Most of us met numbers as exam questions, bank balances, and blood test results. Yet the same symbols that trigger anxiety have also been used to build temples, compose hymns, and describe the birth of stars. What if numbers are not only tools, but a quiet language of meaning? This book offers a guided walk through that language. It explores sacred numbers as more than lucky charms, showing how they structure stories, rituals, and memory across cultures. It treats numerology spirituality not as fortune-telling but as an instinctive human attempt to read significance in pattern. Along the way, it unfolds sacred geometry patterns in buildings and landscapes, inviting readers to see every circle, triangle, and spiral as a doorway into attention. Rather than teaching heavy theory, the chapters linger over everyday scenes: clocks, doorways, calendars, footsteps. They reveal how the symbolism of numbers shapes trust, fear, hope, and choice. Gentle reflections on pythagoras philosophy, meaning in mathematics, and mathematics and spirituality make abstract ideas feel personal and concrete. Practical suggestions show how to cultivate spiritual mathematics in daily habits, and how to notice symbolic number patterns without sliding into obsession. By the end, readers are invited to walk through life with fresh eyes, seeing even the simplest sums as part of a conversation between math and myth.
The Spirit of Numbers
SKU: 9789375363378
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- Elodie Varkash writes at the meeting point of mathematics, spirituality, and everyday life. She has spent many years studying how patterns shape the stories people tell about themselves and the world, from childhood encounters with arithmetic to late-night conversations about the nature of reality. Her work invites readers who feel wary of numbers to approach them again as companions rather than critics. Drawing inspiration from classical thinkers like Pythagoras and from the rich numerological strands in Jewish, Islamic, and Christian traditions, she treats number as a shared human inheritance rather than the property of specialists. Elodie’s essays and teachings focus on accessible images, practical reflection, and gentle humour rather than technical proofs. She is particularly interested in how simple acts of counting, measuring, and noticing can become opportunities for reverence and ethical clarity. When she is not writing, she can often be found walking familiar streets at different times of day, watching how light, people, and patterns of movement quietly change.


















