Seven Samurai Survival: Abundance Year Episode 1915

in #samurai3 days ago

Full Metal Ox Day 1850
Tuesday 24, March 2026
Abundance Year Episode 1915
Noxsoma Life Camp:
Seven Samurai Survival

1915.png

Salvation
Matter Trap 4
Modern Day survival strategies. Secrets of 7 & 40.

Today's Episode: https://odysee.com/@Noxsoma:2/1850_full_3-24-26_1915_samurai:7?r=47k2ScJsm9Uex9eETqgCCA8q1fukdST9
The Cosmic Secrets of Number 40: Why Gestation Holds the Key

There is a number that appears across scriptures, myths, and folk traditions with such persistence that it cannot be coincidence. Forty days of rain. Forty years in the desert. Forty days of temptation. Forty thieves. Forty days of quarantine. The number repeats like a heartbeat, and perhaps that is exactly what it is: the oldest clock in human experience, the count that every community has known since before language existed. The key to understanding the cosmic secrets of 40 may lie not in the stars, but in the womb.

The Allegories of Forty.

In the Hebrew scriptures, the number 40 marks every major transition. The flood lasts forty days and forty nights, drowning the old world so a new one can emerge. Moses spends forty years in Midian as a shepherd, then forty days on Sinai receiving the law, then leads Israel through forty years of wilderness wandering until a generation dies and a new one enters the promised land. Elijah travels forty days to Mount Horeb, exhausted and transformed. Jonah gives Nineveh forty days to repent. In the Christian gospels, Jesus fasts forty days in the wilderness, tempted by Satan, emerging only when the period is complete to begin his ministry. After the resurrection, he remains forty days with his disciples before ascending.

The pattern continues outside scripture. Ali Baba faces forty thieves who hide treasure in a cave that opens only to the command "Open Sesame." In Venice, ships arriving during plague were isolated for forty days—quaranta giorni, giving us the word quarantine. In Islamic tradition, Muhammad receives his first revelation at age forty. In many cultures, the mother rests forty days after childbirth, a period still called cuarentena in Spanish.

The consistency is striking. Forty always marks a threshold. It is the time between death and rebirth, between the old self and the new. It is the period of waiting, testing, and hidden transformation. But why forty? Why not thirty or fifty or one hundred?

Testing the Gestation Theory.

The answer may be the most obvious and most overlooked: human pregnancy lasts forty weeks. Every person reading this spent approximately forty weeks in darkness, floating in water, sustained by a cord, growing from nothing into a complete human being. That experience is the original template for every story about transformation through hiddenness.

Consider the flood. The earth is covered in water for forty days. A floating vessel carries the seed of all future life. When the waters recede, the world is born anew. This is gestation written on a planetary scale. The ark is the womb; the flood is the amniotic sea; the forty days are the waiting; the dove returning with an olive leaf is the first sign that new life has arrived.

Consider Moses on Sinai. He ascends the mountain, disappears into the cloud, and remains forty days. The people wait below, uncertain whether he lives. When he descends, he carries the tablets—the law, the blueprint for a nation. This is the birth of Israel as a covenanted people. The mountain is the womb-mountain; the forty days are the gestation; the law is the newborn identity. When Moses finds the people worshipping the golden calf, he shatters the tablets. The birth was imperfect. He must ascend again for another forty days, because transformation requires the full term.

Consider Jesus in the wilderness. He eats nothing for forty days. He faces the adversary alone. He emerges only when the period is complete, ready to begin his work. The forty days are a gestation of his public ministry. The old life as a carpenter dies in the desert; the new life as the Christ is born after the full term of testing.

Consider Ali Baba and the forty thieves. The treasure is hidden in a cave sealed by a stone. The password to enter is "Open Sesame." A sesame pod, when ripe, bursts open to scatter its seeds. The command is a birth incantation: Open, womb-cave. The forty thieves who use this cave are the forty weeks guarding the threshold. Ali Baba learns the secret and gains access to the treasure—the child, the new life, the wealth hidden in darkness.

Consider quarantine. A ship arrives, suspected of carrying death. It is isolated for forty days. If no disease emerges, the ship is safe. If plague appears, it manifests within the term. This is gestation inverted: waiting forty days to see if death will be born instead of life. The logic is the same. Forty is the time required for what is hidden to reveal itself.

The Silence of the Scriptures.

Nowhere in the Bible does it say that pregnancy lasts forty weeks. The texts never make the connection explicit. But this silence may prove the point. If every listener already understood gestation as the foundational forty-count, the storyteller did not need to explain it. The number carried its own weight. When the teacher said "forty days of rain," every woman in the audience felt the memory in her body. Every man who had paced outside the birthing tent understood the waiting. The number was not arbitrary. It was the most intimate count in human life, projected onto the cosmic screen.

The closest the tradition comes to making this explicit is in the law of purification after childbirth. Leviticus specifies that a woman who bears a male child remains unclean for forty days—seven days of initial impurity followed by thirty-three days of blood purification. For a female child, the period is eighty days. Here, finally, the number forty is directly tied to the aftermath of birth. The text does not say "she was pregnant for forty weeks," but it anchors the number to the period immediately following delivery, as if acknowledging that forty marks the threshold of new life.

The Thesis.

The number forty in allegory is a somatic anchor. It means "transformation through a period of hiddenness" because every human who has ever lived came into existence through exactly such a period. The flood is the world in utero. The wilderness is the soul in utero. The mountain is the prophet in utero. The cave of thieves is the treasure in utero. Quarantine is death-in-utero, waiting to see which way the birth goes. And "Open Sesame" is the cry of the mother, the midwife, and the god: Let the new thing come forth.

The scriptures never say it because they never had to. It was the secret they trusted everyone already knew.
Happy trails.
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