Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Rock Do Rock Feller "ΔΕΞΑΙ" Catch (UPDATED Feb 8)

lead sling bullets with a winged thunderbolt moulded on one side
 and the inscription "ΔΕΞΑΙ" (
Dexai) meaning 'take that'
or 'catch' on the other side, 4th century BCE

The following notable person recently added to Wikipedia’s Deaths in 2026 site stands out:

Borislav Paravac (18 February 1943 – 18 February 2026)  member Presidency of Bosnia

That he died on his birthday is an addition to the “Birthday Blues” pattern cluster.  Not only that, note that on February 1, 2026, a cluster involving February 18th had occurred with 3 notable persons listed on Wikipedia’s Deaths in 2026 site under February 1st, that is also documented at the end of my February 7, 2026 post re:Dawn Don Dam Ass (UPDATE 02/08/26), where I provide those added so far to Wikipedia’s Deaths in 2026 site under February 1st,  and from that list, three generate a “February 16, 17, __, 19/Date Sequence” pattern cluster via their birthday information: 

Fernando Esteso (16 Feb 1945- 1 Feb 2026) actor (Torrente 4: Lethal Crisis, Uncertain Glory)     (*ESSO)                          

Rita Süssmuth (17 February 1937 – 1 February 2026)88, fed minister for youth, family and health

René Kaës (19 February 1936 – 1 February 2026) psychologist/psychoanalyst.

At the time, I saw this as a prompt to bridge the February 18 gap by venturing to the days wikipedia page and limiting our search to those who were either born, died or events occurring during a year containing a sequence of 3 identical numbers at the end ie: …1666, 1777, 1888, 1999, 2000, butt there were none, which is highly unusual, and so a twin heads up in its own “wright”, one that I took to mean in cryptic fashion— “sit tight, keep an eye out, as more cryptic connection will occur in due course).   

As time went by, I forgot about keeping an eye out, butt I did continue with the exercise of listing notable deaths occurring in February 2026 and listed as listed on Wikipedia’s Deaths in 2026 site.  With Paravac cropping up and that he died on his birthday February 18… I vaguely remembers,… hmmm, this was enough for me to go back and investigate recent notable deaths so far in February 2026 that I’ve gathered information on (ie birthdays) that I documented in a “draft post” (with the intention of posting to this blog at the end of February (this is the first month that I took up such an exercise).  On perusing the lists in the draft post, I noted this individual: 
  • Peter Meyer(18 February 1940 – death announced 11 Feb 2026)footballer (national team)     (*peer meer— “see sea/equal”) 
The sections at end of each notable persons info that is in bold/italics/underlined, is the cryptic phrase garnered by applying the newly formed “First and Last 2 Letters in Name Makes a Word” pattern cluster, and so making “peer” from Peter and “meer” from Meyer, with the latter, “meer”, being a word in other languages and via etymology (note below research on the words).  The cryptic phrase is then further deciphered in part, as “see (or “look closely at”) the sea”.
There is dual meaning in the phrase given my surname is “Ocean” and so one is prompted to extrapolate as well “look closely at Ocean/me”.   There is another element to the cryptic phrase that needs consideration— the other meaning of peer: one that is of equal standing with another .  

Another thing to consider in the cryptic communication are that the names of the notable persons mentioned are additions to other clusters that provide us with: or is par; fern and do ESSO
ESSO is also a name, … and as to why it is included… well, we investigate further.  Note from the ESSO wikipedia page and other info garnered by following the leads:

Esso (/ˈɛs/) is a trading name for ExxonMobil. Originally, the name was primarily used by its predecessor Standard Oil of New Jersey after the breakup of the original Standard Oil company in 1911.[1] The company adopted the name "Esso" (from the phonetic pronunciation of Standard Oil's initials and as an acronym of Eastern States Standard Oil),[2] to which the other Standard Oil companies would later object.

Exxon Mobil Corporation American multinational oil and gas corporation headquartered in Spring, Texas, a suburb of Houston.[7][8]: 1  Founded as the largest direct successor of John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil, the company was formed in 1999, with the merger of Exxon and Mobil.

 John Davison Rockefeller Sr. (July 8, 1839 – May 23 , 1937)

UPDATE: 

Catch this twin heads upp: Rockefeller Sr. died on the day of the year where 222 days remain in the year.  Also on checking on others who may have been added to wikipedias deaths in 2026 site under todays date (note only  7 notable persons are listed so far today), … AND, I noted the following: 

Antonia was born on the day of the year where 222 days remain in the year. Sequences of 2’s such as this, are a particular inner twin trade mark signature 

Ultimately, the most important thing to consider is the name of  John Davison Rockefeller as mentioned above, is that his surname Rockefeller is an addition to the “Word in Name” pattern cluster, that provides us with two meaningful words “rock” and “feller”, both of which jive with a recent cryptic communication occurring as a result of investigations in my recent February 15 post, Lions ROAR in Africa for Abel Mwansa (Tumbler Ridge Mass Shooting Part 4) , and following leads, note the following excerpts from the post:

It was his surname Livingstone that stood out, given that it’s an addition to the recent “First and Last 2 Lettersof Name Makes a Word” pattern cluster, and so making “*line”… hmmm note the similarity to “lion”!!  Note from his wiki page: 

David Livingstone (19 March 1813 – 1 May 1873)                                     (*line)

Also adding to the cryptic communication is the cryptic “avid living stone” in his name via the “Word in Name” pattern cluster.   That he passed away on May 1 is strategic… a cryptic “May won”… which is that much more meaningful given my first name is “May” (also see my bio in the side panel of this blog).  

The “living stone”… notably the “stone” also jives with my recent February 12 post, Kylie May Smith (Tumbler Ridge Mass Shooting Part 2) , where the cryptic phrase re “rock do” had cropped up, note this excerpt:

Lina Brockdorff(21 May 1930– 10 Feb 2026) author, playwright.                                 (rock do)
Marie-Rose Tessier (21 May 1910 − 10 Feb 2026) supercentenarian                 (mar rose testier)
Jesse Van Rootselaar (Aug 4, 2007 - Feb 10, 2026)18, Tumbler Ridge mass shooter)    (*ROAR)

Via the first two , we have a “May 21(x2)” pattern cluster in the works (… that I included in yesterday’s post), butt what I failed to mention then, is the cryptic phrase in their names — Brodkdorff is an addition to the “Word in Name” pattern cluster that provides us with “rock do”, and what makes this particularly interesting is that connects in cryptic fashion … now, with the above mentioned article with The Coast, entitled “May Ocean vs. Goliath”.  Anyone who knows the biblical story of  David and Goliath will understand the connection being made— armed with only a sling and rock, little guy (David/Me) goes  upp against big Guy (Goliath/ Big Insurance, Big Money and Big Courts).  So with that in mind, you can now see why the inner twin world influenced the “timely” death of Brockdorff… and the cryptic “rock do” now being communicated via her name— the inner twin world are prepared to send the “rock”… what that form will take, your guess is as good as mine.  

 As can be seen, via two separate posts we have a “Rock/Stone Theme” pattern cluster, and now from having simply followed the leads, we get Rockefeller cropping up, that’s another addition to the “Word in Name” pattern cluster and the   “Rock/Stone Theme” pattern cluster,… so what to make of THAT?!

There is one other cryptic connection gained by following the leads and the “feller” aspect of the name Rockefeller, note the following information from the Tumbler Ridge Mass Shooting of February 10, 2026 wikipedia page

Domestic shooting 

The attacker's mother and half brother were shot and killed at their home at Fellers Avenue in Tumbler Ridge.  Police had already been called to the school when a family member alerted them to this attack

Do note the name of the Avenue re — “Fellers”!!  So we also have a “Fellers (x2)” pattern cluster in the works.  See research below re “Feller”.  Hmmm maybe should investigate all the notable Rockefellers?!  

_________________________________________________________________________________

Research on the above pertinent words: 

Research re “peer”: 

peer (n.): c. 1300, "an equal in rank, character, or status" (early 13c. in Anglo-Latin), from Anglo-French peir, Old French per (10c.), from Latin par "equal" (see par (n.)). Sense of "a nobleman of especial dignity" (late 14c.) is from Charlemagne's Twelve Peers in the old romances, who, like the Arthurian knights of the Round Table, originally were so called because all were equal. Sociological sense of "one of the same age group or social set" is from 1944. Peer review "evaluation of a scientific project by experts in the relevant field"

Research re “meer”.  Note the following response from AI when searching for the word “meer” and its meaning in other languages: 

"Meer" primarily translates to 
"sea" or "ocean" in German (often capitalized das Meer) and is used to describe a large body of salt water. However, it means "lake" in Dutch, and in various contexts can refer to a leader or prince (derived from the Arabic Amir) or more (confused with German mehr).
  • German (Das Meer): Means sea or ocean.
  • Dutch (Het Meer): Means lake or body of water.
  • Arabic/South Asian (Meer/Mir): A title meaning commander, leader, or prince, often used as a surname.
  • Common Roots: Cognate with English mere (lake/sea), Irish muir, and Russian móre, all relating to water

Note from the online etymology dictionary:  

mere (n.1): "pool, small lake, pond," from Old English mere "sea, ocean; lake, pool, pond, cistern,"…   German Meer "sea…, from PIE root *mori- "body of water."

 mere (adj.)late 14c., of a voice, "pure, clear;" mid-15c., of abstract things, "absolute, sheer;" from Old French mier "pure" (of gold), "entire, total, complete," and directly from Latin merus "unmixed" (of wine), "pure; bare, naked;" figuratively "true, real, genuine," according to some sources probably originally "clear, bright," from PIE *mer- "to gleam, glimmer, sparkle" (source also of Old English amerian"to purify," Old Irish emer "not clear," Sanskrit maricih "ray, beam," Greek marmarein "to gleam, glimmer"). 

mermaid (n.): "fabled marine or amphibian creature having the upper body in the form of a woman and the lower in the form of a fish, with human attributes," "usually working harm, with or without malignant intent, to mortals with whom she might be thrown into relation" [Century Dictionary]; mid-14c., meremayde, literally "maid of the sea," from Middle English mere "sea, lake" (see mere (n.1)) + maid

moor (n.)"tract of open, untilled, more or less elevated ground, often overrun with heath," c. 1200, from Old English mor "morass, swamp," from Proto-Germanic *mora- (source also of Old Saxon, Middle Dutch, Dutch meer "swamp," Old High German muor "swamp," also "sea," German Moor "moor," Old Norse mörr"moorland," marr "sea"), perhaps related to mere (n.1), or from root *mer- "to die," hence "dead land.

moor (v.) "to fasten (a ship) in a particular location by or as by cables, anchors, etc.," late 15c., probably related to Old English mærels "mooring rope," via unrecorded *mærian "to moor," or possibly borrowed from Middle Low German moren or Middle Dutch maren "to moor," from West Germanic *mairojan. Related: Moored, mooring

"one who fells (trees, etc.)," c. 1400, agent noun from fell (v.1). For the casual pronunciation of "fellow," see fella.

fell(v.1)

Old English fællan (Mercian), fyllan (West Saxon) "make fall, cause to fall," also "strike down, demolish, kill," from Proto-Germanic *falljanan "strike down, cause to fall"

fella(n.)

an attempt at a phonological spelling of a casual pronunciation of fellow (n.), attested by 1851, also fellah (1842), earlier fellar (1833), feller (1825). 

fellow(n.)

"companion, comrade," c. 1200, from Old English feolaga "partner, one who shares with another," from Old Norse felagi, from fe "money" (see fee) + lag, from Proto-Germanic *lagam, from PIE root *legh- "to lie down, lay." The etymological sense of fellow seems to be "one who puts down money with another in a joint venture


 

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