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Welcome to the World of LEXIGRAMS
What is a Lexigram?
I first heard of the word Lexigram when I was reading
the book "Star Signs" by Linda Goodman. A Lexigram is similar to an
Anagram, but different. A Lexigram decodes hidden messages in words
or titles by putting together full sentences that convey a deeper
meaning of the original word. It is a spiritual process. The word
lexigram for example yields the following words: relax, mare, mail,
rail, grim, am, ram, grime, me.
How do I lexigram?
Just like in an Anagram you find all possible the words
contained in the original word, name or title. Write down each word
or phrase that you can form from the original word, name or title.
Then in the next step guided by your intuition, your Higher Self,
put your words together "to form short phrases or sentences". As
you form your words and then sentences you will be surprised by
the insights that come to light. Complete your final Lexigram(s)
in ALL CAPITAL LETTERS and if necessary give it more meaning by
adding lower case a, the or but. It is best to do so sparingly.
In the past I have tried to lexigram on a piece of
paper by just writing down the words I could see. This time around
I have created my own tiles, just like scrabble tiles. I used a
font that gave my the tiles and then I printed them in MS Word and
cut them out, glued them to old preprinted magnets and cut them
out. Now I can rearrange the letters physically and this seems to
help in finding new and interesting words. It is just like doing
a puzzle, only I write down the words after I have found them by
rearranging the letters. Also having the tiles lying around open
on the table every time I walk by I find another combination I hadn't
thought of or seen before.
Do you like the font in the title image? You can download
my 'Numerology Tile Font' by clicking here.
Are there Lexigram rules and what are they?
- "If you lexigram a person's name and it contains
the word liar or the phrase he lies or she lies or any other such
negative word, such as thief or steal and you do not have the
letters N, O or T to cancel the negative meaning - he/she not
a liar - then that person has a problem and needs to be made aware
of it, so that they can learn to control their personal character
flaw. If on the other hand the negative word can be cancelled
by the letters N, O or T, then the person or word being lexigramed
will have been accused of whatever the negative word implies,
but is not guilty. The person or word is only guilty if the the
word YES appears without the cancel power of the word NO or NOT".
- Each letter in the new word must come from
the original word or name. You can use each original letter more
than once for forming different words, but not in the same word,
if the original word only contains that letter once. If the original
word only contains one S you cannot lexigram a new word containing
2 letters S.
- A word that contains all 5 vowels - a, e,
i, o, u - cannot be lexigramed. It is best when at most 4 vowels
are present, 3 or less vowels are better.
- "The original word, name or phrase may not
contain more than 15 different and separate letters. It ok for
the same letter to occur more than once, then it will be only
counted once - noon equals only 2 letters as both the N and the
O occur twice" .
- The reason for the previous two rules is that
with a word or phrase containing all the vowels or more than 15
letters just about any word in the dictionary could be created
and the Lexigram would not reveal anything valuable.
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