About Master Numbers in numerology.
The first part of this text is an excerpt from the book:
Numerology; Key To Your Inner Self.
There are 3 double-digit numbers that, while they are rooted in the single-digit
numbers, require special emphasis and attention. These are 11, 22, and 33.
They are called Master numbers because they possess more potential than other
numbers. They are highly charged, difficult to handle, and require time, maturity, and great
effort to integrate into one's personality.
The 11 is the most intuitive of all numbers. It represents illumination; a
channel to the subconscious; insight without rational thought; and sensitivity, nervous
energy, shyness, and impracticality. It is a dreamer. The 11 has all the aspects of the
2, enhanced and charged with charisma, leadership, and inspiration. It is a number with
inborn duality, which creates dynamism, inner conflict, and other catalyses with its mere
presence. It is a number that, when not focused on some goal beyond itself, can be turned
inward to create fears and phobias. The 11 walks the edge between greatness and self-destruction.
Its potential for growth, stability, and personal power lies in its acceptance of intuitive
understanding, and of spiritual truths. For the 11, such peace is not found so much in logic,
but in faith. It is the psychic's number.
The 22 is the most powerful of all numbers. It is often called the Master
Builder. The 22 can turn the most ambitious of dreams into reality. It is potentially the
most successful of all numbers. It has many of the inspirational insights of the 11, combined
with the practicality and methodical nature of the 4. It is unlimited, yet disciplined.
It sees the archetype, and brings it down to earth in some material form. It has big ideas,
great plans, idealism, leadership, and enormous self-confidence. If not practical, the 22s
waste their potential. Like the 11, the 22 can easily shrink from its own ambition, causing
difficult interior pressures. Both the 11 and the 22 experience the pressure-cooker effect
very strongly, particularly at an early age. It must work toward the realization of goals
that are larger than personal ambition. The 22 serves the world in a practical way.
The 33 is the most influential of all numbers. It is the Master Teacher. The
33 combines the 11 and the 22 and brings their potential to another level. When expressed
to the fullest, the 33 lacks all personal ambition, and instead focuses its considerable
abilities toward the spiritual uplifting of mankind. What makes the 33 especially impressive,
is the high level of sincere devotion. This is shown in its determination to seek understanding
and wisdom before preaching to others. The 33 in full force is extremely rare.
The number 33 only matters when found among the core numbers: The Life Path,
Heart's Desire, Expression, Personality, Maturity number, or as an Essence cycle or Pinnacle
cycle. In all other cases the 33 should be reduced to a 6.
The fact that the 33 is extra-ordinary demanding and rare can be seen symbolically in the
methods of calculation.
For example, a 33 Life Path can happen only when each of the 3 units of the birth date (month/year/day)
add to 11. Or when the year adds to 22 (in the 20th century there are only 7 years that
add to 22: 1939, 48, 57, 66, 75, 84, and 93) and the month and day of birth combined total
is 11. And finally, when the birth day is 22 and the month and year of birth total 11.
Another way to look at the Master numbers:
The Master numbers 11, 22, and 33 represent a triangle. A triangle of Enlightenment.
33
11
22
The number 11 represents the vision.
The number 22 combines vision with action
The number 33 offers guidance to the world.
We use Master numbers as well as Karmic Debt numbers in all our software
and personal readings wherever they are relevant.
What is the philosophy behind numerology?
The fundamental premise of numerology is that life, and the universe as a whole is an orderly
system, and that numbers reflect that orderliness. Numbers are by definition orderly.
When we confront the question of numerology, we are facing the same dilemma that we all
face with the larger questions of life: Is there meaning and order to life, or is it purely
a random and chaotic universe?
There are three possible answers to this question: the universe is ruled by randomness and
chaos; the universe is infinitely orderly; or both randomness and orderliness exist.
Randomness is a state in which there is no order or larger meaning. Such a state of affairs
would mean that the universe is ruled by chance events, and there are no orderly laws governing
the universe. In fact, we know this premise to be untrue, since the natural sciences, such
as physics, mathematics; biology, chemistry, and astronomy are all based on the orderliness,
even predictability, of natural law. Moreover, if the universe were ruled by unpredictable
events, there would be no sustainable structure to it. On the contrary, the universe not
only maintains form and structure, it also changes in precise and orderly ways.
We are continually witnesses to this process of change: Day turns into night, and night
turns into day; winter is followed by spring, and summer is followed by fall; and apples
grow on apple trees, and figs grow on fig trees, and they never, ever, get confused.
Orderliness can be seen in every aspect of existence, from the subatomic world to the world
of stars and galaxies. Therefore, we can cancel the first possibility to our original question:
There is, at the very least, some orderliness.
But is it all orderly? When we look at the very basics of life—the world of deoxyribonucleic
acid (DNA), the molecular world, and the developing child—we see an awesome sequence unfolding.
DNA is of such profound orderliness that it has been the template for producing literally
billions upon billions of human beings with the same universal characteristics, two eyes,
ten fingers, ten toes, et cetera. That no two sets of eyes are alike only shows the remarkable
creativity and energy that are contained within this DNA molecule.
The gestation and birth of a child are also examples of remarkable orderliness: It still
takes egg and sperm to produce an ovum, and nine months for a child to fully develop and
to be born. The growth pattern of humans has remained essentially the same too: We are born
very young, and grow through adolescence, puberty, adulthood, maturity, and old age, at
which point we die. The arc of life is consistent and stable. This has been happening for
about 2 million years, the length of time humans have inhabited the planet.
If we look up at the stars and see the planets, we see a further example of great orderliness.
In creation, there is no randomness, a fact that is the basis for all physical sciences.
Yet, all of us experience events that we perceive as arbitrary or random. How can we reconcile
the awareness that beneath our feet and above our heads—indeed, our very bodies—are the
products of profound orderliness, while our lives seem permeated by random events of which
we can make no sense?
We seem forced to say that, at first glance, both order and randomness exist simultaneously.
But wait—doesn’t our perception of how much order there is in the universe constantly grow
as we learn more? For example, only three decades ago, heart disease and cancer were regarded
by most of us as random and terrible events in life. Today we believe that these illnesses
are of the result of our daily behavior and eating pattern. Both illnesses have very logical
etiologies. Consequently, they are the products of order. The illnesses have not changed;
only our understanding of them has.
Many examples of so-called “natural disasters,” such as famine, drought, and mud-slides,
are often perceived as random events. It is only later that the cause is usually discovered
to be mankind’s ignorance. Specifically, we have not had (and still don’t have) a perspective
large enough to understand all the variables that come into play when we begin to tamper
with the underlying orderliness.
The point here is that our perception of what is random keeps changing as we learn more.
Meanwhile, our appreciation of an underlying order was always implicit in these events that
were previously regarded as random; we simply didn’t see the order.
Our growing understanding of order also changes the way we experience space and time. We
all have had experiences that we cannot explain that fall in to the category of synchronicity
or extrasensory perception. These experiences violate our normal perception of space and
time. We think of these things as out-of-the-ordinary, but they are really glimpses of the
underlying order that our rational minds cannot comprehend, and that we perhaps were not
designed to understand.
Nevertheless, this underlying order, which can only be fully appreciated intuitively, is
being proven by our most advanced science, quantum physics.
As quantum physicist Fritjof Capra points out in his book The Tao of Physics, scientists
have now discovered a universal unity among all phenomena. And quantum physicist Niels Bohr
emphasized that the main consequence of these theories is that we cannot separate any part
of the material universe from the rest without making an error. The new vision of reality
is a spiritual vision in its very essence.
Progress for the human spirit, as I’ve come to see it, is an elevation of consciousness
to where the individual becomes fully aware of being an integral part of the cosmos as a
whole, and of its maker. This mode of consciousness is much, much broader than anything
that could possibly develop from a rational thought process. Contrary to the knowledge of
the mind, this understanding is rooted in seeing, recognizing, and realizing at a much deeper
level. It typically occurs in meditative experiences, but it can also occur in many other
settings.
However, science is trying to reach that kind of understanding. As Capra indicated, quantum
mechanics is demonstrating that the fundamental reality of the universe—while not immediately
apparent to our rational minds—is a vast unity in which all things are related.
In ancient times, this understanding formed the basis for all natural and spiritual sciences.
In fact, natural science was merely the tool that was used to discover the underlying orderliness
of the universe, otherwise known as God. Out of this consciousness came such spiritual sciences
as numerology. Numerology is based upon this underlying unity, a unity that manifests itself
in a very intimate way in all of our lives. Our names and dates of birth, for example, are
connected with our deepest inner being in a way that the rational mind cannot immediately
understand. The intuitive mind, however, is capable of perceiving these relationships, and
of interpreting them to help us better understand our lives.
The act of giving something a name is not a superficial or intellectual effort, but a reflection
of our deep experience of the essence of the thing we are naming. It comes out of our connection,
or our intuitive feeling of that thing.
For example, the word storm, with its special combination of vowels and consonants, gives
us a feeling of the movement and power of an invisible force. Storm. Say it and you will
feel it.
Another example is the word power, which names something, but at the same time gives the
experience of the thing we are naming: Power! The biting movement of the jaw makes us feel
it.
The word love embraces us gently. It gives you the experience of its meaning.
Every word, in every language, perfectly reflects the feeling and spirit of the thing that
is named by the people who use that language. Some will argue that the words used to name
things were originally chosen arbitrarily, and then were integrated into our inner feelings.
However, our understanding of sound comes from an archetypal and unconscious part of our
being. It is intimately connected with our appreciation of music; no matter whether you
are tone deaf or have perfect pitch, all of us have an inborn capacity to discern music
from chaotic noise. Music is harmony. And music is inside of us.
Nature too, is filled with events that have trained us to associate certain qualities with
sounds: The clap of thunder, the woosh of a river, or the whir of a bird in flight.
From our innate understanding of music and harmony comes the act of naming things according
to our perception of their inner natures. This intuitive act is the source of our language.
All languages emerge from, and represent the natures of the people who use them.
All of this points to a single and incredibly important fact: Sound and time are both rooted
in harmony and universal order.
This is the source of numerology. The numerologist maintains that each of us carries the
perfect name that reflects our inner nature or being. That name is a collection of sounds,
a melody that in a very deep and perfect way is you.
Excerpted from the book Numerology; Key To Your Inner Self |