040 Speaker 1: look out for UM. Being too dependent on others. Does 569 00:34:38,080 --> 00:34:41,120 Speaker 1: that apply to me? Maybe it does. Let me just 570 00:34:41,200 --> 00:34:43,840 Speaker 1: kind of go forth from there. And I wouldn't recommend 571 00:34:43,920 --> 00:34:46,560 Speaker 1: doing in a daily numerological thing or anything like that, 572 00:34:46,560 --> 00:34:49,600 Speaker 1: But I'm saying like, in some ways New Age stuff 573 00:34:49,640 --> 00:34:52,960 Speaker 1: can be harmful because it kind of takes it takes 574 00:34:53,000 --> 00:34:55,000 Speaker 1: the purpose out of life for a lot of people. 575 00:34:55,000 --> 00:34:56,759 Speaker 1: But in other other ways it can kind of be 576 00:34:56,800 --> 00:35:00,000 Speaker 1: a guide. And just the same way that like religio 577 00:35:00,120 --> 00:35:03,799 Speaker 1: in or Friends or um a television show that you 578 00:35:03,800 --> 00:35:07,360 Speaker 1: think is speaking directly to you, can you know I 579 00:35:07,480 --> 00:35:12,520 Speaker 1: hear you? Do you? I do? Uh? I mean we're 580 00:35:12,560 --> 00:35:14,640 Speaker 1: kind of at that point. I guess about some criticisms 581 00:35:14,680 --> 00:35:17,319 Speaker 1: and one thing Tracy does mention And I think this 582 00:35:17,400 --> 00:35:20,319 Speaker 1: is just more as an example, not as specifically as 583 00:35:20,320 --> 00:35:24,240 Speaker 1: applies to the practice of numerology, but just people believing 584 00:35:24,320 --> 00:35:27,040 Speaker 1: like in a special number in their life and how 585 00:35:27,080 --> 00:35:30,840 Speaker 1: they always see that number. Uh. You know, I I 586 00:35:31,080 --> 00:35:33,480 Speaker 1: know people that see numbers and think that they mean 587 00:35:33,560 --> 00:35:36,040 Speaker 1: something like there's a certain number and I always see it, 588 00:35:36,600 --> 00:35:40,960 Speaker 1: And you know that's sort of that confirmation bias at work. Yes, generally, 589 00:35:40,960 --> 00:35:43,799 Speaker 1: where you notice that number more, you're really seeing all 590 00:35:43,880 --> 00:35:46,840 Speaker 1: kinds of numbers. But you notice eleven eleven on the 591 00:35:46,880 --> 00:35:50,440 Speaker 1: clock because you've told yourself that eleven eleven means something 592 00:35:50,480 --> 00:35:53,799 Speaker 1: to you, or that it does. You know you've heard 593 00:35:53,800 --> 00:35:56,440 Speaker 1: that it does, and you and you don't think about 594 00:35:56,480 --> 00:35:58,160 Speaker 1: all of the other times that you've seen on the 595 00:35:58,200 --> 00:35:59,880 Speaker 1: clock all day, or all the numbers you see all 596 00:35:59,920 --> 00:36:03,280 Speaker 1: the a long and you know that's fair enough. Um. 597 00:36:03,320 --> 00:36:08,880 Speaker 1: I think another criticism of numerology is that it's the 598 00:36:08,920 --> 00:36:11,720 Speaker 1: whole thing is based on an invented system of counting, 599 00:36:12,680 --> 00:36:17,080 Speaker 1: grouping by ten. And that's not even the first or 600 00:36:17,480 --> 00:36:21,239 Speaker 1: I mean, I was about to say the most legitimate. 601 00:36:21,560 --> 00:36:24,160 Speaker 1: I guess it was. It's not the original system of counting. 602 00:36:24,200 --> 00:36:25,960 Speaker 1: It was just made up by people to begin with. 603 00:36:26,080 --> 00:36:28,200 Speaker 1: It's the basis of the metric system. I would say 604 00:36:28,200 --> 00:36:32,319 Speaker 1: it's legit, well, not illegitimate, but it was. It was 605 00:36:32,440 --> 00:36:35,760 Speaker 1: invented by humans, right, yes, And it's not the only 606 00:36:35,760 --> 00:36:37,719 Speaker 1: way that we know how to count. Same as that 607 00:36:38,040 --> 00:36:41,880 Speaker 1: like using the the English alphabet to divine your future, 608 00:36:41,960 --> 00:36:45,319 Speaker 1: because you're applying in number an Arabic numeral to the 609 00:36:45,440 --> 00:36:48,239 Speaker 1: to a letter from the English alphabet. Those aren't the 610 00:36:48,280 --> 00:36:52,600 Speaker 1: only number systems or the only alphabet system, so like, yes, 611 00:36:52,800 --> 00:36:55,879 Speaker 1: it's made up, and you could make a case like 612 00:36:56,400 --> 00:36:58,759 Speaker 1: that A numerologist might make is say, well, you were 613 00:36:58,880 --> 00:37:02,560 Speaker 1: born English king in an English speaking country that uses 614 00:37:02,600 --> 00:37:06,480 Speaker 1: Arabic numerals, so of course that's going to apply to you. Um, 615 00:37:06,640 --> 00:37:09,160 Speaker 1: I haven't heard what the response would be for like 616 00:37:09,200 --> 00:37:11,640 Speaker 1: if you were born in China, where the average person 617 00:37:11,680 --> 00:37:14,440 Speaker 1: needs to know about two thousand different characters in their 618 00:37:14,480 --> 00:37:18,359 Speaker 1: alphabet to to make their way through life. Um, like 619 00:37:18,520 --> 00:37:23,520 Speaker 1: how that would apply to numerology? Um, but yes, the 620 00:37:23,880 --> 00:37:25,920 Speaker 1: basis of this whole thing is like this is like 621 00:37:25,960 --> 00:37:27,759 Speaker 1: there's just so many holes you could drive a truck 622 00:37:27,800 --> 00:37:30,840 Speaker 1: through every single one of them. But if it's providing 623 00:37:30,880 --> 00:37:35,640 Speaker 1: some sort of comfort or um I even guidance to 624 00:37:35,719 --> 00:37:38,880 Speaker 1: somebody who's and it's not hurting them, hurting other people, 625 00:37:38,960 --> 00:37:43,759 Speaker 1: damaging their lives or shortening or narrowing their prospects, then 626 00:37:43,800 --> 00:37:46,279 Speaker 1: I mean, what's is it harmful? I don't know, I 627 00:37:46,320 --> 00:37:49,800 Speaker 1: could be missing something in that sense. I know what 628 00:37:49,880 --> 00:37:52,040 Speaker 1: you mean. And and even if you're if someone would 629 00:37:52,080 --> 00:37:53,520 Speaker 1: be like, yeah, but what about these people that pay 630 00:37:53,560 --> 00:37:57,279 Speaker 1: money and flush their money down the toilet? Problem with 631 00:37:57,320 --> 00:38:01,160 Speaker 1: a numerologist Another person might say, well, you know what, 632 00:38:01,560 --> 00:38:03,360 Speaker 1: I think that it's a waste of money talking to 633 00:38:03,400 --> 00:38:05,680 Speaker 1: a therapist who doesn't know you, or they could say 634 00:38:05,719 --> 00:38:10,920 Speaker 1: they're stimulating the economy. Well, the point is it's you know, 635 00:38:11,040 --> 00:38:14,879 Speaker 1: if the person walks away from that experience happy and satisfied, 636 00:38:15,760 --> 00:38:18,440 Speaker 1: then it's a it's a victimless crime. It's not a 637 00:38:18,480 --> 00:38:21,200 Speaker 1: crime at all. It's it's someone paying money for something 638 00:38:21,200 --> 00:38:23,160 Speaker 1: that they feel like they got something out of. If 639 00:38:23,200 --> 00:38:25,040 Speaker 1: you walk out there and you're like, what a rip off, 640 00:38:25,040 --> 00:38:27,759 Speaker 1: I can't believe it. They had ten dollars too for 641 00:38:27,800 --> 00:38:30,239 Speaker 1: someone to look into a crystal ball or to read 642 00:38:30,280 --> 00:38:33,719 Speaker 1: my numerological chart like, then it's a problem. But if 643 00:38:34,000 --> 00:38:36,120 Speaker 1: if you want to spend your money that way, we're 644 00:38:36,160 --> 00:38:39,360 Speaker 1: not gonna yuck your yum. If you feel good about it, 645 00:38:39,520 --> 00:38:43,840 Speaker 1: good on you. Yes, I have one caveat to that though, Okay, 646 00:38:43,880 --> 00:38:48,399 Speaker 1: it makes me anxious about about this just signing off 647 00:38:48,440 --> 00:38:51,799 Speaker 1: on that, and that is that I feel like this 648 00:38:51,880 --> 00:38:54,480 Speaker 1: resurgence and numerology we're seeing, like I'm sure most of 649 00:38:54,480 --> 00:38:56,239 Speaker 1: the people who are like the younger people are into 650 00:38:56,280 --> 00:38:58,000 Speaker 1: it today don't realize that like it was huge in 651 00:38:58,040 --> 00:38:59,960 Speaker 1: the seventies, and then I apparently was huge in the 652 00:39:00,080 --> 00:39:02,799 Speaker 1: nineteenth century. It was like like that, it just keeps 653 00:39:02,800 --> 00:39:05,239 Speaker 1: coming back at certain times in certain ways. Is that 654 00:39:05,600 --> 00:39:09,239 Speaker 1: this time that it's come back around, is it's correlated 655 00:39:09,280 --> 00:39:14,080 Speaker 1: with this again, this this death of trust and expertise 656 00:39:14,239 --> 00:39:17,959 Speaker 1: and in its anti science sentiment, And in that way, 657 00:39:18,080 --> 00:39:21,240 Speaker 1: I don't like anything that promotes an anti science sentiment 658 00:39:21,640 --> 00:39:24,520 Speaker 1: or um makes you believe that your opinion is just 659 00:39:24,560 --> 00:39:27,160 Speaker 1: as good as somebody who's gone and studied whatever you're 660 00:39:27,160 --> 00:39:31,239 Speaker 1: talking about for a dozen super yes, So in that sense, 661 00:39:31,280 --> 00:39:33,319 Speaker 1: I do not endorse it if it if it does 662 00:39:33,400 --> 00:39:35,799 Speaker 1: kind of promote that. But again, if we can just 663 00:39:35,880 --> 00:39:38,520 Speaker 1: bring it back to if it's just making them happy 664 00:39:38,560 --> 00:39:41,480 Speaker 1: then you know, and it's not harming them or society 665 00:39:41,520 --> 00:39:44,319 Speaker 1: in general, then I'm good with that. Alright, great, like 666 00:39:44,400 --> 00:39:49,160 Speaker 1: that matters, I guess I took. My big takeaway from 667 00:39:49,160 --> 00:39:52,239 Speaker 1: this article was at the very end Tracy kind of 668 00:39:52,280 --> 00:39:54,520 Speaker 1: snuck snuck in a cool fact that I never knew 669 00:39:55,520 --> 00:39:58,360 Speaker 1: was that the we the reason that we here in 670 00:39:58,400 --> 00:40:00,799 Speaker 1: the West count things in groups ten or it's sort 671 00:40:00,840 --> 00:40:05,080 Speaker 1: of a tin based system, is probably because we have 672 00:40:05,200 --> 00:40:10,560 Speaker 1: ten fingers, and that the old English language and The 673 00:40:10,560 --> 00:40:15,319 Speaker 1: old English words for numbers reflect this groups of ten 674 00:40:15,520 --> 00:40:19,080 Speaker 1: and the eleven. The word eleven means one left, and 675 00:40:19,200 --> 00:40:22,399 Speaker 1: twelve is an abbreviation of two left ye, like one 676 00:40:22,480 --> 00:40:25,279 Speaker 1: left over ten, two left over ten, and then thirds. 677 00:40:25,440 --> 00:40:27,080 Speaker 1: That's the fact of the show for me right here 678 00:40:27,080 --> 00:40:30,080 Speaker 1: at the bey. I think you're right, Chuck, I totally agree. Uh. 679 00:40:30,160 --> 00:40:32,200 Speaker 1: And that means that we should be seeing twelve in 680 00:40:32,840 --> 00:40:37,800 Speaker 1: twelve in twelve. In is how I'm gonna say twelve 681 00:40:37,840 --> 00:40:41,040 Speaker 1: from now on, I'll be like, look it up and 682 00:40:41,040 --> 00:40:48,839 Speaker 1: then think about thirteen two. That's like three, ten, four, ten, five, ten, Yeah, yeah, 683 00:40:49,120 --> 00:40:53,239 Speaker 1: twelve in twelve twelve. Even if you want to know 684 00:40:53,280 --> 00:40:56,000 Speaker 1: more about numerology, I guess go visit the Bustle or 685 00:40:56,080 --> 00:40:58,200 Speaker 1: numerology dot com and see what you think. See if 686 00:40:58,239 --> 00:41:00,279 Speaker 1: it's right for you. But God help you if you 687 00:41:00,320 --> 00:41:04,799 Speaker 1: stop believing in expertise or become anti science, because that 688 00:41:04,960 --> 00:41:08,160 Speaker 1: is not a good thing anybody. Um, but thinking for 689 00:41:08,200 --> 00:41:10,759 Speaker 1: yourself is as well. So maybe we can figure out 690 00:41:10,800 --> 00:41:13,640 Speaker 1: a way to balance all of that together. Since I said, 691 00:41:14,040 --> 00:41:15,880 Speaker 1: let's figure out a way to balance all that together, 692 00:41:16,080 --> 00:41:22,360 Speaker 1: it's time for listening mail. This is from Cassie Sounds 693 00:41:22,400 --> 00:41:28,560 Speaker 1: like Lassie in Statesboro, Georgia. Oh, yeah, down there, that's right. 694 00:41:28,680 --> 00:41:31,279 Speaker 1: So this was in reference to the Georgia lizard that 695 00:41:32,040 --> 00:41:34,080 Speaker 1: we had quite a few people right in it is 696 00:41:34,080 --> 00:41:36,759 Speaker 1: is not a leopard, gecko or whatever you said it was. 697 00:41:36,960 --> 00:41:41,239 Speaker 1: That is everyone's wrong but me, okay, because they don't 698 00:41:41,239 --> 00:41:45,080 Speaker 1: have those in this country. Uh, they're big in Pakistan apparently. 699 00:41:45,120 --> 00:41:48,080 Speaker 1: But well that's what I'm here. Yeah, that's probably it 700 00:41:48,560 --> 00:41:51,719 Speaker 1: from my time living in Pakistan. I've never had a 701 00:41:51,719 --> 00:41:54,399 Speaker 1: reason to send an email till now, guys, but here 702 00:41:54,400 --> 00:41:57,120 Speaker 1: it is in response to the short stuff on chameleons. 703 00:41:57,160 --> 00:42:00,560 Speaker 1: Chuck was going on about the skinks and Joshua's saying 704 00:42:00,560 --> 00:42:03,680 Speaker 1: that they're geckos. I'm pretty sure that he's wrong because 705 00:42:03,719 --> 00:42:06,000 Speaker 1: way back in ninety nine, my family moved to Georgia 706 00:42:06,000 --> 00:42:08,480 Speaker 1: for Minnesota, and I was living in Minnesota. I worked 707 00:42:08,480 --> 00:42:10,680 Speaker 1: at a pet store that sold lizards among other animals, 708 00:42:10,960 --> 00:42:14,840 Speaker 1: had chamellions, iguanas, geckos and is it pronounced anal a 709 00:42:15,080 --> 00:42:21,840 Speaker 1: n o l e uh leave the gun take the annually? 710 00:42:23,520 --> 00:42:27,680 Speaker 1: Oh boy, well that's ANNUALI Uh. The reason I'm saying 711 00:42:27,680 --> 00:42:29,640 Speaker 1: this is because when we moved to Georgia started seeing 712 00:42:29,719 --> 00:42:36,800 Speaker 1: these annolis or anals anals can't be anals everywhere. My 713 00:42:36,840 --> 00:42:38,520 Speaker 1: twelve year old brain was cooking up a scheme to 714 00:42:38,560 --> 00:42:40,799 Speaker 1: catch them and sell them for the going rate back 715 00:42:40,800 --> 00:42:44,920 Speaker 1: in Minnesota, which is twenty dollars each. Uh wow, that 716 00:42:45,080 --> 00:42:49,520 Speaker 1: is that's those are nineties dollars. I know those are 717 00:42:49,560 --> 00:42:51,879 Speaker 1: grunge dollars. I learned that it was against a lot 718 00:42:51,920 --> 00:42:55,000 Speaker 1: of own native species in Georgia, so I didn't go 719 00:42:55,040 --> 00:42:56,480 Speaker 1: through with that plan. If you read this email and 720 00:42:56,480 --> 00:42:59,640 Speaker 1: you get a chance, search Annulli and see if that's 721 00:42:59,719 --> 00:43:03,439 Speaker 1: the szard and that is indeed the lizard Cassie, So 722 00:43:04,040 --> 00:43:06,799 Speaker 1: thank you and others for for figuring that out for us. 723 00:43:06,960 --> 00:43:11,160 Speaker 1: Very nice. Thank you. Cassie rhymes with Lassie. Um, Cassie 724 00:43:11,160 --> 00:43:14,319 Speaker 1: said that right, You didn't say that, that's yeah, she said. 725 00:43:14,840 --> 00:43:17,600 Speaker 1: I was like, she's check. Well, if you want to 726 00:43:17,600 --> 00:43:19,960 Speaker 1: be like Cassie rhymes with lassie, you can write to 727 00:43:20,040 --> 00:43:21,920 Speaker 1: us and tell us your name and what it rhymes 728 00:43:21,920 --> 00:43:25,160 Speaker 1: with and maybe we'll end up reading your email on 729 00:43:25,280 --> 00:43:28,120 Speaker 1: listen to mail, wrap it up, spank it on the annually, 730 00:43:28,719 --> 00:43:32,480 Speaker 1: and send it off to stuff podcast at I Heart 731 00:43:32,560 --> 00:43:37,920 Speaker 1: radio dot com Stuff you Should Know is a production 732 00:43:37,960 --> 00:43:40,880 Speaker 1: of I heart Radio. For more podcasts my heart Radio, 733 00:43:41,080 --> 00:43:44,080 Speaker 1: visit the i heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever 734 00:43:44,120 --> 00:43:45,560 Speaker 1: you listen to your favorite shows.