The Origin
This work began in silence.
Extended periods of fasting, solitude, and strict routine — while working as a scaffolder in Norway — produced observations that did not fit existing frameworks. Patterns emerged in wearable device data that matched no known cycle.
29 days. Five phases. 137 hours per phase.
The discovery was not mystical. It was empirical. The framework was built from numbers, tested against data, and refined through rigorous self-experimentation. The connections to ancient systems — the Eye of Horus, the eight gates, the 40-day threshold — were found afterward, not assumed beforehand.
The Author
Four Principles
Verifiable
Every claim can be checked with a calculator and a calendar. Count the days. Check the primes. The mathematics speaks for itself.
Open
Knowledge is shared freely under CC BY-SA 4.0. The framework belongs to anyone who uses it. No gatekeepers.
Empirical
Observations precede theory. Data constrains interpretation. Speculation is labeled as such.
Falsifiable
Claims that cannot be tested are not made. Predictions that fail are documented. The framework improves through failure.
Licensing
Knowledge: Creative Commons
All framework knowledge — the Prime Calendar, the Moonth, the phase structure, the mathematics — is shared under CC BY-SA 4.0.
You are free to share, adapt, and build upon this work, even commercially, as long as you give appropriate credit and distribute your contributions under the same license.
Trademark
THE MOONTH™ is a registered trademark with the European Union Intellectual Property Office.
Registration: EUIPO 019282104
The trademark protects the brand, not the knowledge. You can use the framework freely. If you build a product or service, please use a different name.
Contact
For collaboration, research inquiries, or translation requests.
The Invitation
The Prime Calendar was not invented. It was recognized.
The primes were not placed by human hands. They emerge from the structure of number itself, distributed according to the same geometry that governs seeds in sunflowers, electrons in atoms, and the proportions of ancient temples.
The ancients who lit fires on May 1 and November 1 did not know they were marking prime days from the Equinox. Or perhaps they did. Either way, the festivals fell where they had to fall: on the geometric nodes of optimal distribution.
You can verify every claim in this framework with a calculator and a calendar. Count the days. Check the primes. Run the probability.
The mathematics speaks for itself.