Tuesday, August 1, 2017

Lucy Furcertain Questions Pi References In Gematria

Lucy has more than a passing interest in Gematria Pi references. During her university days she was required to write a four digit number of pages thesis to pass. (Having flunked the midterm as she was too busy socializing.)


Passing was used in the above reference in its meaning of 'casual', but in this case her collegiate success hinged on this paper. Ordinarily she would have just slept with the TA, but that wasn't her style. She got the nickname Loosey Lucy because she did that for fun, not grades. But four digits for pages? That's way too much for ordinary gematria to handle. So she really needed to buckle down and do what numerologists do best. Not work diligently. Cheat.


Pi references now include digits in regards to the fractional approximations. 22/7 =227. 355/113...hey 113 popped up in my narrative. That means Pi, too. To hell with the numerator. Also, 1117=117 and 707=77 and so forth. Lucy created the master plan to combine these two rules together and flesh out two pages into 3140. By simple multiplication. Here's how she did it.


Start with 355/113. Multiply both numerator and denominator by Pi. 3.14 is close enough. You are going to drop all fractions anyway, it will be 'close enough.' Multiply both numerator and denominator by Pi again. Whoa look at that!


That's a nice juicy numerator of 3500.16. Which rounds to 3500. Drop the zeroes, 35. The denominator rounds to 1114. 114 means Pi, too! 3500/1114=3.14 "and so on."


Now to fill out the thesis to 3140 pages, start with multiplying both fractional parts by two. 70 and 228 mean Pi. And so on page after page after page.


To this day gematria narratives include all kinds of things that equal 227 and lately 113 (355 is beyond the matching range and calling it 35 is either too obvious or would get called out for the rounding to 35 or 36.). Even though the narrative itself has to do nothing with Pi, other than the knee jerk 'it's not 666, but 227 is in my list of cool numbers!'


Lucy questions why 70 isn't used for Pi, when she already proved its validity in the above manner. And it's a lovely number that means SUICIDE, YAHWEH, and DEMONS in the simple elision (cipher). Perhaps this is respect for her work. You wouldn't want to get caught plagiarizing. Unlikely, nobody ever quotes any historical references on using it not using any rule that appears to have been created off the cuff. (Consonants only, 74=47, writing numbers as letters to make new numbers, etc....)


More likely is- One, she might favor you and live up to her college nickname if you respect her. And two, she is a demon. She could force you to commit suicide.


But what a way to go! Because demons and suicide both equal 70 which means Pi!



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