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Editor's note

About Manifest 11 — the cosmic editorial of synchronicity

Manifest 11 launched on a new moon. We started this magazine because every other manifestation publication wanted you to listen to a guru. We wanted to read about the numbers, the moons, the moments when the dial lined up — and what to do about them on a regular Tuesday afternoon.

A cosmic still life of a small brass star chart, a single tarot card on velvet, and a candle in dim light.
Manifest 11. Volume one. New moon issue.

Why this magazine

The cultural turn toward manifestation in the late 2010s was overdue and overpolished. Most of what got published was tone-flat — algorithm-friendly affirmations, Instagram-frame tarot pulls, the kind of advice that sounded the same on every account because it was. Manifest 11 launched as a corrective. We wanted to write about cosmic symbolism with the rigor of a literary magazine and the warmth of a friend’s letter.

Volume one came out on a new moon in late spring. The first issue had three essays: one on 11:11, one on the master number 22, and one on what to actually do with synchronicity besides post a screenshot of it. We’ve been publishing daily since.

Our position on numerology

Numerology is symbolic, not predictive. The master numbers (11, 22, 33) are a vocabulary for paying attention — to qualities of will, of building, of teaching. They are not a way to know what’s coming. We write about them as a calendar, not a forecast.

This matters because most numerology coverage on the internet is bad in the same way: it treats the numbers as fortune-telling. We don’t. The numbers tell you when to look. What you find is up to you.

Our position on the moon

The lunar cycle is the oldest manifestation calendar humanity has used — 29.53 days, by NASA’s measurement, repeating since before recorded history. Most spiritual traditions across cultures use it. We use it as a structural frame for the magazine: new moon issues open new themes; full moon issues close them.

You don’t need to track moons to read Manifest 11. But the magazine reads better if you do.

How to read us

Daily, ideally first thing. Our writers have a daily audio practice (we recommend the AYA Method) and most of them write before they have read anything else. The magazine reads the same way — early in the morning, slowly, with a coffee. We don’t recommend skimming.

Contact

Pitches, comments, and angry letters: editor@manifest11.com. We answer most within a week.

Frequently asked

What does Manifest 11 cover?
Master numbers (11, 22, 33), lunar cycles, synchronicity, numerology applied to manifestation, the way personal practice intersects with cosmic timing. We don't cover horoscopes. We don't predict outcomes. We write about how to use the symbolic frame as a calendar for daily attention.
Are you affiliated with the Aya app?
We recommend the AYA Method as the daily audio practice that pairs with cosmic timing — but Manifest 11 is editorially independent. The magazine has its own writers, its own voice, its own opinions about what works and what doesn't. The recommendation is a recommendation, not a partnership disclosure.
Who writes for Manifest 11?
A small group of independent writers who use the practice daily. Several came from astrology and numerology backgrounds; others from journalism. All of them write under their own names and bylines, and several keep parallel Substacks. We rotate authors across topics so the magazine stays varied.
Do I need to believe in astrology to read Manifest 11?
No. Treat the symbolic frame as a calendar, not a predictive system. The numbers and the moons are useful even if you read them poetically. Many of our readers are skeptics. Many are not. The writing tries to work for both.
How often do you publish?
Daily. New entries appear every morning under the journal.