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N UGGETS FROM MY RESEARCH

VOLUME 1

THE L AW OF V IBRATION
BY THE

PATTERNS

BY
D R. L ORRIE V. BENNETT

COSMOLOGICAL ECONOMICS
Th e L a w o f V i b r a t i o n b y t h e P a t t e r n s

Tableof Contents

Dedicationand Author Comment……………………………………………………………………………………


i
A Note on SecurityMeasures………………………………………………………………………………………
ii
Tableof Contents ……………………………………………………………………………………………………
iii
An Introduction to Dr. Bennett and Her Work by KenMacht .…………………………………………………
xii
Publisher’sIntroduction
TheHigherPurposeof GannTheory ……………………………………….
…………………………
..………………
xvii
Origin and Developmentof the Series…………………………………………………………………
..………………
xxii
On Baumringand WaveMechanics ……………………………………………………………………………
.……xxvii

WavePatterns................................
................................
................................
................................
........1
Why Studythe Lawof Vibration by the Patterns?................................
................................
....................1
What ToolsDo YouNeedto Do the Exercise?................................
................................
..........................
2
References................................
................................
................................
................................
............4
What Am I Supposedto Be Learning?................................
................................
................................
......4
GettingStartedon the Model................................
................................
................................
...................9
CycleStructure................................
................................
................................
................................
........11
Wavelength................................
................................
................................
................................
.........11
How to Measurea Cycle– Node to Node................................
................................
...........................
12
NodalPoints................................
................................
................................
................................
........12
WaveStructure................................
................................
................................
................................
... 13
How to Build a Cycle................................
................................
................................
...........................
13
Createthe Wavesof the Cycle................................
................................
................................
............14
Hurst AlreadyHasThis!................................
................................
................................
...........................
15
How Do I Readthe Charts?................................
................................
................................
.....................16
BasicWaves................................
................................
................................
................................
.........16
Positiveor NegativePhasing................................
................................
................................
...............16
FundamentalInterval................................
................................
................................
..........................
16
AssigningValuesto the Intervals................................
................................
................................
............17
WaveDirection................................
................................
................................
................................
.......17

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4 WaveCycleStructures................................
................................
................................
.........................
18
What to Lookfor to Differentiate the Different CycleStructures..................................
........................
28
AdditionalWaveView................................
................................
................................
.............................
29
The8ths WaveStructure................................
................................
................................
........................
32
UnderstandingHow CycleHarmonicsCombine:TheCompositeCycle................................
.................36
Compoundvs. SimpleCompositeWaves................................
................................
...............................
38
SummationalCycleAppliedin the SoybeanMarket................................
................................
...............42
TheImportanceof Studyingthe TheoreticalWaves................................
................................
..............44
EventsHappeningInsidethe Waves................................
................................
................................
... 44
1. Retracements:................................
................................
................................
.............44
2. Congestion:................................
................................
................................
.................44
3. Extrememoves:................................
................................
................................
..........44
4. CrossingWaves:................................
................................
................................
..........44
Applyingthe BaseTheoreticalWavesto a Market................................
................................
.................46
Variationsof the SameBase4 WaveStructure................................
................................
......................49
GeneralChartFormations................................
................................
................................
...........................
58
RunFormationsor Grinds................................
................................
................................
...........................
60
Top Structures................................
................................
................................
................................
.............62
Bottom Structures................................
................................
................................
................................
.......65
RangeFormationsor Stumps................................
................................
................................
......................67
Sequence of Wavesthat Occurdue to Directionof Cyclesat StartingPoint ................................
.............69
NaturalPartnerCycles................................
................................
................................
............................
70
InvertingWavesCreatingOther Base WavePatterns................................
................................
............74
Node Inversions................................
................................
................................
................................
......75
Node 1 Inversions:................................
................................
................................
..............................
75
Node 2 Inversions:................................
................................
................................
..............................
75
Nodesand Andrews................................
................................
................................
................................
76
ChartFormationsand the Markets................................
................................
................................
.............79
Dow 2002 to 2007 Bull Market & 2009BearStructure................................
................................
..........80
DOW2009to 2017 CycleStructure................................
................................
................................
........82
What About Intraday?................................
................................
................................
............................
83
CommonPeriodsof TimeCreateSimilarChartPatterns(DOW)................................
............................
84

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WaveMechanics................................
................................
................................
................................
. 85
Measuringthe Market (Learningto Count)................................
................................
............................
86
Gettingthe CorrectMarket Direction................................
................................
................................
. 86
NOW,Count!................................
................................
................................
................................
.......91
LOVDailyTimeSegmentCounts(CalendarDays)................................
................................
..............91
Another Way to Count................................
................................
................................
........................
93
May the ForceBe with You................................
................................
................................
.....................95
Vectors................................
................................
................................
................................
....................97
Accelerationand Decelerationof PriceLines................................
................................
.........................
98
Angle of Attack................................
................................
................................
................................
....98
NormalLines................................
................................
................................
................................
.........102
Anglesof Reflection................................
................................
................................
..............................
104
Applying NormalLinesand Anglesof Reflections................................
................................
.................106
ReflectiveLinesand PriceChannels................................
................................
................................
......111
To Build a Channel................................
................................
................................
............................
111
Accelerationand DecelerationFormula................................
................................
...............................
117
Rise................................
................................
................................
................................
....................117
Run................................
................................
................................
................................
....................117
Accelerationrate................................
................................
................................
...............................
117
KeyPointsto Note ................................
................................
................................
............................
118
HarmonicCompositionand Decomposition................................
................................
......................119
Definitions................................
................................
................................
................................
.............119
Decomposition................................
................................
................................
................................
.. 119
Composition:................................
................................
................................
................................
.....119
WavesShapes................................
................................
................................
................................
.......120
SineWave................................
................................
................................
................................
.........120
GeometricWave/SquareWave................................
................................
................................
........120
TriangleWave................................
................................
................................
................................
...120
SawTooth Wave................................
................................
................................
...............................
120
Deflagration:(Gaps)................................
................................
................................
..............................
121
Discontinuity................................
................................
................................
................................
.....121
Shocks:Up & Down Shocks................................
................................
................................
...................121

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Attenuation................................
................................
................................
................................
...........123
Attenuation in the Markets ................................
................................
................................
..................124
Other KeyComponentsof Wavesand Their Market Appearance................................
.......................
126
Rarefaction................................
................................
................................
................................
........126
RelaxationTime ................................
................................
................................
................................
126
DissipativeProcess................................
................................
................................
............................
127
DilatationalWave................................
................................
................................
..............................
127
CompressionalWave................................
................................
................................
........................
127
WaveFront................................
................................
................................
................................
........128
WaveLength................................
................................
................................
................................
.....128
DistortionalWave................................
................................
................................
.............................
128
Effectsof Volumein the Markets................................
................................
................................
.........128
Very,Very Important Aspectof WavesCancelationand Disappearance
................................
.............129
UsingDecompositionin Market Analysisand Trading................................
................................
.........129
Shapesof Movesin the Market ................................
................................
................................
...........132
Rangesor Many Weeksin Narrow Range................................
................................
.............................
132
Wavesand Parabolas................................
................................
................................
............................
133
Wavesin the Market? Got That! Really?................................
................................
..........................
135
TransmissionImpairmentsto WavePropagation................................
................................
.................137
• Attenuation................................
................................
................................
...................137
• Fading................................
................................
................................
............................
137
• Distortion ................................
................................
................................
......................137
• Interference................................
................................
................................
..................137
• Noise................................
................................
................................
.............................
137
Putting Theoryinto a Forecast................................
................................
................................
..............138
1. Thedevelopmentof dates................................
................................
........................
138
2. Repeatingindividualwave structures................................
................................
.......138
3. Creationof compositewaves................................
................................
....................138
Workingwith a Market (Stepby Step)- Silver................................
................................
......................139
A. Choosea Market: Silver................................
................................
............................
139
B. Beginningto Measure................................
................................
...............................
140
C. Which Lengthsto Choose................................
................................
..........................
144

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D. Angleof Attack and Reflection................................


................................
..................147
E. UsingHistoryto Createa Forecast................................
................................
............148
Summaryof Initial Market Analysis................................
................................
................................
......149
ForecastType1: Developing Dates................................
................................
................................
...149
To Generatea Date................................
................................
................................
...........................
149
BUTMy SoftwareDoesn’tDraw Those................................
................................
.............................
150
Draw a Date Line................................
................................
................................
...............................
150
ForecastType2: RepeatingIndividualizedWaves................................
................................
.............151
Comparisonsto Use................................
................................
................................
..........................
151
ComparingSoybeanWaves................................
................................
................................
..............152
ComparingS&PWaves................................
................................
................................
......................155
Another S&PAngleof Attack................................
................................
................................
............156
SimilarWaveStructures................................
................................
................................
........................
158
GannGridsand Fans................................
................................
................................
..............................
160
Applyingthe Grids................................
................................
................................
................................
. 161
Silver................................
................................
................................
................................
..................161
A Glimpseof Priceby UsingGannFans................................
................................
................................
167
How to KnowYouAre DoingSomethingRight?................................
................................
...................168
What shouldyou do with a chart like this? ................................
................................
..........................
174
Lawof Periodicity:Repetitionof PatternDefinesLawof Periodicity................................
...................175
UsingChartFormationSimilaritiesto FindPeriodicPatterns................................
..........................
178
ForecastType3: CompositeWaveProjections................................
................................
..................180
Market Tracings................................
................................
................................
................................
....185
UnderstandingTracings................................
................................
................................
....................185
Master Charts................................
................................
................................
................................
........186
ProjectionCharts................................
................................
................................
...............................
190
How to Make Up AnnualForecasts
................................
................................
................................
.......192
Page8 of Master TimeFactorand Forecastingby MathematicalRules................................
..........192
Page12, IndividualStocks................................
................................
................................
.................192
Did GannuseCompositeWave Projections?................................
................................
........................
193
Wheat................................
................................
................................
................................
................193
A. Wheat Cyclesfor 1949Master Chart................................
................................
............................
194

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B. Gann’s1949CommodityFuturesPricesProjectionfrom his Ephemeris................................


.....195
C.Author Reproductionof the Multi -YearPriceLineTracingsBasedon AvailableWheat Data.....196
D. ReconstructedWheat ProjectionBasedon Prior YearCompositeWave................................
....197
E.Compositeand PriceLineswith Actual Wheat Tracingfor 1949................................
..................198
Gann’s1929 Dow JonesIndustrialsForecast................................
................................
........................
199
ReproducingGann’s1929 Forecast................................
................................
................................
......202
DOW1919................................
................................
................................
................................
.............205
DOW1920................................
................................
................................
................................
.............206
DOW1921................................
................................
................................
................................
.............206
DOW1922................................
................................
................................
................................
.............207
Dow 2017 Main TrendProjection................................
................................
................................
.....208
Dow 2017 IntermediateTrendProjection................................
................................
........................
208
Smoothingthe Curvein Silver................................
................................
................................
..... 209
RecreatingGeorgeMarechal’sDow Forecast................................
................................
............216
Gannand His TimeRules................................
................................
................................
............220
10 YearRules................................
................................
................................
................................
.........220
Rule4 ................................
................................
................................
................................
................221
Rule5 ................................
................................
................................
................................
................221
Rule2 ................................
................................
................................
................................
................221
Rule3 ................................
................................
................................
................................
................222
Rule8 ................................
................................
................................
................................
................222
Rule1 (TimeException) ................................
................................
................................
....................222
Rule1 Culminationsof TrendTimes................................
................................
................................
. 222
7 YearCycle................................
................................
................................
................................
...........223
Rule6 ................................
................................
................................
................................
................223
Rule7 ................................
................................
................................
................................
................223
Rule9 ................................
................................
................................
................................
................225
Rule11 ................................
................................
................................
................................
..............226
Author’s Notes................................
................................
................................
................................
......226
StrongDirectionalityMarket ................................
................................
................................
................226
Knowyour trend to know what to expect! ................................
................................
.......................
226
How to differentiate the direction of move expectedat a Supportor Resistanceline in TIME......227
Rule12 ................................
................................
................................
................................
..............229

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Gann’sCountingSquares................................
................................
................................
......................233
Counts6, 7, 8 Steps:................................
................................
................................
..............................
234
Counts4, 5, 6 Steps:................................
................................
................................
..............................
234
Counts8, 9, 10 Steps:................................
................................
................................
............................
234
Counts11, 12, 13 Steps:................................
................................
................................
........................
234
Counts19, 20, 21 Steps:................................
................................
................................
........................
235
Workingwith the CornMarket................................
................................
................................
... 236
Lookingat the SoybeanMarket in 2017................................
................................
.....................240
30-YearSegments................................
................................
................................
................................
. 240
10-YearSegments................................
................................
................................
................................
. 241
LongerSegments
................................
................................
................................
................................
...242
7-YearSegments................................
................................
................................
................................
...242
15-Yearsegments................................
................................
................................
................................
. 243
Type2 Forecast................................
................................
................................
................................
.....245
TimingPointsfor Soybean’sNext Move................................
................................
...............................
246
Type3 Forecast................................
................................
................................
................................
.....247
Waldo Points................................
................................
................................
................................
.........249
Angleof Attack PriceLineProjection................................
................................
................................
....250
Lookingat the Wheat Market in 2017................................
................................
................................
. 251
A VisualInspection................................
................................
................................
................................
251
TakingMeasures................................
................................
................................
................................
...251
Creatinga Type2 Forecast................................
................................
................................
...................253
Evaluatingth e 2017CurrentMarket for a PossibleLongTrade................................
...........................
254
What is a bottom? ................................
................................
................................
................................
254
When might this latest low (2nd higher bottom) form?................................
................................
........257
Canwe determine the possibleprice levelsfor the highsof the “prior weeks”?................................
257
TradeSetup,Entry and Stop Loss................................
................................
................................
.........258
How to Convert1-3 Centsto CurrentPriceLevels................................
................................
...........258
1st consideredStopLosslevel ................................
................................
................................
..........258
2nd consideredStopLosslevel................................
................................
................................
.........259
PyramidOpportunity................................
................................
................................
............................
259
Void TradeSetup................................
................................
................................
................................
...260

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LongTermOutlook for Wheat from the Lawof Periodicity................................


................................
. 260
Wheat, Cornand SoybeansComparison................................
................................
............................
261
Comparing Two Markets(Wheatand Corn)................................
................................
.........................
262
LongPositionOutlook................................
................................
................................
.......................
262
ShortPositionOutlook................................
................................
................................
......................262
ComparingTwo Markets(Soybeansand Corn)................................
................................
....................262
Canwe relate any other marketsto Wheat?................................
................................
........................
263
Statusof Wheat in 2017................................
................................
................................
........................
264
TheYardstick................................
................................
................................
................................
...........267
Definingthe Yardstick................................
................................
................................
.......................
267
Usingth e Yardstick– A Lookat CrudeOil................................
................................
.............................
270
CrudeOil ................................
................................
................................
................................
...........270
Crude’sMeasures................................
................................
................................
.............................
271
TheChartsGridsand Fansfrom the YardstickMeasure................................
................................
...272
Seeingthe Future in the Waves................................
................................
................................
........275
Type2 Forecastfor Crude(Individual Waves)................................
................................
......................276
Comparisonsthat Couldbe Usedin Crude................................
................................
.......................
276
Type3 CrudeForecast................................
................................
................................
..........................
278
Workingwith the BondMarket................................
................................
................................
............279
Learningto Seethe Obvious................................
................................
................................
.................279
How to use Wavesin Evaluatingyour Market?................................
................................
....................280
First Stepinto Geometry................................
................................
................................
.............284
FutureBooksin the Series................................
................................
................................
..........285
Appendix A - FromSacredScienceInstitute:................................
................................
..............286
TheApplicationof WaveMechanicsto FinancialMarket Forecasting:A Brief Descriptionof The
Analysisof TheoreticalWaveMechanicCharts& Their Correlation of FinancialMarket PriceChartsas
Taughtby Dr. JeromeBaumring................................
................................
................................
...........286
BASICOBSERVATIONS
................................
................................
................................
...........................
286
Composition:(PATTERNS)
................................
................................
................................
.................286
Wavelength:(PATTERNS
& NUMBERS)
................................
................................
.............................
287
Phasing:(PATTERNS
& PLANETS)
................................
................................
................................
......287
PatternFormation:(PATTERNS)
................................
................................
................................
.......288
MARKETAPPLICATIONS
................................
................................
................................
........................
288

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Counting:(PATTERNS
& NUMBERS)
................................
................................
................................
.. 289
Reactionsand Congestion:(PATTERNS)
................................
................................
...........................
289
PatternRecognition:(PATTERNS)
................................
................................
................................
.....290
Angleof Attack: (PATT
ERNS)
................................
................................
................................
.............291
GeometricStructure:(GEOMETRY)
................................
................................
................................
.. 292
Problems:................................
................................
................................
................................
..........292
NOTES:................................
................................
................................
................................
..................293
AppendixB - 5-WaveTheoreticalModelson CD................................
................................
........294
AppendixC - Referencesfor Further Studyof Waves:Sound................................
....................295
WaveTypes................................
................................
................................
................................
...........295
https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Engineering_Acoustics/Wave_Motion_in_Elastic_Solids
...................295
https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Engineering_Acoustics/Qualitative_Description_of_Shocks
..............295
NonlinearGenerationof Harmonics................................
................................
................................
.....295
https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Engineering_Acoustics/Harmonic_Generation
................................
...295
ProgressiveWaveDeformation................................
................................
................................
............296
FrequencyAnalysisof SolutionsObtainedUsingthe Method of Characteristics................................
298
Direct AnalyticalSolutionto HarmonicProfile................................
................................
.....................300
References................................
................................
................................
................................
............302
Typesof Attenuation ................................
................................
................................
............................
303
https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Engineering_Acoustics/Attenuation_of_Sound_Waves
.....................303
Viscosityand Heat conduction................................
................................
................................
..........303
BoundaryLayerLosses................................
................................
................................
......................303
Relaxation(Composition/DecompositionPhases)................................
................................
...........304
AppendixD – Method for Forecastingthe StockMarket – by W. D. Gann................................
.305
AppendixE - ForecastingGrainsby TimeCycles……………………
……………………………………………….328
End ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………

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A N I NTRODUCTION TO

D R. BENNET AND H ER W ORK

By KennethMacht

You hold in your hands a real map to a real treasure—treasure that is likened unto

the Horn of Althea in that it will pour forth insight after insight and if held by persistent

hands will yield an important and fundamental toolset towards the understanding and

application of the works of W. D. Gann. Dr. Lorrie Bennett is going to take you there

through the conduit of Dr. JeromeBaumring and later, through one of herself. Dr. Bennett

has no antecedentsbeyond W. D. Gann and JeromeBaumring.

Dr. Bennett is unique in the community of Gann researchers not only for the

aforementioned reason, but also—and most i mportantly —because unlike most before

her, she is going to show the work to you without reservation. No half explanations or

double -talk here, nor that puerile game of “I’ve got a secret,” so prevalent in this field.

She has earned a real place as an inter preter and applier, and she is giving it to you. In

other words, what she has presented before you works!

She has a profound gift of seeing patterns and of perceiving the underlying order

within whatever subject she directs her attention towards. Addition ally, she has the gift

of perceiving not only what is truly being said, but more importantly, what is not. She

has taken on the works of W. D. Gann and Dr. Jerome Baumring in a total immersion.

Her tenacity, will, and energy have been the sails, the curren t, and the wind of her voyage

through the illusory and sometimes rocky waters of W. D. Gann.

xii | P a ge © 2 01 7 | Lo r r i e V . B en n e t t
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Sheis also unique in that there are very few, almost none in fact, in the W. D. Gann

community that can actually understand and apply the secretsof Gann. While many try

to mystify, monopolize or claim W. D. Gann’s secretsas their own, Dr. Bennett has ever

strived to seek the truth, the real truth —and also to express it plainly spoken. For many

years, for reasons not of our concern, she has kept this knowledge cl ose to her vest, but

she has privately expressed from the beginning of my acquaintance and subsequent

friendship with her, the strong desire to share what she has learned. The first piece of the

crown of her work is now before you, with more on the way. She privately conveyed to

me that this present series of work is to be her legacy to her children and to the world.

Dr. Bennett, Lorrie from here onward, and I met about fifteen years ago at a Gann

conference. Immediately, one could recognize a brilliant mi nd here, one that could see

patterns, processes, and underlying order in whatever she was interested in. Gann’s

works were her interest, and she displayed from the outset an affinity for understanding

the subject as a whole. Trained as a physician, with an undergraduate degree in

Mathematics, she possesseda skill set of tools, the mathematics, and a penetrating ability

to “see” both what is seen and what is not seen,the diagnostician.

She possessesunusual tenacity and when faced with obstacles of any ki nd, she

quietly and persistently works through them. Where she lacked knowledge of music or

tuning theory, she found it; astrology, she found it; programming, she found it;

symbolism in the Bible, she found it; and so on. Another example is that much of th e early

Neo-Pythagoreanism, which is the basis of modern numerology, is but a means of

expressing patterns and structure in nature through numbers. Lorrie cut through the

nonsenseand went straight to the roots of what Gann was doing with the numbers. You

will learn more about that in the second volume of this series.

xiii | P a g e © 2 01 7 | L o r r i e V . B en n e t t
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Lorrie shared with me her entire set of notebooks containing her journey th r ough

Gann, so I know what is to come for you, the reader. As alluded to above, Lorrie was self-

taught in all that she needed to know. It was a difficult journey, as ofttimes, no one really

knows ahead of time what they need to know. I was frequently amazed at her uncanny

ability to intuitively know what to study and to what depth she needed to go. She was

undaunted by l ack of experience or requisite knowledge, and dove with determination

into whatever she needed to know in order to decipher Gann.

In her notebooks, she structured her study almost as a dialogue, asking herself a

series of questions about the work or subject, and then proceeding to seek the answers.

Plato’s dialogue as a didactive method is superior to almost any other, and leads one to

deep insights beyond the face of any study. I think this is the principle technique she used

to gain the knowledge that she is about to share with you. I strongly suggest that you

consider mimicking her process by writing down the questions that will naturally pop

up as you read her works, and then take these questions on one by one seeking the

answers.

In Volume Three of the series, she takes on the planets and planetary cycles. Here

is where I helped her most, as this is my specialty. Sheperceived concepts and techniques

directly from reading Gann (and his The Tunnel Thru the Air especially). What she did

not know, and did not really need to know, was just how close she was to an

understanding of some of the more obscure parts and techniques of Ptolemy and the

ancient Astrologers.

One application, which I leave to Lorrie to reveal to you at the proper time, is in

my estimation, the jewel in the crown of everything you need to know about Ancient

Astronomy and Astrology. This technique is found hidden in plain sight within George

Bayer, and the Bible, too, and is not just in The Tunnel Thru the Air . Another crown jewel

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is her deciphering of the real use of certain aspectsof Ancient Astronomy and Astrology

relating to the particular division of the zodiac. Again, I will not steal her thunder. I honor

her, becauseno one, aside from an ivory towered student like myself, would ever seeit.

And unlike me, she discovered a very practical application to use it for market analysis.

It’s amazing to seethis working, and you will seeit all in Volume Three.

Her study of geometry is completely out of the box. Personally, I understand thi s

approach the least of all, and will only comment that her treatment of the subject, like so

much of what she has uncovered in general, is not the conventional, and she reachesinto

truths and applications not found anywhere else outside of Baumring. Much of her

insight is truly simple, and demonstrates how most of us have been misled by

overcomplications of the work.

Back to this present volume. Here she deals with the mathematics of music theory,

and applies simple principles of engineering to the study of theoretical wave mechanics.

This was an important and fundamental lesson from JeromeBaumring’s curriculum, and

in this first Volume, Lorrie has deciphered and applied the subject most ably.

As an engineer myself by training and profession, I, like mo st of my kind, made

the study either too hard, or demanded too much exactitude, when an open mind and a

lot of elbow greasewere what was really needed. Lorrie constructed a method to organize

the study so as to make what began as a theoretical examination into a valuable and

practical application. This provides a clear and natural place to begin the journey of

exploration through which her series will guide the reader into deeper and greater stages

of Gann and market revelation. It is a foundation that you will depend upon throughout

the entire study.

One particular area of her work which is completely unique is her treatment of

Gann’s final book, The Magic Word . No one has ever provided a meaningful explanation

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of Gann’s intention with this small and very abstract work filled primarily with Bible

quotations. If any other besides she has any insight into that book, they are keeping it to

themselves. Lorrie, however, has deciphered a code within it, containing an insight into

numbers, which elaborates the essence of Gann’s most profound insights. That

understanding and application will be laid open for readers of this series.

Lorrie has unraveled a huge mystery in the field of W. D. Gann, and her work is

impressive by any standard. She worked carefully and alone for many years. She had to;

few people understood her or her genius. Many wanted to steal her work and some of

the smaller minded purveyors of Gann secrets have castigated and ostracized her, as

there is nothing like the truth to raise the hackles of t hose who claim to know when they

actually do not.

Lorrie does know, and she is now ready to open up to the world a wonderful

treasure. It is my honor and privilege to introduce this body of knowledge, and I think

that all of you who touch this work will apprehend with the same awe the magic that is

in her words…

Ken Macht

Atlanta, Georgia

October7, 2017

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PUBLISHER’ S I NTRODUCTION

THE H IGHER PURPOSEOF GANN THEORY

The Institute of Cosmological Economics is proud to release this first wor k in a 4

Volume series by Dr. Lorrie Bennett, revealing the deepest levels of insight into Gann

A nalysis and Forecasting. We have been expectantly waiting to begin development of

this series for 7 years now, since we first began discussing the project with Dr. Bennett

back in 2010.At long last, we are now able to begin bringing you what we consider to be

the best series of books on Gann and the markets ever produced.

There is nothing more fulfilling for me than to hear of Baumring students, or other

dedicated Gann researchers, making deep, penetrating breakthroughs in Gann Analysis

and Forecasting, since many people consider Gann’s theories to be either pure fantasy or

impenetrably complex . Whenever somebody solves some key element of the Gann

puzzle or cracks some part of his mysterious code that explains some element of his

system, producing accurate forecasts, or developing successful trading systems, this

provides further evidence to the entire Gann and financial community that these esoteric

theories have a solid basis in the markets.

Further, such proof that markets are truly forecastablebrings up philosophical and

scientific questions about the nature of reality that are beyond the scope of modern

academic science.Such evidence serves to prove the existence of a lo st, hidden , or little

known Higher Science, that not only controls the markets, but must similarly control at

least some part, if not all of reality itself . This is a paradigm shattering realization, and it

just happens that the financial markets, when und erstood through the lens of Gann

Theory, could possibly serve up the undeniable evidence of a metaphysical/scientific

system that supersedesall modern scientific paradigms.

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This science,though known by the Ancients, has been completely missed, ignored

or suppressed by mainstream academia, the scientific community and Wall Street. One

wonders just how that could be, and a study of the different schools of thought over the

last couple centuries will show that the science dominant in Gann’s time was a very

different type of science than we have today. Scientists in the late 1800’s were called

Natural Philosophers, and the purview of their study was the entire universe, including

all branches of science,seeing everything as an integrated body of knowledge.

The scientific perspective of those days was very unlike today, where the sciences

have become so hyper -specialized that the physicist often cannot communicate with the

mathematician, and neither can speak to a biologist, let alone a psychologist. Like the

Tower of Babble, what was once an integrated and cohesive world view becamesmashed

into incommunicable parts, incapable of intelligent interaction, let alone of seeing the

universe as a holistic system.

This sciencefrom the Ancients to the Natural Philo sophers was known by a term

coined by the great Pythagoras, father of modern science:Cosmology. However, this term

has lost it s meaning today, where academic scienceuses it only in reference to a form of

glorified astro-physics, and the search for the un ification of the 4 fundamental forces. It

has lost its meaning of old, which related to a system of unified scientific principles of

order and causation existing across the universe, defined as all things in manifest

existence, from matter, to biology, to mind and psychology, and even consciousness,

which in modern times has been relegated to the superficial prison of a mere brain

function, instead of being understood as the primary substrate of the cosmos itself.

It is the nature of modern materialistic science to provide petty reductionist

theories for systems of complex beauty and precision known by the Ancient Traditions

to permeate the universe with perfect order. This advanced scienceclearly resides beyond

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the parameters and limitations of materialist ic science, as there is no theory in that

paradigm that would allow for the possibility of financial markets to be predictable, since

they are not a material entity, so cannot adhere to any kind of material force or influence.

Therefore, proving the predic tability of the markets fundamentally shatters the entire

paradigm of materialistic science, a goal, the accomplishment of which, would be the

great honor of any higher philosophy, and the natural intention of Sacred Knowledge.

This explains why this field of market forecasting is often summarily dismissed or

aggressively attacked by certain types and schools, particularly the materialists, because

its verification signifies the intellectual death of their entire belief system, without which

they would be completely lost. Such materialists think the market is and can only be

random, as their absurd Random Walk Theory professes.So, any consistent verification

of an ability to forecast beyond a 50% random average proves there is a science beyond

randomness, p roviding a death blow to the random action theory of materialism.

It is such intentions that illustrate the higher purpose of Gann Theory and market

forecasting! The pursuit of higher wisdom and philosophy, order and beauty, the search

for Truth in a worl d of illusion, and the quest for the ultimate cosmological sciencebehind

the universe itself; these are the higher purposes of this Work. To disprove false theories

of science,economics, psychology, biology, astronomy, physics and mathematics, and to

rep lace them with a new and improved worldview and scientific system of operation is

the higher purpose of Gann Theory, or what I prefer to call Cosmological Economics. This

is what I find most interesting about this study, and anyone who spends enough years

researching this field will become enchanted with such higher values and goals as well.

The results of such endeavors have the potential to create new technologies across

many fields of application, since the markets are but one small example of how this

scienceoperates in the world. Further implications and applications would stretch across

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every field of scienceand technology, philosophy and spirituality, bringing revolutionary

changes to the world, if ever this Higher Sciencewere to become known and replace the

crippled and confused sciencewhich has so far served to half destroy our planet.

Sure, the ability to forecast and trade the markets for personal profit is all fine and

dandy, but it is truly a superficial goal bred by another branch of mater ialism,

philosophical or spiritual materialism. This materialistic philosophy has become a cancer

in the body of mankind, as we view the rampant greed and corruption that plague

modern finance, politics and industry, placing the wealth of a planet into the hands of the

few, with most of those few being the least worthy or deserving of it. The desire for vast

wealth beyond what is needed for a comfortable life or for the fulfillment of a specific

task or purpose also springs from the same corrosive and corru pt materialism that

pervades the scientism of academia.

It is for these reasons above that I believe the sciencebehind Gann Theory should

be released, rather than greedily hoarded solely for the personal benefit of a few. Higher

Wisdom and Sacred Knowledg e are meant to be shared, not suppressed, such that l ow er

systems of knowledge come to dominate the world. Obviously, Gann, to some degree,

believed the same, or he would not have left us what record he did of the discoveries he

made. Baumring too had the same intention, leading him to teach his Seminar Series,

though both he and Gann struggled within themselves to truly let go, leading them to

veil and complicate their presentations to nearly impossible degrees.

My intention through the work of Sacred Science Institute and the Institute of

Cosmological Economics is to encourage and support the wider releaseof this knowledge

privately in its market applications within the financial community, and widely in its

more general scientific context to the world. And in Lorrie Bennet, I have found a friend

and comrade in purpose, who feels no conflict in privately revealing her financial market

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discoveries to the Gann community, and publicly sharing her non -financial discoveries

based upon the same principles, but applying to wider fields of scienceand metaphysics.

This book is the first step in fulfilling these many intentions.

The higher -minded Gann Theorist who will develop out of the study of these

books will learn with time and experience, that there is a law of give and take, action and

reaction, that pervades not only the markets, but the entire universe. The use of Sacred

Knowledge, as this knowledge truly is, for materialistic ends can produce a violation of

a higher law that will exact its own penalty for any misuse or abuse. This is the age-old

and little understood Law of Karma, and no one falls beyond its recourse.

Jerry Baumring believed that the abuse of one’s forecasting abilities for the mere

pointless accumulation of wealth had severe Karmic consequences, so he only traded to

support his needs, without abusing the higher principle. He is not the only one to think

in this way. This is a good lesson for all to keep in mind as they begin this process of

acquiring higher wisdom in a financial context. This does not mean that this work cannot

become one’s profession, providing comfortably for one’s family, and passed down to

future generations, enabling a higher purpose and a more meaningful pathway in life.

On the contrary, that is entirely a just and r easonable intention for pursuing this

work. One must just be cautions to avoid letting things get out of hand and out of balance,

while being conscious about finding higher purposes and good works to contribute to

with one’s gains. The universe will let yo u know if things begin to fall out of balance,

though you will probably already know this yourself. Seek to rectify the issue before it

occurs and thereby you will manage to always keep the scalesproperly balanced.

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THE ORIGIN & D EVELOPMENT OF THE SERIES

I first met Lorrie Bennet in 2003,when she contacted me about obtaining copies of

Dr. Jerome Baumring’s Seminar Series, Gann Harmony: The Law of Vibration. At that

time, now almost 15 years ago, she was already exploring the field of theoretical wave

m echanics and planetary cycles though the work of Rudy Bess,and she mentioned that

she had some initial exposure to Dr. Baumring’s theories, which she wanted to explore

in their full detail.

Her primary interest was in the work of W.D. Gann, whom she ment ioned was a

cousin of her grandfather, and she desired to dedicate herself to the deepest possible

exploration of Gann’s work. The courses of Dr. Baumring are generally considered to be

the most advanced elaboration of Gann’s deeper scientific and esoteric theories, so she

wanted to acquire these courses as a key guide and supplement to her own research.

We arranged to provide her wit h the complete set of Baumring Courses along with

Julius Nirenstein’s accompanying Lecture Notes, after which she disappeared for some

time into deep research, as most Baumring students tend to do. She popped back up a

year later to purchase a new set of Baumring Lecture Notes by Alfred Freedman which

we had acquired after his passing, and again vanished back into her research.

A couple years later, in 2005,she mentioned that she had been in an accident which

had left her disabled, requiring some years of rehabilitation, and that she intended to

engage this research in total immersion th r ough her long recovery period. This leads to

what is one of the most surprising and interesting elements of Lorrie’s story, that being

that the accident and her brain injury primarily affected her left brain, leaving her right

brain totally dominant.

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This ended up being the Key to her cracking Gann, as it gave her the ability to

accessthe inner secrets of Gann’s and Baumring’s work that were simply missed or

unperceivable by everyone else. Gann’s work requires the shifting of one’s perception to

a different perspective and while thinking from a d ifferent paradigm that the left brain,

as well as our past educational experience, struggle to grasp or allow. But her accident

simply shut off the element that blocked everyone else’s access,opening a doorway of

insight that has led to this series.

The next time I heard from her was about 2 years later, in the summer of 2007,

when I released an unusual item I had found called The Gann Ellipse , a geometrical

ellipse overlay related to the work of George Bayer, but said to have been altered and

further dev eloped by Gann. Lorrie contacted me to acquire a copy of this Gann Ellipse

and i t was at this point that she provided me with the first little peek into the depth of

the work that she was engaged in, through the following tantalizing comment:

“I havecracked Magic Word and believethat the ellipseties to a techniquehe describesin

there.Dr Baumring wascorrect,and Gann did useellipsesin forecasting.It hastakenme 4 years

to finally graspwhat Baumring waspointing out, and after Magic Word openedup, I realizedthat

Baumring had not brokenMagic Word, but did havemuch of Gann’s inner techniquecorrect.”

It was another 3 years, in 2010,before I heard from Lorrie again, but this time, she

was bursting with ideas and plans to begin publishing her work . She told me that since

Baumring had been so influential in helping her, that Sacred ScienceInstitute felt like the

right place to bring out her work as well, to continue the Tradition within the same

School. She also realized that my clientele were the ideal people to bring her work t o,

since all had a deep understanding of Gann, and since I had the direct connection to all

the Baumring students from over the last 25 years.

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She provided me with detailed outlines for at least five absolutely fascinating

works, along with various supportive material, charts, overviews and outlines. We went

back and forth for a while discussing elements and details of the series, what should

follow what, and how to structure and organize them, according to the different contents

and points of focus.

There was a more technical market work on Gann’s trading setups, a couple of

intraday timing methods, one based upon Sepharial’s Gravitational System, another

based upon Tunnel and the Tides, with more advanced insights into ancient timing

systems and Lunar cycles and influences. Then there was the BIG one, decoding Magic

Word and providing the breakthrough into her understanding of the Law of Vibration.

It is this primary work that has now evolved, 7 years later, into the 4 Volumes of her Law

of Vibration series.

She mentioned that there were many further possible books that could be written

depending upon the approach taken and the depth plumbed. H owever, she was also

concerned about the security of the books, and how I could assure they would remain

private and within the group of paid students, without being pirated and passed around

the Internet, which at that time and still now has been a terrible problem causing many

authors to stop writing or to never publish anything importan t. Lorrie told me clearly

that if her books were pirated, she would quit writing and not make any more of her

knowledge available to the public.

At the time I was in the process of developing and implementing a set of new

technologies that provided much deeper overlapping security measures for our books. I

required a bit more tim e to complete this project, so suggested she start working on her

manuscripts to begin building out the content, while I finished resolving the security

issues,and that soon we wou ld both be ready.

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Over the next year, we bounced occasional emails back and forth, with Lorrie

working to get some more text written, but often distracted by family life, graduating

children and various frustrating illnesses that kept her from her work. Ul timately, a lull

came upon our communications that surprisingly lasted seven enti re years with almost

no contact as time just blew by, with both of us distracted by very busy lives.

Sometimes it seemsthat the universe has a timing of its own, and this was the case

for us both, while family and other responsibilities intervened. She was often on my

mind, as I continued to develop and test more powerful security measures, particularly

intended for her books, while simultaneously working to build a new advanced website

that would be more Baumring -centric, and provide the ideal platform for the

development of her work (also delayed 7 years, but now close to completion).

Then suddenly, several months ago, some kind of strange time portal

unexpectedly reopened… In late May of this year, 2017,at the encouragement of a couple

of her friends, Lorrie published a short PDF version of a few partially developed sections

contained in this Volume, and mentioned it to an online group she belonged to. A few

friends and cli ents of mine informed me of this, since many k new that Lorrie and I had

been intending to publish her work for some years. When I saw the PDF, I immediately

wrote her and told her that if she was ready to start putting her work out, so was I, but

that PDF’s were definitely NOT the way to do it, since there was no security on them. She

told me that this was just a tiny piece she put out as a first test case, but that yes, she

would still like to publish together, and was now ready to go with a 4-volume series that

was an expansion of her initial BIG work on the Magic World and Law of Vibration from

7 years ago.

From that point, this project suddenly burst into a life all its own, one that neither

of us were anticipating nor prepared for. My wife and I were expecting our new daughter

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to be born two weeks later, and I had promised my wife I’d take a few months off through

the summer , doing only part time work once the baby came. So, I had not been planning

on or expecting to dive head first into the best and most complex series of books that had

ever come across my desk. Similarly, Lorrie mentioned to me just the other day, that had

someone told her 6 months ago that she would be working full force to get her 1st two

books out by the end of the year, she would have laughed at them.

So, this project has a very strange and timely energy to it, the like of which I have

never quite seen before, coming out of the blue with no warning, and having a pace that

is far more intense than is usual. The pace is primarily due t o some forthcoming market

cycles in the New Year, that possessionof Volume 2 will enable readers to take advantage

of in a way that could be life changing for them, and help them pay for the cost of the

series.

More unusual yet, just through my mentioning the series to a handful of people, a

real buzz started that pushed me t o do an initial pre -releaseof the 1st 2 books, which even

happed right during Mercury Retrograde, something I never do. At one point I had asked

Lorrie her feelings about Merc Rx, and she informed me that by Gann’s system in Tunnel,

it was not an influence that was bad at all, and that she had no concern in doing a release

during that traditionally difficult time period. Surprisingly, this produced the largest and

fastest response I’ve ever seen for any of our publication s in 20 years.

So again, this confirms that there is some energy, some intention with this work,

that has a life of its own, and we are just moving along with it as quickly as we can, while

assuring the quality and clarity are up to the highest possible standards. Needless to say,

my summer baby vacation did not happen, to the displeasure of my wife, and there will

be no rest until Christmas, before which we plan to releaseVolume 2.

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ON BAUMRING & W AVE M ECHANICS

Wit h the history of the development of the series complete, I wanted to say a few

words about the content of this text and its relationship to Baumring’s Courses and

curriculum. As one of Baumring’s closest Private Students back in the 1980’s, I had the

oppor tunity to study directly with him, as well as to work as his personal assistant and

teaching assistant during the seminars and through the 5 years that I worked intensively

with him before he died unexpectedly in 1992.

One of the very first assignments giv en to me was the exercisewhich is the subject

of this text, the creation and study of theoretical wave mechanic charts. I spent over 100

hours making up setsof 4 and 6-wave theoreticals by hand, as Baumring would not allow

us to do this work on the compu ter. (Note: my 2 sets of hand drawn theoreticals are

included on the CD so you can seewhat it was like to do them by hand. Also, the 6-wave

theoreticals are not presented in this text, so you can refer to them for an extended level

of study. ) I spent many hours studying these charts and learning to see how the

underlying component waves generated the composite pattern, and learning to count

these waves to find the underlying intervals in the market.

I was one of only a dozen or so students that I know of w ho actually did the wave

mechanics exercise. There is a set of some computer generated partial versions that one

student created which were included in one of the Baumring Course Manuals. Most

students looked those over a bit and figured they understood wh at it was about, but very

few really studied or researched this subject closely.

I can now say, after having carefully worked through Lorrie’s text during these

last two months of editing and development , that even I never really understood the

depth and intention behind Baumring’s having us do this work. I understood a third to

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perhaps half of it, but the level that Lorrie has taken the work here goes FAR beyond

anything that I ever considered. It has advanced my understanding of the subject and its

impor tance significantly.

To my surprise, there is more depth and importance underlying this seemingly

simple exercisethan I had myself ever considered. I only now understand why Jerry said

that this work was the foundational step underlying all the rest of the Gann research. I

see it now, becauseLorrie has explained clearly what Jerry would not, and has shown

how to put it to use.

I have personally been so impressed with the quality and intelligence of Lorrie’s

work that I have provided her with a copy of m y Private Student Notes from the five

years that I worked closely with Baumring. These notes probably represent the most

detailed representation of Jerry’s ideas of anything there is, since I spent far more time

with him than anyone else did, and as a Priv ate Student was given a different level of

information than was provided in the Seminars.

I have always intended to publish these Notes someday for the serious Baumring

students, but they require a lot of work to type up my hard to read handwriting and to

provide better diagrams. But I realize that a more direct route to my own full

understanding of these complex notes is to share them with Lorrie, who is reviewing

them very closely. I have agreed to let her pull out any examples she would like to use in

her books to demonstrate that Baumring understood this work and to show what he was

doing with many of his vague hints and references.

My further hope in this collaboration is that my Notes may provide Lorrie with

further clues, leads and ideas than she fo und in Julius’ Notes and Al’s Notes, which will

make her work deeper and more extended than it already is. Much of the work in my

Notes would fall more into the Geometry segment of Gann, though there was lots of work

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in every branch of Gann Analysis. So, I hope my Notes provide many useful examples

and further clues that Lorrie will decipher and share with us all.

It is this willingness to explain where Jerry would only hint, that is the half the

value of Lorrie’s work! The other half being the depth of her insights, which when

combined with her openness and willingness to teach and share her ideas without veils

or blinders , places her above all the Gann t eachersthat have preceded her.

Everyone who has seriously studied Gann or Baumring has been deeply frus trated

at the cryptic and vague method of presentation and pedagogy that Gann teachers

employ, and only the most patient, perseverant or simply bull -headed types ever really

crack into the deep layers of this work. Most who have done that have committed at least

10, if not 20 or 30 years to their research.

This field truly is not a study for the impatient, or a quick fix for the those hoping

to find an easy answer to the markets. But the added impairment to direct understanding

of the subject overlaid by t ypes like Gann, Bayer, Baumring and others, takes a highly

difficult pursuit and makes it almost impossible.

Lorrie’s work is going to bring a massive revelation and reorientation to the field

of Gann A nalysis, erasing many misunderstandings and debunking many false theories

and incorrect explanations. She will help to give Gann’s work a higher degree of respect

in a financial world that has often disrespected and derided him. She will help to affirm

the value of Baumring’s work that has also often been dis missed by those either too lazy

to do the work or not smart enough to understand it.

Her approach to presenting this material is with clear logic and detailed

explanations, illustrated by multiple examples. She then applies the techniques to

multiple marke ts, creating REAL forecaststhat can be studied, understood and traded by

students. This is combined with an Online Classroom where Lorrie will be available

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ongoingly to answer questions and to explain ideas that are not being easily grasped, or

to discuss trades as they setup, progress, and close out. This structure and hands-on

approach creates a sort of apprenticeship program for her students, leading newcomers

or old Gann students alike through each stage of the work.

Between these various pedagogical elements, we expect students of Lorrie’s series

to progress to a higher level of Gann understanding than any group has in the past.

Students of this series can expect to becomeas advanced than the best experts in the fi eld,

if not more so, since few, if any others, have made the discoveries that Lorrie has. And all

this can be accomplished without the decades of time required and endless confusion

others experienced, just to reach a small fraction of Lorrie’s understanding.

So, with this in mind, I encourage each reader to dedicate himself to this study and

to take advantage of the unusual opportunity presenting itself here. Be sure to make good

use of your accessto Lorrie on the Online Forum, since this amenity may not be available

forever. I am certain th at there has never been a series of courses of this level of quality

and depth on these subjects,and I have seeneverything out there, so I am better equipped

to judge than most.

I wish I had had the opportunity to begin my Gann studies 30 years ago with

Lorrie rather than with Jerry, because I would have made far more progress, far more

quickly, and with far less pain and frustration, than will everyone who gains their next

levels of Gann understanding under Lorrie’s tutelage. I am almost envious of those who

have the good fortune to begin their Gann studies here…

The same can also be said about Gann, if not more so, since Baumring helped to

significantly penetrate Gann’s work, and provided a clearer pathway to understanding

him than Gann himself would ever have shared. That path helped Lorrie to make faster

headway, and now Lorrie will help all of us to do the same. So, we each have the

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opportunity to stand on the shoulders of those who have preceded us, and to gain an

added level of benefit from the years of hard work and struggle that our predecessors

went through.

This first book really is only an introduction to the larger insights that will be

presented in the following volumes, unveiling Lorrie’s serious breakthrough into Gann.

The first big revelat ion will come in the second book , Numbers, and will then expand

through the third and fourth volumes. But this first work alone should provide a new

level of understanding and application in a foundati onal field that is key to Gann

A nalysis, and will present it on a level beyond anything written on the subject before.

With this, I leave you at the doorway to a new and greater intellectual adventure

than you have likely every engaged in before, but an adventure with a potential for

accomplishment that has not been easily attained before.

William BradstreetStewart,Director

Institute of CosmologicalEconomics

SacredScienceInstitute

SantaBarbara,CA, October11, 2017

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WavePatterns

Why Studythe Lawof Vibrationby the Patterns?

Theseriesof booksI am presentingare the results of the yearsof study and


researchinto the writings of many authors. A key author in my studies was Dr.
JeromeBaumring.He presented, in 1986-1991, a seriesof Seminarscalled Gann
Harmony:The Law of Vibration. It is not an easy seriesto comprehendand years
havebeen spent masteringthe thoughtsthat he presented.Most studentssay, “ it
is over my head.” The work presented in this text is the beginning step into
Baumring’swork. In this book, I will present both the results of an exercisethat
Baumringencouragedhis students to perform and then to beginbuildingthe initial
foundationof WaveMechanicsin the marketsand presentvarioustechniquesand
processeswhich will help applythat knowledgeinto the markets.

The Baumring exercisewas comprisedof creating idealizedwave charts to


help foster the developmentof seeingthe movementof the cyclesin the markets.
Bydevelopingthis skill,then the manytechniquesand processeswhich canbe used
for analyzingandforecasting the marketsbecomereadilyusableby the student.The
underlyingskill required is to be able to see “waves” in the market, which was the
reasoningfor the Baumringexercise.

In his work, he tells the student to begincreatinga theoreticalmodel using 4


base cycles, and to build a sequenceof theoretical charts using every possible
variation of those cycles. I am not sure how many students have performed the
exerciseover the years, and I will admit that it wasyearsbefore I did it myself,and
yet it wasone of the most revealingexercisesI could havedone.

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In this book, I will presentthe tracingsof the patternsgeneratedfrom these


modelsand the cycle structuresderived from this exercise. Also,I will show how,
usingthis simpleexercise, you can begin to find key cyclesin your markets.Why is
this so important?First and most critically, most of us believethat when you reach
a cycle turning point it will be cleanand clear. This exerciseteachesyou that this
belief is not alwaystrue and it helps one understandwhat is true of the turning
points.

Thisbookis the first book in a serieson the Lawof Vibration.I feel that having
a foundational understanding of wave mechanics leading to a basic visual
recognitionof Patternsin the market is essentialto fully graspthe later material.
Excelspreadsheetshavebeenincludedto assistthe studentwith creatingthe cycles.

What ToolsDo YouNeedto Do the Exercise?

In Baumring’sday the computer was just cominginto being and the private
individual likely did not own one. The cycleswere drawn on grid paper and then
tracing paper was utilized to placethe cyclesover a chart. But now, 30 yearslater,
computers are present in most homes and we can’t imagine life without the
technology.So,putting it to useis easilyaccepted.

I havedevelopedmanytools (spreadsheets
) utilizingthe Microsoft Exceland
have included those on the accompanyingCDto help speedup and simplify your
studies.Most of the chartsshownin this book are derivedfrom thosespreadsheets,
andI havefound them to be essentialtools in developingmy cyclereadingskills.The
other market chartsshownare createdusingTimingSolutionsoftwarewhich is the
only programof which I know that cancreatea generalizedcyclewith it s harmonics

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References

Dr. JeromeBaumring,Gann1 Manual, Chapter4, How to Createa CompositeCycle.

Alfred Friedman,LectureNotesfrom Baumring’sInvestmentCentreSeminars


, Gann
2 LectureNotes.

Assignmentnotation: page33, Constructionof CompositeWaves

• 2 Waves;F, O, giving3 compositewavestructures:++,+-, -+ patterns.


• 3 Waves:F, O, D, giving8 compositewave structures:+++,---, ++-, --+, +--, -
++,-+-, +-+
• 4 Waves:F, O, D, T, giving16 compositewavestructuresaswill be presented
in this book.
• 5 Waves: givinga multitude of wavevariationsincludedon the CD.
• 6 Waves:giving an evenwider variationof wavesincludedupon the CDfrom
BradStewart’sPrivateStudentNotes.

What Am I Supposedto BeLearning?

ReferenceChapter4 of Baumring’sGann1 Manual.

As I noted earlier, part of this book is the result of doing the exercisesthat
Baumringgavehis students.In havingthem do this exercise, he was beginningthe
processof trainingthem to seethe cyclicpatternsbehindthe markets. Byseeingthe
idealistic wave formations, you can then begin to see them in the actual charts
where there is not just one cycleplayingout but up to three.

The idealizedwavesgive a template for how the wavescombine to create


different wave patterns allowingone to begin to see what the actual structure or

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parts of the waveare, how they interact and how to find them in the summational
wavesthemselves.Youwill find that a wave peak can be lost insidethe trough of
another wave or in the peak of another time frame. You will develop an
understandingof how the peaksthemselvescan morph as they progressthr ough
the cycles. Thishelps you to see the cycles changingrelationshipas they progress
thr ough time. You learn to see how, by havingtwo similar spansmoving together
but opposite, you canlosesight of one or both, astheir oppositemovements cancel
each other out so that a flat line appears.It is these changingrelationshipsthat
becomeimportant in the ability to seethe actionwithout beingoverwhelmedby all
the movementwithin the chart.

As for how the cyclesbehave,there is a pictorial sequencethat is generated


at eachturn of the cycle.Not all the cyclesreturn to the samestartingpoint at the
nodesof the cycle(points of rest). Due to their mathematicalrelationshiponly the
Octavedivisions(2, 4, 8, 16, etc.) return to the samepoint together sincethey are
all even(halving)divisionsof the Fundamentaland its subsequentdivisions.

Otherwaves,whoselengthsare not a halvingsubdivisionof the Fundamental,


will be early or late to the node/restingpoint in comparisonto the fundamentalor
octave,then onceenoughturns of the cycle/wavehaveoccurredthey will return to
the node at the sametime asthe fundamentaland its octaves.Theseare the waves
whichhavea lengthof the musicalnotessuchast he 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th. It is this differing
time of returning to the node that creates the variation in the shape of longer
repeatingcycles.

There is a general similarity in the waves shape and pattern but also a
differenceoccursdue to the changingarrival time of the non-octave notes to the

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node. Theresult of this is that eventuallythe shapeor pattern of tops, bottoms and
the wave itself changesenoughthat somethingthat was a small move inside the
bottom of a wavecan becomethe most noticeableeffect at the top of t he waveor
viceversa.Eventhe movesthat occurbetweenthe top and bottom can changedue
to the presenceof this variationcausedby the non-octavelengthsworkingthe wave.
It is not a new cycleoccurringbut just a progressionof the non-octavenotes.

Thereis a largesectionof the TheoreticalWavemodelshavebeenput on the


accompanyingCD. A representative group of these modelshas been presentedin
the text but the possiblevariationsare so greatthat their inclusionin the text would
be hindersometo the book itself. Thesemodelsgeneratea multitude of different
chart patterns which are important for the study of the wave mechanicsand
patterns.Theyhavebeenincludedto illustratethe numerouswavepatternspossible
when a 5th wavelength is addedinto the 4-wavemodel.

Thesecharts use a variety of different 5th wave lengthsbut not all to show
these pattern changes.These charts also show the different types of Chart
Formationsthat are generated through the repetitive cycle relationships which
produce an identifiable group of Patternswhich can be categorizedinto 4 main
groups:Top, Bottom, Range, and Run Formations. TheseFormationtemplateswill
help you identify the actual underlyingwave combinationscreatingthese Patterns
on the market charts. This will further help one to correctly identify the critical
top/bottom points asthey morph and changeover time, due to the varianceof the
underlyingwavecombinations.

Sincethis exercisewas initially releasedbefore the commonuse of personal


computers, Baumring did not allow his students to create their models on

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computersbecausehe wanted them to learn the logic and developa feel for these
patternswhich is better realizedthrough doing them by hand.TheCDincludestwo
setsof hand drawn TheoreticalWaveMechanicchartsdone by BradStewartwhile
he wasa PrivateStudentof Dr. Baumring.One is a set of 4-wavemodelslike those
in this text, and anotherset of 6-wavemodelswhich is not coveredin this book.

Today, many computers have programs that do the cycle hunting in the
marketsautomatically.I havemanyof thoseprogramsand cantell you that they do
not find the true cycles that are being sought, but find instead variations and
combinationsof the underlyingcycles. It is t his misunderstandingthat givesrise to
the belief that “cycles” sometimesseem to disappear.It is due to an incomplete
understandingof the cyclesbehavioror their actual structure and formation. The
cyclesdo not stop or disappear, they just blend into the pattern of others so as to
become indistinguishable from another wave. This cycle characteristic of
“disappearance”gives credenceto the need for the student to understandhow
SummationalWaves, ie. the markets price line, are generated using the tru e
underlying Component Waves. Without understanding this, one never really
understandscycles,which is why both Baumringand myselfconsiderthis work to
be foundationalto all further work in the markets.

Thisexercisein WaveMechanicsis meant to help you learn to SEEhow these


changesin the Patternsof the market happen. A top will not alwaysappearto be a
top but canbecomea range,while a range, over time, can morph into lookinglike a
top. Computerscannot see these facts, they simplysee rangesas rangesand tops
astops, so the true pattern of the cycleasit morphsis missed.Thislimitation is why
advancedFourierAnalysisdoes not alwaysseemto work in the financialmarkets,

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direction they begin to move in relation to the other underlyingcomponentcycles


in the model.

All cyclespossessa further elementcalledamplitude, the height of the wave


in what we would considerto be price scale,which can be determined when you
know wherethe peaksare and canmeasurethe amountof changein the pricechart
createdbetweenthe extremesof the moves.

As Baumringadmits, “This procedureis, of course,approximate,but very


usefulnonetheless
.“ In takingthe time to perform this exercise,the skillto seethese
patternsunderlyingthe actualmarket is developed, and the patternsthat you have
studiedact asa referencepattern to applyto the actualmarket charts.

Thefollowing exampleshowsa SummationalWaveModel overlaidupon the


DowJonesMonthly chart,givinga clearexampleof what canbe donewith this work.

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views. The opposite views are causedby the considerationof two possible
points of inversion,one at one node and an inversionat another node in the
samecycle, creatingtwo different opposingviews.

HurstAlreadyHasThis!

Yes,but this is not meant to be about Hurst.Thisbook is the actual exercise


from Baumring’sGannHarmony:TheLaw of Vibration course(presentedinsideAl
Friedman’sNotes) teachinghow to work with idealizedwaves.It is meantasa primer
providingthe first instructionson the topic which will be elaboratedin later books.
It is intended to presentthe 16 idealizedwavesso as to learn to see the different
formationsthat are formed accordingto the initial position of the waves, either up
or down, at the node. It will then expandthis foundationalbaseinto a variety of 5-
wavemodels,and then demonstratehow thesetheoriesapplyto the markets.

The bulk of my work is basedon this processand understandingthe shifting


of the wavesat the nodesand how to apply intervalsin the marketsusingidealized
waves.Hurstis goodto a point, but I am attemptingto presentBaumringhere ashis
lessonprovidesa strong basisfor the Law of Vibration as pure numbers.Thereare
only 13 numbersyou must have to make all stock and commodity market cycles
work. Hursthastwo, if memoryservescorrectly.

I am preparingto releasein the Law of Vibration by the Numbers, the 13


SacredNumbers and the natural law/logic behind them. However,no one would
know how to use those numbers unlessthey had worked through this lessonfrom
Baumring’scourse.This book is the primer for putting those numbersinto wave
form usinga simple6 - 8 – 12 - 24 wavestructureto teachit.

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Anywaveform that includeswavesthat are not a 1/2, 1/4, or 1/8 divisionwill


causea slow transformationof the wave form over multiple iterationsof the wave
itself. In this way the "general"shapeof the waveis maintainedbut the inner waves
can change, altering the finer detailsof the wave,while expandingand contracting
top and bottom formations.

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low. In the standardpracticethe points B and C are points occurringafter point A


high or low. I suggestthe secondsetup aswell. Considerthe wavestructureabove.

Thefirst utilizesthe standardplacementof points A, B and Cof the Andrews


Pitchfork. The secondwave placesthe node point A in front of the high (B) and
behind the low (C). Actual placementof A sometimesrequires aligning A in the
empty spacebehindthe nodalareato achievethe correctdirectionof the pitchfork.

The desired result is seen below where the highs and lows of the smaller
wavesare enclosedwithin one half of the pitchforkstructure,while the largerwaves
are enclosedby the full pitchfork.A visibleconsolidationis seenin points where the
marketbreaksout of the pitchfork,which would be consideredan inversionof price
as it does not turn downwards as expected.Thishelps to identify additionalnode
areasas highsare the nodal areaof largerwaves.

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RangeFormationsor Stumps

Formation:STUMP Formation: STUMP


Name: 5 Finger
Name:3 Fingers& BrokenNail Cycle: P 5th: -D
Cycle:P 5th: D

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CommonPeriodsof TimeCreateSimilarChartPatterns(DOW)

This tracing utilized a period where there is similar causefor an expected


effect in the market. Note that although there are some differences,as no two
points in time are alwaysat the exactcorrelationbetweenall the cycles,there is a
generalcommonstructure that can be usedfor predictiveoutlooksin the market.

Tradingis not done directly off the tracing, but an expectationof what is
ahead, when properly done, can allow the trader to incorporatefuture eventsinto
the trading plan and setups.From this tracing,you move into the setupsfor entry
and exit and determinewhat you would expectand the types of trades you would
take.Thefuture is not shown, asthat wasnot this chart’s purpose, but knowingwhat
is comingcanhelp the trader preparefor the typesof tradeshe would be expecting.
Thenif the marketdoesnot perform asexpected,a reevaluationis in order.

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On the chart above,note the position of the areaof decompositionbetween


the down trend and the next uptrend in what somewould call a restingareaof the
chart. If you note the similarityof the angleof attackon the two wavesshown, you
will see that they are similar.The key points to decompositionare the lower highs
and lower lows which tighten into an area shapedlike a pennant(converginglines)
or flag (slightlyconverginglines).Thispoint is followed by a point at which the highs
become higher and lows higher and often a snap back point where the break
upwards returns to the trendline along the lower highs. At this point parabolic
movescanoccuroff the trendline. A breakbelow the trendlineis a warningthat the
market could be entering a longer period of compositionand not preparingfor a
strongmoveupwards.

WavesShapes:

SineWave:

Generalstandard, idealizedwaveform.

GeometricWave/SquareWave

Only odd harmonics create this wave


shape(1, 1/3, 1/5, 1/7, 1/9).

TriangleWave

Only odd harmonics create (1, 1/9,


1/49, 1/81) note squaredenominators.

SawTooth Wave Containsall harmonicsin geometricratio (1, ½, 1/3, ¼, 1/5, 1/6,


1/7, 1/8, 1/9).

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PuttingTheoryinto a Forecast

The idealizedwaves, how they are formed, and the individualpatterns that
are created by their formation, along with the knowledgeof wave mechanicshas
been presentedwith an eye towards their use in the markets.But why are these
beingshown?To teachthe student how to createa forecast.Thereare three types
of forecastthat can be made, and eachutilizesa different skill set. Thethree types
of forecastlevelspossibleusingthe skill set presentedare:

1. Thedevelopmentof dates: By usingthe patternsof the waveswhich movefrom


high to low and low to high, and an expectedlength basedupon the lengthsof
prior waves,a generaldate can be developedin which a changein trend can be
expected.Thisis becausewavescontinuein their travelsevenif they do compose
and decomposesuffering the effectsof attenuation.

2. Repeatingindividualwavestructures:by applyingthe view that a similarangleof


attack betweentwo wavesindicatesa similarwavepattern occurring.Theprior
times of that angleof attack can be “traced” into the current market pattern as
a projectionof what to expect from that wavesformation.

3. Creationof compositewaves:Thisis the techniquethat Gannutilizedfor his year


forecastand canprovidethe trader with a generalto specificpattern the market
can be expectedto follow.

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Workingwith a Market(Stepby Step)- Silver

A. Choosea Market: Silver

To beginworkingwith a market you must get a sourceof data. Somedata is


free while other data is very expensive.For this exercise,generalmarket data for
Silveris included on the CD which accompaniesthis book. This will allow you to
duplicate the measureson the following charts. The data used is free data from
Quandl.com(Com/WLD_Silver)
, while the chartingprogramis TimingSolutions
. It is
not requiredto havethis exactprogram, but it doeshavea few featureswhich have
proven useful, such as the ability to easilydraw vertical reflectionsof trendlines,
harmonic waves/Fourierwaves,and the ability to move betweentime measuresof
days,weeksand months.Youcan contactSacredScienceto set you up with a copy.

But this work can alsobe done by handusinga protractor and ruler. Drawing
wavesis not impossibleeither, as a generalizedwave can be drawn and often with
lesseffort. As stated before, the programonly knowswhat the programmerknows
and they don’t alwaysknow the right way to create the wave. Also,the program
tries to usethe actualprice actionon the chart with the waveconstruction, andthat
often makesit difficult to breakthe different wavesout from eachother. I will show
the waveson the chart but they are not alwaysrepresentativeof the exactwaveto
expect.

Silver was chosenas a brand-new market for the author, as I have never
analyzedit before. I will show the step by step processperformed to begin to
understandthe structureof this Silverinstrument, usingthe techniquesin this book.

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UsingChart FormationSimilaritiest o FindPeriodicPatterns

One of the most difficult points of chart analysisfor projection is finding the
repeatpointsin the chart. Now it canbe done, especiallywhen utilizingthe patterns
tied to planetarycycles.And that will be coveredin Law of Vibrationby the Planets.
But here we are goingto presentthe concept that a repeatingpoint in time has a
repeatingpattern as well. A good exampleis a high in 1980 in
Silver.On the far left is a snapof that high.

This is a formation I call a Bottle Nosed Shark.


Lookingto the picture on the left, note that the extreme
length of the first top i.e. the bottle point of the sharkis
createdby two cyclesendingtogether whereasthe lower

Bottle NoseSharkTop

1980 Highin Silver 2011 High


1998High

jaw is formed by a smallercyclepeak.So,with the actualtracingof the top and the


cyclestructurewhich createsit, we move thru the monthly chart on Silverwatching
for a similarpattern to occur.

The1998high and the 2011high are similarin nature suggestingsimilarcycle


structure creatingthe high. The creation of a similar high also suggests a point of

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C. Author Reproduction of the Multi-Year Price Line TracingsBased on Available


WheatData

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RecreatingGeorgeMarechal’sDowForecast

In December1933, CanadianmathematicianGeorgeMarechalproduced a
now famous 15-year forecast of the Dow as follows, with Marechal’sforecast up
top, and the Dow Jonesactualdata below:

Thischart was publishedby both EdwardDeweyand GarfieldDrew in years


to come,and it hasbeen long speculatedas to the methodologyusedby Marechal
to produce this chart. Marechal was an associateof RogerBabsonand Dr. Alan
Andrews,both who used geometric principles from physicsand engineeringto
producesvariousforecastsand analysesof the markets.Babsonwasfamousfor his

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is a valuabletool that allowsyou to evaluatethe overallchart beforefocusingon the


smaller parts on the right side of the price line. To get the bigger picture as one
would say.

Howto UseWavesin Evaluatingyour Market?

Print out a price chart you are studyingusingpreferablya monthly chart first,
then a weekly,then a daily.

Usinga curvededgedraw in simplewavesconnectedby a line drawnbetween


two points. In this chart, we begandrawing at the 1984 low in 30 YearTreasury
Bonds. Drawinga line betweenthat low and the late 1999 low we connectedthem
with a smooth arc creating W1. Then connect the late 1999 low to the 2014 low
before the strongmoveupwardswith a line, and draw a curvedownwardsand back

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FutureBooksin the Series:

TheLawof Vibrationby the Patternsis the first in a four-book seriesthat will


teach the reader the Law of Vibration and how to apply it into your markets.The
knowledgeis built in the serieswith no repeatsof the information other than for
greater clarification.Forthis reason,the booksare meantto be studiedin the series
order as the knowledgefrom one book is the foundationfor the next. Theywill not
be sold individuallybut are requiredto be purchasedsequentiallyas a series.

Lawof Vibration by the Numbers: In this book a systemof vibratory numbers


will be revealedthat allows one to easily build the dominant (Primary)and Sub-
Dominant(Secondary)cyclesin a market.More tools will be presentedthat help in
understandingthe vibratory structureand its use.Thesetools are primarilyGannin
nature suchasthe Fans,Squares,NumberSquaresand manyof the variousnumber
chartsGannutilized in his work.

Law of Vibrationby the Planets: In this book the structure of cycleswill be


presented as well as the processby which the cyclesare developedfrom simple
numbersand how they are also broken down into sub-cyclesand built up to the
greater cycles.Learningwhich planets create which intervalsbasedon numerical
logic is openly presented suchthat at the end of the book you will know which are
the keyplanetarycyclestied to specificintervalsandhow to build andtest your own.

Lawof Vibrationby the Geometry: Thefinal book in the seriesdrawson all the
above knowledge, processes and tools to push the understandingto the 4th
dimensionand utilize the Geometricshapescreatedthere. Spiralgrowth (example
above), geometricshapesand other mathematicaland geometricalfoundationsare
laid to pushone’sability to the highestlevel possible.

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FirstStep into Geometry

The most advancedlevel in the Law of Vibration is building the Geometric


shapesthat help determinethe sequenceand growth possibilitiesof a market. The
skills learned in this book lay the groundwork for building the Geometry of the
markets.One of the hardest elementsof geometry is correct geometric growth.
Here is where the basicelementsin this book are blendedtogether to create the
spiral.

TheEND…ofthis book and the BEGI


NNING of an adventure.

Enjoy,Lorrie

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AppendixA - From SacredScienceInstitute:

Thestudyof the Lawof Vibrationis dauntingwhen lookedat asa whole. This


seriesof booksis intended to break the Law of Vibration into manageablepieces
that will take the student from a general knowledgeof the law to an in-depth
understandingof it. JeromeBaumring’scourseGannHarmony:Law of Vibrationis
the whole Lawof Vibrationbut not fully explained.Theauthor is attemptingto bring
clarityto manyof the topicsthat createthe Lawof Vibration.Hereis a write-up from
SacredScienceInstitute on wave mechanicsshowingthe book(s)in the LOVseries
that covereachtopic. A brief explanationof eachbook is in the prior section.

The Application of Wave Mechanics t o Financial Market Forecasting: A Brief


Descriptionof TheAnalysisof TheoreticalWaveMechanicCharts& TheirCorrelation
of FinancialMarketPriceChartsasTaughtby Dr. JeromeBaumring

BASI
COBSERVATI
ONS

Composition: (PATTERNS
)

Thecompositeor summationalwaveis the summation of the four component


sinusoidalwaves.Anytime one of the underlyingcomponentwavesturns there is
change in velocity in the composite wave except when two component waves
simultaneouslyturn in oppositedirections.Thepattern of the compositewave is the
result of the summationand changesof the variousunderlyingwaves.If you change
the relationshipsof the length of the waves,the summationalpattern will likewise
change.If you changethe phasingof any of the componentwaves,you changethe
pattern of the compositewave.

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Wavelength: (PATTERNS
& NUMBERS
)

Wavelengthor lambda refers to the underlyingcomponent waves.In this


model, there are four componentwaves.Thesewaveshave been chosento have
specificmusicalrelationshipsto eachother. Wavelengthsare usuallyreferred to by
their 1/4 cyclelengths,the amountof time/distancefrom the 0 line to the maximum
or minimum energyextreme.If a sinusoidalwaveis seenas a circle cut in half with
the bottom half slid forward the length of the diameter, one can then see the
relationshipbetweenthe circleand the wavelengthor cycle.A 1/4 cyclecanbe seen
to be alsoa 1/4 circle,a 1/2 cycle1/2 of a circle,3/4 cycle3/4 of a circle,and a full
cyclea full circle.Thisexplainswhy we use degreeswhen referring to cycleswith a
1/4 cyclebeingequalto 90 degrees,1/2 to 180 degreesand a full cycleequalto 360
degrees. These lengths are related to each other through musical harmonics.
Harmonicsare expressedasratios suchas 3/4, 2/3, 1/2, which relate to divisionsof
a vibratingstring,or bell, or somethingof the sort.

Phasing:(PATTERNS
& PLANETS
)

The phasingof the wavesrelatesthe beginningof the different component


wavestogether.If all componentwavesbeganat 0 degrees,they would all beginby
moving up, or phasedup, accordingto our explanationabove. If they all began
movingdownwards,they would all havebegunat 180 degrees.At any point along
the summationalwave,you can look at the componentwavesand determinetheir
phasingto eachother whichwill be most easilyexpressedby whether the wavesare
movingup or down. If two or more wavesare movingup or down simultaneously,
they cause what is called either positive or negative constructive interference,

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respectively,meaningthat the combinedsum of the energiesof thesetwo or more


wavescreatesa greater positive or negativeamplitude summationalwave. If one
has two waves moving up and two waves moving down, you get destructive
interference,meaningthat there is an equilibration of energiescausinga sideways
movementon the chart.

PatternFormation:(PATTERNS
)

It is the interactionof thesecomponentwavesthat forms the patternsof the


summationalwave on the charts. It will be noticed when you have a particular
pattern of the summationalwave on a chart, if you simply change one wave,
whether large or small, it changesthe whole summationalpattern. For instance,
compare charts 1 and 3. Notice that by changingthe phasing of the smallest
component wave it changesthe pattern of the composite.The difference in the
compositepattern dependsupon which and how many of the componentwaves
you change.Also notice that if you changeall of the componentsthe opposite
direction, you get the same pattern but up-side-down. This is called an inverse
pattern, and it shouldbe easilynoticed that there are only 8 patternsin this 4-wave
theoreticalwith 8 inverses.

MARKET
APPLI
CATIONS

The wonderful thing about wave mechanicsis that it servesas an excellent


foundationfor incorporatingmanyconceptsandideasof the market.It actsasa sort
of foundational schemataupon which one can build a good model of market
behaviorin simplifiedform.

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Counting:(PATTERNS
& NUMBERS
)

One of the first things one learns to see in the markets after studying
theoreticalsis how to see energyvectorsand from where to count them. We see
that a bottoming or topping complex is alwaysmade from a number of energy
vectorschangingsimultaneously(within the rangeof the top or bottom). Sincewe
know that a directionalmovementis causedby combinationof severalcomponent
waves,we would not expectthat the count from extremetop to extremebottom to
be the soledeterminantof that move.Ratherwe would count from the few energy
changepoints at the t op to the few energychangepoints at the bottom, givingus a
larger number of vector counts,someof which must be the lengthsof someof the
underlyingcomponents(or multiples thereof). If one were then to measurethe
different actions and reactions in this way, one would see the same numbers
recurringand in that way determinesomeof the underlyingintervals.

Reactionsand Congestion:(PATTERNS
)

In the sameway, a good place to discoversmallercomponentlengthsin is


reactionsagainstthe major trend. The longer componentswill be determiningthe
main trend, while the minor componentseither strengthen that trend or cause
reactionsagainstit. So,measuringthese reactionsis a good way to uncoverthese
smaller components.Also, when you have a long congestionphasein which the
longer componentsare equilibrating,you can often see the smallercyclesturning
up and down in the rangeof the trend, so this is a good placeto discoverthem.

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PatternRecognition:(PATTERNS
)

One of the most useful aspectsof the theoreticalsis in the study of pattern
recognition. Sincein the theoreticals we learn to see the causeand processof
permutationof form or pattern, we canlearnto extrapolatethis experienceinto real
marketpatterns.Twopatternswhichbeforemight not haveseemedsimilarnow can
be seento be almost the samewith one or two or more componentsflipped. We
have a sense of the underlying causal structure of formations. For instance, a
broadeningtop formation or bed of accumulationat a bottom can be seento be
caseswhereyou havea numberof wavesspreadout over a longerperiod with most
of them equilibratinguntil the last one or two turn down or up respectivelycausing
the beginningof the reversalin trend. Or with a spiketop or bottom, you know that
you have the underlyingcomponentschangingalmost simultaneouslycausingthe
fast reversalin trend. Likewise,every pattern, whether top, bottom, directional
trend, or congestionhasan underlyingcombinationof componentwaveswhich will
cause that particular formation. Also, the slight irregularitiesone alwaysfinds in
these patterns can be explained by changes in the underlying component
relationships.Theseslightchangescanalsogiveyou an ideawhat to expectin terms
of permutations.Sayyou have on occurrenceof a bottom which makesa clean
downwardhalf-circle,then you seelater a bottom of the sametime length but with
a sidewaysS pattern rather than the full arc. Youwould recognizethat you havea
waveout of phaseand that you shouldnot expectthe samemovementawayfrom
the bottom, but, rather that you may get a different angleof attack and different
endingto the upwardmovementdue to this changedcycle.Thetrick is to be ableto
quantify all of this so asto useit correctly.

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Angleof Attack:(PATTERNS
)

The angle of attack is the slope at which the market moves at any time.
Baumringhassaidthat the slopeof a vectoris its vibratoryrate. It caneasilybe seen
that the slope of the market is causedby the relative constructive or destructive
interferenceof the underlyingwaves.A steepslopeor angleof attackhasa number
of underlyingcomponentsmoving together in the samedirection. A flat slope or
congestionarea only existswhen you have an equilibration of underlying waves.

LargerImplications:(PLANETS
)

Thereare manyimplicationswhich come with the wavemechanicsconcept.


One is the whole idea of cycles, harmonics, and the law of vibration. These
underlying cycles must have some larger correlation to some cosmic or stellar
phenomena.All of thesewaveshaveharmonicrelationshipsbetweenthem showing
the underlyingorder of the cosmosand its harmoniccomposition.Thisshowsthat
the whole universecan be broken down in terms of the law of vibration, or the
harmonic interrelation of time cyclesas the causativefoundation for mundane
phenomena.

Cyclesvs.Periodicity:(PATTERNS
)

Thedifferencebetweencyclesand periodicityis an important concept.Cycles


are equivalentto what we look at as componentwaveson th e theoreticals,energy
vectors,or directionalforce fields,movingfrom a positiveto a negativeextremeat
a regular time interval. Baumring said that there were 12 different stellar
combinationsof componentwaves.A periodicity is the recurrenceof a pattern at

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some sort of time interval. Thispattern is made of componentcyclerelationships


which recur simultaneouslyin a period of time. Thispattern is more like a sequence
of eventswhich occursat the periodicity.

GeometricStructure:(GEOMETRY
)

It is the harmonic relationshipsof these cycleswhich causethe geometric


order underlyingthe structure of the market. Theseharmonic relationshipsbuild
harmonic structures which grow like natural growth structures accordingto the
geometryof nature.

Problems:

(PROCESS
LEARN
EDIN ALLBOOKS
WILLHELPSOLVE
THIS)

In theory, many of these ideasseemclear and logicalbut when it comesto


applyingthem to the markets,the task is much more difficult. Thetheoreticalsare
a grosssimplificationof the real market, and the simpleanalyseswhich canbe done
on the theoreticalscanbecomebafflingwhentried on a real marketchart.Baumring
would regularlyrepeat that the theoreticalsare just theoreticals,and the market is
different. If not, one coulddo Fourieranalysison the marketand breakout all of the
componentsandknow whereit is going,but Baumringsaidthat this would not work.
Baumringalso stated that the component waves were not sinusoidal,but were
elliptical instead.This obviouslychangesthe picture, but would seemto correlate
more logicallyto planetaryphenomena.

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NOTES

P1Accelerationand Deceleration:(PATTERNS
)

Baumringusedto talk about measuringaccelerationand decelerationoff of a


medianline. He would sayto dray a vector or line from a high to a low and then the
movementsaboveand below that line shouldbe symmetricaland be a measureof
accelerationand decelerationwhich would identify someof the underlyingwaves.

P2-3 LeastCommonDenominator:(NUMBERS
)

Whenyou havetwo or more waveschangingtogether or crossinga node and


you multiply their 1/4 cyclestogether to find the LCD,then at that point of time in
the future they will be changingdirection again. So find where two cyclesturn
together and project the LCDboth forward and backwardand you will alwayssee
them turn together or cross a node together at their 1/4 cycles.

P5SpatialOrientation:(GEOMETRY
)

Baumring says that taking time counts allows us to measure the spatial
orientation of the structure we are analyzing. So, then we are able to see the
structure and what precedesit and the next structure and what precedesthat and
then we measurethe changesin torque betweenthem.

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