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A law is anything that happens over and over again in in the
same manner. Some laws are fairly obvious, like the law of
gravity, which says that
"all objects feel the force of attraction between all masses
in the universe". You don't have to go to school
to know about this law, even young children soon learn about
gravity after they fall from a height.
Knowing that a law exists is very helpful, because it allows
us to know what to expect in advance. One law that has been
neglected in our society is the
law of the cycles in time,
which says that events happen in a repetitive or recurring
way. Cycles are an inevitable and integral part of life,
from the 24 hour cycle of a day to lunar cycles, months, seasons, years and to
larger cycles such as markets and business cycles.
This page deals with the law of cycles that is used to
understand conditions as they affect all life through
evolution, or the passing of time in the form of rhythms or
cycles. When we learn about the influence of cycles as they
express through us from day to day, then most of the complex
problems in our lives can become much clearer as we
understand the prevailing cycle influence and live in
harmony with the cycle. example; (no one plants a garden in winter
with snow on the ground)
How To Find Your Cycle Year
To find your cycle year add the month and day of your birth
date and add it to the present year and then add
'one', Then
reduce them all to a single digit. For example if your
birthday is 15th December and the current year is 1995 then:
December
15, 1995
plus 1 = 7 cycle
year.
or: 12 +15 +
1995 +1 = 2023 then reduce; 2 + 0 + 2 + 3 =
7
or: (1 +
2 + 1 +
5 +1 +
9 + 9 +
5 + 1
= 34 then reduce 3 +
4 = 7
You are then in a 7-cycle year in 1995.
A summary of all the monthly cycle conditions is found on the
cycle year pages. (see left column)
The "Daily Cycles" are a
considerably more complex
calculation that would require a
huge data base to serve
everyone's birth date. Therefore an individualized calculator
was developed and is
available to you on each of the
"year
cycle" pages.
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