Agent-almanac study-hebrew-letters
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/i18n/wenyan/skills/study-hebrew-letters" ~/.claude/skills/pjt222-agent-almanac-study-hebrew-letters-b8d73b && rm -rf "$T"
i18n/wenyan/skills/study-hebrew-letters/SKILL.mdStudy Hebrew Letters
Study the twenty-two Hebrew letters as mystical symbols — examining their visual forms, numerical values, Sefer Yetzirah classifications (mother, double, simple), elemental/planetary/zodiacal correspondences, paths on the Tree of Life, and contemplative letter meditation practices.
When to Use
- You want to study a specific Hebrew letter's mystical dimensions beyond its linguistic function
- You are learning the Sefer Yetzirah's classification of letters into mothers, doubles, and simples
- You need the correspondences (element, planet, zodiac, path) for a specific letter
- You want to practice Hebrew letter meditation (visualization, chanting, contemplation)
- You are studying the paths of the Tree of Life and need to understand the letter assigned to a path
- You are exploring how letter form (shape, open/closed, final form) carries symbolic meaning
Inputs
- Required: A specific Hebrew letter to study (e.g., "Aleph," "Shin," "Beth") or a request for the full classification system
- Optional: Tradition preference (Sefer Yetzirah, Zohar, Hermetic/Golden Dawn)
- Optional: Focus area (form, sound, number, correspondence, meditation)
- Optional: Connection to a path on the Tree of Life
Procedure
Step 1: Select and Identify the Letter
Determine which letter to study and establish its basic identity.
The Twenty-Two Hebrew Letters: ┌────────┬───────────┬───────┬──────────┬─────────────────────────┐ │ Letter │ Name │ Value │ Category │ Sefer Yetzirah Attrib. │ ├────────┼───────────┼───────┼──────────┼─────────────────────────┤ │ א │ Aleph │ 1 │ Mother │ Air │ │ ב │ Beth │ 2 │ Double │ Saturn / Moon * │ │ ג │ Gimel │ 3 │ Double │ Jupiter / Moon * │ │ ד │ Daleth │ 4 │ Double │ Mars / Venus * │ │ ה │ Heh │ 5 │ Simple │ Aries │ │ ו │ Vav │ 6 │ Simple │ Taurus │ │ ז │ Zayin │ 7 │ Simple │ Gemini │ │ ח │ Cheth │ 8 │ Simple │ Cancer │ │ ט │ Teth │ 9 │ Simple │ Leo │ │ י │ Yod │ 10 │ Simple │ Virgo │ │ כ │ Kaf │ 20 │ Double │ Sun / Jupiter * │ │ ל │ Lamed │ 30 │ Simple │ Libra │ │ מ │ Mem │ 40 │ Mother │ Water │ │ נ │ Nun │ 50 │ Simple │ Scorpio │ │ ס │ Samekh │ 60 │ Simple │ Sagittarius │ │ ע │ Ayin │ 70 │ Simple │ Capricorn │ │ פ │ Peh │ 80 │ Double │ Venus / Mars * │ │ צ │ Tzadi │ 90 │ Simple │ Aquarius │ │ ק │ Qoph │ 100 │ Simple │ Pisces │ │ ר │ Resh │ 200 │ Double │ Mercury / Sun * │ │ ש │ Shin │ 300 │ Mother │ Fire │ │ ת │ Tav │ 400 │ Double │ Moon / Saturn * │ └────────┴───────────┴───────┴──────────┴─────────────────────────┘ * Double letters have two sounds (hard/soft) and two planetary attributions vary between Sefer Yetzirah recensions. The GRA version, Short version, and Long version differ. Values shown are representative; always note the specific recension. Categories (Sefer Yetzirah Chapter 3-5): - 3 Mothers (Aleph, Mem, Shin): Elements — Air, Water, Fire - 7 Doubles (Beth, Gimel, Daleth, Kaf, Peh, Resh, Tav): Planets — each has a hard and soft pronunciation and a pair of opposites - 12 Simples (Heh through Qoph): Zodiac signs — each governs a month, a direction, and a human faculty
- Name the letter and its Hebrew character
- State its numerical value (standard gematria)
- Identify its Sefer Yetzirah category: mother, double, or simple
- Note its primary attribution: element (mothers), planet (doubles), or zodiac sign (simples)
- If the user requested the full system, present the complete table before focusing on a specific letter
Expected: The letter is identified with its number, category, and primary correspondence. The user understands where it sits within the three-fold classification system.
On failure: If the user names a letter ambiguously (e.g., "Chet" vs. "Cheth" vs. "Het"), confirm by providing the standard value and asking the user to verify.
Step 2: Examine the Letter's Form
Study the visual shape of the letter as a symbolic image.
Form Analysis Framework: SHAPE SYMBOLISM: - Open vs. closed: Open letters (Heh, Chet) suggest receptivity or incompleteness; closed letters (Samekh, Mem-final) suggest containment or wholeness - Vertical vs. horizontal: Vertical strokes reach between heaven and earth; horizontal strokes extend across the world - Angular vs. curved: Angles suggest distinction and judgment; curves suggest mercy and flow - Ascending vs. descending: Letters that reach upward (Lamed) aspire toward the divine; letters that descend below the line (final forms) reach into hidden realms FINAL FORMS: Five letters have final (sofit) forms when they appear at the end of a word: Kaf → ך, Mem → ם, Nun → ן, Peh → ף, Tzadi → ץ The final form often "opens" or "extends" the letter, symbolizing the hidden dimension revealed at completion. COMPOSITE LETTERS: Traditional teaching describes some letters as composed of others: - Aleph = two Yods connected by a diagonal Vav (heaven + earth + breath) - Bet = a Dalet with a Vav base (door on a foundation) These internal compositions reveal deeper symbolic layers.
- Describe the letter's visual form — what does it look like as a shape?
- Note if it is open or closed, ascending or descending
- If the letter has a final form, describe how the form changes and what that suggests symbolically
- If the letter is traditionally described as a composite of other letters, note the composition
- Mention any traditional names for the letter's shape (e.g., Bet = "house," Daleth = "door," Ayin = "eye")
Expected: The user sees the letter not just as an alphabet character but as a visual symbol carrying meaning in its form. The shape itself teaches.
On failure: If form analysis feels subjective, ground it in traditional sources (Sefer ha-Bahir, Otiot de-Rabbi Akiva) where available. Where tradition is silent, present the observation as suggestion rather than doctrine.
Step 3: Note Numerical Value and Position
Study the letter's number and its significance in gematria and on the Tree.
- State the standard gematria value
- State the ordinal position (1-22)
- Note the letter's full spelling (milui) and its gematria:
- Example: Aleph spelled out is Aleph-Lamed-Peh = 1+30+80 = 111
- Identify the path on the Tree of Life this letter is assigned to (path number, from-sephira to-sephira)
- Note if the value connects to other significant numbers:
- Is it a sephira number? A significant traditional number?
- Does it relate to the letter's meaning?
Expected: The numerical dimension of the letter is established — both its value and its position on the Tree. The user can connect this letter to gematria analysis and sephirotic study.
On failure: If the Tree of Life path attribution is contested (different systems assign different letters to different paths), present the major systems (GRA, Golden Dawn) side by side rather than choosing one.
Step 4: Study Correspondences
Map the letter's full set of correspondences per Sefer Yetzirah and later traditions.
Correspondence Template: ┌─────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────────────────┐ │ Correspondence │ Details │ ├─────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────────────────┤ │ Category │ Mother / Double / Simple │ │ Element/Planet/Sign │ [Per Sefer Yetzirah category] │ │ Direction │ [Spatial direction — SY assigns each │ │ │ simple letter a direction] │ │ Month │ [Hebrew month for simple letters] │ │ Human Faculty │ [Sense or organ — SY assigns each │ │ │ simple letter a bodily function] │ │ Tarot Path │ [Hermetic tradition — Major Arcana] │ │ Color │ [Golden Dawn color scales] │ │ Musical Note │ [Traditional or Hermetic attribution] │ │ Opposites (Doubles) │ [Life/Death, Peace/War, Wisdom/Folly, │ │ │ Wealth/Poverty, Grace/Ugliness, │ │ │ Fertility/Desolation, Power/Servitude] │ └─────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────────────────┘ Notes on Tradition Differences: - Sefer Yetzirah exists in multiple recensions (Short, Long, GRA, Saadia). Correspondences differ between versions. - Hermetic/Golden Dawn attributions add tarot, color, and other correspondences not present in Jewish sources. - Always note which tradition a correspondence comes from.
- Fill in the correspondence template for the selected letter
- For mother letters: state element (Air, Water, Fire) and the triadic relationship (head, torso, belly)
- For double letters: state planet and the pair of opposites governed by this letter
- For simple letters: state zodiac sign, month, direction, and human faculty
- Note Hermetic additions (tarot, color) separately from Jewish Kabbalistic attributions
Expected: A comprehensive correspondence map for the letter. The user sees how the letter connects to cosmology, the body, the calendar, and the symbolic landscape.
On failure: If correspondences conflict between sources, present both and note the recension. Do not silently choose one tradition over another.
Step 5: Practice Letter Meditation
Guide a contemplative exercise focused on the selected letter.
Letter Meditation Protocol: PREPARATION (3 minutes): 1. Sit comfortably, spine upright, eyes closed 2. Three deep breaths to settle 3. Set intention: "I am studying the letter [Name] through direct contemplation, not only through information." PHASE 1 — VISUALIZATION (5 minutes): 1. Visualize the letter in your mind's eye - See it as black fire on white fire (Talmudic image of Torah) - Let it fill your inner visual field — large, clear, luminous 2. Observe its form: - What is open? What is closed? - Where does it reach upward? Where does it root downward? - Does it suggest movement or stillness? 3. If the letter has a final form, let it shift between regular and final — notice what changes PHASE 2 — SOUND (5 minutes): 1. Intone the letter's sound silently, then aloud: - Mothers: Breathe Air (Aleph — silent breath), hum Water (Mem — mmmm), hiss Fire (Shin — shhhh) - Doubles: Alternate hard and soft sounds - Simples: Hold the sound steady, let it resonate 2. Feel where the sound vibrates in the body 3. Notice: does the sound match the letter's correspondence? (e.g., Mem/Water should feel fluid; Shin/Fire should feel sharp) PHASE 3 — CONTEMPLATION (5 minutes): 1. Hold the letter in mind — both form and sound — and ask: "What does this letter teach?" 2. Do not force an answer. Let associations, images, or insights arise 3. Note what comes without judgment 4. If the letter has a meaning-name (Beth = House, Daleth = Door), contemplate: "What is the house? What is the door?" CLOSING (2 minutes): 1. Let the letter dissolve from visualization 2. Return to breath awareness 3. Note one insight or impression from the meditation 4. Open eyes, return to ordinary awareness
- Guide the user through the three-phase meditation (visualization, sound, contemplation)
- Adapt duration to the user's preference (5-minute abbreviated, 15-minute standard, 30-minute extended)
- For mother letters, emphasize the elemental quality (breathing for Air, flowing for Water, intensity for Fire)
- For double letters, explore the polarity (hard/soft sound, the pair of opposites)
- For simple letters, connect the zodiacal quality to the contemplation (e.g., Heh/Aries — initiative, beginning)
- Close with integration: what did the letter communicate?
Expected: The user has engaged the letter through multiple modes — sight (form), sound (chanting), and meaning (contemplation). The letter has become experiential rather than purely intellectual.
On failure: If visualization is difficult, substitute writing: draw the letter slowly and deliberately, multiple times, as a meditative act. Physical engagement with the form can substitute for mental visualization.
Validation
- The letter was identified with its name, value, and Sefer Yetzirah category
- The letter's visual form was examined for symbolic meaning
- Numerical value and Tree of Life path assignment were stated
- Correspondences were presented with tradition sources noted
- A contemplative exercise was offered (meditation, chanting, or journaling)
- Tradition differences were acknowledged where attributions conflict
Common Pitfalls
- Treating letters as mere code: The letters are not just a cipher for numbers or sounds — in Kabbalistic tradition, they are creative forces through which the world was formed (Sefer Yetzirah 2:2). Approach with appropriate reverence
- Ignoring recension differences: The Sefer Yetzirah's letter-to-planet and letter-to-zodiac assignments vary significantly between the Short, Long, GRA, and Saadia versions. Presenting one version as definitive is misleading
- Conflating Jewish and Hermetic systems: The Golden Dawn added tarot, color, and other correspondences to the Hebrew letters. These are valuable but are NOT part of Jewish Kabbalistic tradition — always label the source
- Skipping the sound: Hebrew letters are sounds first, symbols second. Meditation that includes vocalization engages the letter more fully than visual contemplation alone
- Rushing through all 22: Each letter deserves sustained attention. Studying one letter deeply is more valuable than surveying all twenty-two superficially
- Forgetting the body: Sefer Yetzirah assigns letters to body parts and senses. The letters are not disembodied abstractions but are mapped onto the human form
Related Skills
— Each letter corresponds to a path on the Tree; understanding the path context deepens letter studyread-tree-of-life
— The letter's numerical value participates in gematria analysis; understanding the letter enriches gematria interpretationapply-gematria
— General meditation framework supporting the contemplative exercises in letter studymeditate
— If guiding another person through letter meditation rather than practicing independentlymeditate-guidance