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Yoga Speak: Repeating Numbers
Numbers are the language of the universe, and they've been speaking to Anne.

โA B C. Itโs easy as 1 2 3, as simple as do re mi, A B C, 1 2 3 โฆ โ ~ ABC, Jackson Five
I was at yoga the other night for an eight oโclock class, and, for the first time in years, the instructor was running late. But that was okay with us, as we ourselves had lost track of time. We were all happily seated in the practice room, visiting each otherโs mats, chatting and catching up from the week.
The door finally opened. It was the instructor.
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โIโm so sorry Iโm late,โ she said. โItโs already 8:08!โ
808 is a significant number for me. When I was a little girl, my parents encouraged my siblings and I to learn our home address by heart. That way, if we were ever to get lost, we would be able to tell someone where we lived. Our street number was 808, an easy enough number to remember. I remember practicing my address earnestly, reciting it over and over, like the words of a favorite song. As a result, the lyrics embedded themselves so deeply in my consciousness that, to this day, 808 is a number thatโs as fresh in my mind as it was when I was a child.
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I was never much for numbers. Growing up, I progressed through my math classes in much the same way as I had memorized my address as a child. I had to practice a lot. The only math that ever came naturally to me seemed to be my tenth-grade geometry. In geometry, the problems were like pictures, and that visual aspect appealed to me.
When I arrived at college, I was relieved that my studies would only require one year of math. I pursued a journalism degree, diving feet first into a sea of words. I swam easily among my classes, surprised at how calm the waters were. As with geometry, writing was a visual exercise for me. I found it easy to put into words everything that I pictured. From that time on, aside from my most basic arithmetic needs, I successfully left most math problems behind me.
But, as with so many things that Iโve left behind, somehow, theyโve made their way back again! Over the past several months, Iโve been haunted by more numbers than I can count! With increasing frequency, numbers have been appearing regularly, multiple times a day, and always in a repetitious sort of way. Only this time Iโm not fighting with them, and now I might even like them! They make me feel as if the universe is talking to me, telling me that Iโm part of some equation thatโs too big for me to see.
I awaken in the night at 2:22 or 3:33 or 4:44. During the day, I check the time, and, invariably, itโs the same. Other times, more often than not, my old address, 8:08, is on the clock. A sign outside a parking lot tells me that there are 555 spaces available. I get lost in an office building on the 11th floor and find myself at Suite #1111. I buy a new mattress, and my credit card bill arrives. I owe 5,555 dollars.
I think I was mistaken to ever believe that I could be done with numbers. In fact, science says that none of us ever can. According to science, numbers are everywhere and always have been. In the words of Galileo Galilei, the Father of Modern Science, the universe is a โgrand bookโ thatโs โwritten in the language of mathematics.โ He even embraced the mystical side of numbers, calling mathematics the โalphabet in which G-d [had] written the universe.โ
I make a playlist for a yoga class and double-check the length of the last song, the one for Savasana, the final resting pose. It clocks in at 4:44. I get to the studio, set up my music and check the time. Itโs 5:55. I share an article on social media, and it receives 111 likes and 1,111 link clicks. I check the word count on this very article and find that I still have room to write. Iโm only at 999 words. I check the thermostat at night. Its digital clock reads 8:08. The next morning, I check the digital clock on the coffee maker. Itโs 8:08, again.
Thereโs no question that numbers are woven into the fabric of our universe. Their relationships are evident in the placement of the pyramids, in the double-helix of our DNA and in the elliptical orbits of the planets. Thereโs even something in mathematics called the Fibonacci sequence, or the Golden Ratio, wherein each number in a pattern equates to the sum of the two before it. This relationship, or ratio, is literally everywhere. It can be found in the number of petals on a flower, in the cochlea of our inner ears, and even in the spirals of the Milky Way!
Iโve started snapping pictures of all the numbers, as they appear to me. Itโs as if Iโve needed some kind of proof that Iโm actually seeing them as often as I am. I scroll through my phone, sifting through all the evidence that Iโve collected, and when I see all the 8:08โs, 1:11โs, 2:22โs, 3:33โs, 4:44โs, 5:55โs, 10:10โs, 11:11โs, and 12:12's, I wonder again about the message they might have for me. Part of the answer, I think, might lie in numerology.
According to numerologists, numbers speak to us in the ways in which they appear and in how they coincide with the events in our lives. Itโs not a scientific field, but numerology does use scientific terms to describe numbers. According to numerologists, numbers have mystical properties and contain energies, vibrations and frequencies. Like Galileo, they, too, believe that numbers are the language of the universe, for they also see something Divine in all the numerical patterns that science finds.
I donโt think itโs any accident that in numbers science and mysticism seem to collide. As far back as ancient times, Pythagoras, the first mathematician in history, used both science and mysticism to explain the basis of reality. Not only did he believe that mathematics explained the physical world, but Pythagoras also believed that numbers held various qualities and characteristics. He also believed in reincarnation and considered the brain to be the home of our soul.
Over time and to this day, mathematicians have continued to ponder the basis of reality. M.I.T. professor and cosmologist Max Tegmark puts a modern spin on the brain as the home of our soul. Known for his โMathematical Universe Hypothesis,โ which identifies our external reality as a mathematical structure, he claims that our consciousness is simply another form of matter, like a solid or a liquid or a gas. Like these other forms of matter, he says that consciousness is created from mathematical patterns that result from specific sets of mathematical conditions. According to Tegmark, everything in the universe is math, including us!
I look at my phone. Itโs 3:33. I text my daughter on the way to meet my son. Itโs 5:55. Itโs nighttime, and Iโm tired. Itโs 10:10. Iโm ready for sleep. Itโs 11:11. In the morning, I watch the news in bed and decide to get up, if itโs after eight oโclock. The time on the screen flashes. Itโs 8:08! I receive a text message from one of my instructors, asking me to lead the mentorship group for her teacher training program. Itโs 4:44, so I say yes.
Iโm at the market, and the cashier totals my groceries. My bill is $52.52.
โThatโs a very nice number!โ he says.
I look at him for a moment, and then I canโt help myself. I find myself explaining all about the matching patterns in nature, the ones that are found in the stars and even in ourselves. Heโs nodding his head. He understands!
โThatโs the Golden Ratio!โ he exclaims. He hands me my groceries. โNumbers are crazy,โ he says. Theyโre everywhere!โ
Iโll never know why these numbers have suddenly been appearing, multiple times a day, and always in a repetitious sort of way. All I know is that there doesnโt seem to be an end to them. They are filling my universe (and now my phone!) to the very brim, and I think itโs up to me to figure out the message theyโre trying to send.
The only thing that I can figure is, if numbers are truly the basis of our reality, then what I must be getting is a Divine glimpse into mine! And that would make these numbers messengers of faith. Perhaps theyโre here as evidence of a universal pattern that I canโt see, but of which Iโm no less a part. And if thatโs the case, then their message is clear. I am in the care of the universe. And itโs okay to let things be, because whatโs in nature, and in the stars, is also in me.
Anne is the author of Unfold Your Mat, Unfold Yourself. To learn more, visit www.annesamit.com.