My mind remembers as far back as I sail into my imagination lit up with activated intuition. If I make the request I can go back to my very beginning. Even further if I choose before my organic parts were fully formed. It’s all math. Numbers. Years, ages, whatever. It’s all clear, concise mathematics, more commonly appreciated in a spiritual sense as numerology. I was born a month premature in 1972 on January 19th right on the cusp. A Capricorn with Aquarian and Pisces tendencies. If I was born at exactly nine months I could be either of the three.
My transpersonal journey has left me with incredibly accurate foresight according to my experiences surrounding universal consciousness and belonging to a unified whole. I’m 1/16th Cherokee Indian, and my spirit calls out to me in guidance honoring my archetypal ancestral energies. I call it my predictive spontaneity. While my lucky number 27 and the daily recurrences of 11:11 peak out from behind the veil each day, two new numbers have come to my attention: 12 and 70. Hmm, so that’s 1270. Interesting that 27 is in the middle of the pairing. Numbers really are a lot of fun and cannot be denied. It’s one of the purest methods in seeing the interconnectedness of everything. It breathes and naps on occasion.
12 is a highly common age for creative folk to dive into their own ignited precog recognition from Pablo Picasso to Joe Kubert, and even myself. When I turned 12 in 1984 I began monetizing my artwork. My Dad, similar to Paul Rand’s, said he concerned that I’d be able to make a career out of art and design. Then I sold my first watercolor for $100 when I was 12. From then on Dad was always impressed at how I was able to make a buck. He was concerned, but remained optimistic when he and mom realized I was destined to be an artist, a technical one with a passion for typography and technology that couldn’t be tamed.
Joe Kubert, comic book illustrator legend, inked his first comic book when he was just a dozen years old. By the age of 12, Picasso had already grown as talented as the masters of classical painting. Then there’s the number 70. It’s a special one. I had no idea of its significance. Director, artist, and enlightened soul, David Lynch, said if you make 70 cards you have a film. As luck would have it, I made 70 posters for the first batch of my Third Eye I Charts. Coincidence? Um, no. Moments ago I clocked them in at 300. Whew! I was on a roll. Takes me back to high school when in a week or so I drew 240+ caricatures of my classmates.
“[Dad] was concerned, but remained optimistic when he and mom realized I was destined to be an artist, a technical one with a passion for typography and technology that couldn’t be tamed.”
