It’s quite rare, butt very now and then, two notable persons listed on Wikipedia’s Deaths site who die on the same day, share the same birthday, butt I’ve never known for it to occur 3 times until recently:
- William Edward Rush (6 July 1994 – 17 December 2025)
- David Hunter Heathcote (6 July 1931 – 17 December 2025)
- Mario Alberto Pineida Martinez (6 July 1992 – 17 December 2025)
- will I am eddy ward war rush
- avid hunt hunter heat heath eat cote(shore/coast)
- mar Alberta pin pine need mar mart tin
- Ernesto de Figueiredo Cordeiro (6 July 1937 – 13 December 2025)
Jonathan Hawkins (1 May 1983 – 22 December 2025) 42, chess grandmaster
His birthday communicates a cryptic “May won”, so another twin heads upp, given my name is May!! Note as well that his surname contains a cryptic “haw kin’s”/“hawk ins” (see etymology below). On investigating Hawkins wiki page, the first notable person mentioned stands out:
Stanislav Novikov (born July 6, 2985)
This is no coincidence, so I waited some more.
This time things took a more personal turn. I’m spending Christmas holidays with my son and his family, and because my grandkids want me to watch the next addition to the “Stranger Things” film series (airing last night), I took in a few of the earlier episodes beforehand. It was then that I picked up on the fact that the place name (in the film), was Hawkins… and so connecting in cryptic fashion to Jonathan Hawkins above. So investigating the Hawkins surname wiki page, one in the list caught my eye:
Rush Hawkins (1831–1920), American Civil War colonel and politician
- Rush Christopher Hawkins (September 14, 1831 – October 25, 1920)
AGAIN, we have another “Rush”!! And do note his date of death, October 25th is a particularly meaningful date to me personally … as I have expressed often enough in this blog. Other notable persons recently added to Wikipedia’s Deaths in 2025 site stand out … and likely fit into the cryptic communication:
- Neil Laverne Frank (11 September, 1931 - December 24, 2025)
- Yury Eduardovich Sadovenko (11 September 1969 – 25 December 2025)
- Diosdado P. Banatao (May 23, 1946 – December 25, 2025)
- Biswa Bandhu Sen (23 May 1953 – 26 December 2025)
- Jean-Louis Gasset (9 December 1953 – 26 December 2025)
- Patrick Cassidy Finn (July 31, 1965 – Dec 22, 2025) actor (Dude, Where's My Car?)
- David Adam Williams (August 10, 1974 – December 22, 2025)
- Nicola Chirinsky Pietrangeli (11 September 1933 – 1 December 2025)
- Lusanda Dumke (11 September 1996 – 16 December 2025)
- Oscar da Costa Ribeiro (11 September 1936 – 19 December 2025)
A “Finn (x2)” pattern cluster!! Note from Finn Wolfhard’s wiki page:
Finn Michael Wolfhard (born December 23, 2002)
He celebrated his birthday one day after Patrick Finn passed away, and so generating a “__, December 22, 23, __/Date Sequence” pattern cluster.
On the Finn (Name) wiki page, one who stands out:
Finn Graff (born 1938), Norwegian illustrator
When removing one “f” from the twin letters ending his name we get a word “Graf” (see etymology below). Note from his wiki page:
- Finn Graff (born 25 December 1938)
And the cluster expands,… and more clearly directs us to the intended gap needing to be bridged: a “December 22, 23, __, 25/Date Sequence” pattern cluster. You can use the formula to bridge the gap.
An actress from the film also stands out:
Maya Ray Thurman Hawke (born July 8, 1998)
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Note the etymology:
grove(n.)
Old English graf "grove, copse, small wood" (akin to græafa "thicket")
grave(n.)
"excavation in earth for reception of a dead body," from Old English græf"grave; ditch, trench; cave," from Proto-Germanic *grafa-/graba- (source also of Old Saxon graf, Old Frisian gref, Old High German grab "grave, tomb;" Old Norse gröf "cave," Gothic graba "ditch"), cognate with Old Church Slavonic grobu "grave, tomb," and perhaps (Watkins) from a PIE root *ghrebh- (2) "to dig, to scratch, to scrape," and related to Old English grafan "to dig" (see grave (v.)).
. Note the etymology:
haw(n.)
"enclosure," Old English haga "enclosure, fortified enclosure; hedge," from Proto-Germanic *hag- (source also of Old Norse hagi, Old Saxon hago, German Hag "hedge;" Middle Dutch hage, Dutch haag, as in the city name The Hague), from PIE root *kagh- "to catch seize; wickerwork fence" (see hedge (n.), and compare hag). Meaning "fruit of the hawthorn bush" (Old English) is perhaps short for *hægberie.
haw(v.)
"hesitate in speech," 1580s, imitative.
hem(interj.)
1520s, probably imitative of the sound of clearing the throat; late 15c. as a verb meaning "to make the sound 'hem.'" Hem and haw (v.) first recorded 1786, with haw "hesitation" (1630s; see haw (v.));
hem(n.)
Old English hem "a border" of cloth or a garment, from Proto-Germanic *hamjam (source also of Old Norse hemja "to bridle, curb," Swedish hämma "to stop, restrain," Old Frisian hemma "to hinder," Middle Dutch, German hemmen"to hem in, stop, hinder"), from PIE *kem- "to compress" (source also of Armenian kamel "to press, squeeze," Lithuanian kamuoti "press together, stop," Russian kom "mass, clot, clod").
hem(v.)
late 14c., "to provide (something) with a border or fringe" (surname Hemmerattested from c. 1300), from hem (n.). Meaning "to enclose, circumscribe" is from 1530s. Related: Hemmed; hemming. The phrase hem in "shut in, confine," first recorded 1530s.
hawk(n.)
c. 1300, hauk, earlier havek (c. 1200), from Old English hafoc (West Saxon), heafuc (Mercian), heafoc, "hawk," from Proto-Germanic *habukaz (source also of Old Norse haukr, Old Saxon habuc, Middle Dutch havik, Old High German habuh, German Habicht "hawk"), from PIE root *kap- "to grasp" (source also of Russian kobec "a kind of falcon").
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