Sometimes I’m a little slow in picking up on the finer details of the inner twin world language. Such as the following two notable deaths added under the recent April 6 list:
- Kosala Jayaweera, 38, Sri Lankan politician, MP (since 2024), heart attack.
- Jay North, 73, actor (Dennis the Menace, Maya, Arabian Knights), colorectal cancer
- Tony Blanco, 44, baseball player (Chunichi Dragons, Yokohama DeNA BayStars, Orix Buffaloes)
- Octavio Dotel, 51, baseball player (Houston Astros, St. Louis Cardinals, New York Mets)
Born: May 23, 2002
He was born in Santo Domingo… where the tragic roof collapse occurred!! AND, to top it off, he was born on the day of the year where 222 days remain… AND he’s 22!! THAT speaks cryptic volumes. As for John Schneider who wears #14 jersey, note from his Wikipedia page:
John Patrick Schneider (born February 14, 1980)
Born on Valentines Day… a way for the inner twin world to convey “love”. Keep in mind that yesterdays post research resulted in a 14th day pattern cluster, and so expanding it now into a :
“January 14, February 14(x3), March 14, April 14(x2), May 14, June 14, July 14,__ , September 14, …/14th Day/Month Sequence” pattern cluster.
So we are now being prompted to bridge the august 14 gap, and so using the formula as per usual we arrive at:
- 1999 – Pee Wee Reese, American baseball player and sportscaster
- Harold Peter Henry "Pee Wee" Reese (July 23, 1918 – August 14, 1999)
- Sam Pee Yalley, Ghanaian lawyer and government official
- Murdaya Poo, 84, Indonesian member of the House of Representatives
Saint Dominic (Santo Domingo; 8 August 1170 – 6 August 12210
There’s my ex husbands birthday again…, and so expanding the earlier posts cluster today:
“January 8, __, March 8(x2), April 8(x3),__ …, August 8(x2)/ 8th Day” pattern cluster.
As for the name Domingo, it reminds me of “domino”, and so a twin heads up, note the etymology:
domino(n.)
1801, "one of the pieces with which the game of dominoes is played," from French domino (1771), perhaps (on a perceived resemblance to the black tiles of the game) from the earlier meaning "hood with a cloak worn by canons or priests over other vestments in cold weather" (1690s in English), from Latin dominus "lord, master" (from domus "house," from PIE root *dem- "house, household"), but the connection is not clear.
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