You found her book the way most serious students do. A footnote in a Gann text. A scanned PDF passed around a forum. A title that promised the thing every chart hides: the month, read before it opens.
You read the 1929 case. You read the U.S. Steel window, $30 in 1935 to $125 by 1937. The claims are dated and specific. You went back to your own chart to test them.
Then the book closed on you. The terms were astronomical. The North Node. The lunation. Secondary factors. Words a chart reader never has to learn. The examples were from 1929 and 1938, and the steps were scattered across chapters that taught theory first, history second, and application last. You had the snapshot of a method, not the method.
And the chart gave you nothing it had not already given you. It marks the turn after price confirms it. McWhirter marked the turn before. The gap between those two is the whole of this letter.
A chart is a photograph of what price did. It is exact and it is late. You can study a thousand of them and still not know what kind of month you are walking into. The photograph shows the past with great clarity. It says nothing about the date ahead.
This is not a flaw in your study. It is the ceiling of the whole field you were taught. Market education has three floors, and you have probably walked all of them. Fundamentals explain what a business is worth. That is too slow to time a turn. Technical analysis explains how price has behaved. That is a picture taken after the move. Order flow, Wyckoff, the liquidity work — faster, sharper, but still a reading of price after price has spoken.
Every one of those floors answers the same question in a different accent: what did price just do? None of them answers the question McWhirter built her whole method around. What kind of month is this, before it opens? That layer is not taught in the standard ladder. Most traders never look for it. The few who hear of it call it astrology and walk past, never learning that the clock underneath it is astronomical — counted, dated, and visible years ahead.
So the gap is not that you studied price badly. It is that price is only half the instrument. The chart leaves the reader stuck in four concrete ways.
A reversal pattern confirms after price has already reversed. By the time the chart admits the turn, the move you wanted is over.
The chart cannot tell you what kind of month it is before the month opens. It has no way to form a directional hypothesis in advance.
A monthly reading near a long-cycle low is a different thing than the same reading in a rising phase. The chart shows neither phase.
Seasonality and macro debate are guesses about the same price the chart shows. There is no second, independent timing signal to check them against.
Without that timing layer, you are always reacting. You see the reversal pattern, but only after the reversal. You feel a month go against you, but you had no reading of it before the first trading day. You enter a stock with no sense of whether its own clock favours you. You debate the macro with people who are guessing about the same price you are looking at. Four blind spots, all from the same missing instrument.
A working version needs three things in order. First, where the long cycle sits. Then the directional bias for the month. Then the timing window for the single stock. The next section is how each one is built.
You can find the 1937 book free. What it does not hand you is the sequence: which layer to read first, and how each one changes the meaning of the next.
In the 1930s the best economists admitted the cycle existed and could not be timed. McWhirter would not let that stand.
Booms happened. Busts happened. They repeated. But no one had named a usable time factor. She spent years inside astronomy, business history, and market data, looking for the clock.
She found that the North Node — the point where the Moon's orbit crosses the Sun's path — moves through the zodiac in a cycle of 18.6 years. This is not a belief. It is an astronomical count, the same kind that lets an almanac print an eclipse decades early. Mapped against more than a century of business data, the position of that node lined up with the rhythm of expansion and contraction often enough to name.
That is the discovery. Not a magic number, but a clock that is already on the wall of the sky, ticking on a schedule no market participant can move. McWhirter published it in 1937. The method that grew from it reads in four layers, each one feeding the next. The order is the whole thing. Read them out of sequence and you get noise. Read them in order and a month becomes legible before it opens.
You learn to locate the economy inside the 18.6-year North Node cycle. The cycle has an expansion phase, a warning phase, a low, and a recovery. Because it runs on an astronomical clock, the phase ahead can be placed years in advance, not guessed at after the fact. From this you build a five-year macro outlook. The positions that mark each phase are taught inside the lessons.
Why this layer comes first: it sets the weather for everything else. A bullish month in a rising tide is a tailwind. The same bullish month near a long-cycle low is a counter-current, and you weight it differently. Skip this layer and every monthly reading floats free of context. You learn to recognise which phase the economy has entered, and roughly when it is due to turn.
You learn to read the New Moon chart for the New York Stock Exchange. Every twenty-eight days a New Moon arrives. At that exact moment the planets stand at exact positions, and McWhirter set those positions against the natal chart of the exchange itself. Overlaid with the cycle position and the secondary factors, the reading produces a directional bias for the coming month. The working rules behind it are part of the course.
This is the layer that does the heaviest work, because it answers the question the chart cannot. What kind of month is this, before the first trade prints? You state the bias in advance, in one sentence, and then you watch price confirm or reject it. Without it you are back to reading photographs. The secondary factors — the slow-moving planets that nudge the baseline up or down — are what keep the reading honest, so the same New Moon does not always mean the same thing. You learn to recognise a supportive month, a heavy month, and a neutral one.
A company has an incorporation date. It was filed and recorded on a real day, and that day fixes a chart of its own. The same timing logic that reads the whole market reads one stock against the day it was born. As slow planets transit that founding chart, the stock moves through windows — some that favour a rise, some that call for caution. You learn to map those windows months ahead and to recognise which is which.
This is the layer that fixed the chart's "always late" problem in 1937, on U.S. Steel. The market-wide reading tells you the climate. The single-stock reading tells you which instrument is in season inside that climate. Without it you can have the month right and still be in the wrong name. The specific rules for reading an incorporation chart stay inside the course; what you take from this letter is that the founding date is a real, datable input, not a guess.
McWhirter read the month from the Moon. David Williams read the year from the Sun. His solar-ingress method adds a second, independent climate layer to her lunar work, and the two read cleanly together. You learn to bring them into one twelve-month forecasting practice, so the monthly bias arrives inside an annual frame.
Why two methods and not one: a single signal can be fooled. Two independent clocks agreeing is stronger evidence than either alone, and two clocks disagreeing is a warning to size down. This is the layer where the work stops being a trick and becomes a discipline. You learn to treat each month as a probability environment, not a command, and to keep the running record that turns a forecast into study rather than a habit.
This is McWhirter's own documented record, not a Skool forecast and not a promise about any future year. Each case is dated. Each is checkable against the historical price record.
By her account, the North Node had moved into the warning zone in December 1928 and stayed there. That placed the economy in the part of the cycle where the boom is running out of road. The published reading gave six to eight months of notice before the top. The bull market peaked in September 1929 and fell through the autumn.
Read the restraint here, because it is the point. This does not say the crash was certain or that the day was named. It says the long tide had turned to its warning phase, and that turn was legible months ahead of the price. That is the difference between a forecast and a photograph.
The original text printed the exact planetary positions at the New Moon of March 2, 1938, set around a skeleton chart of the exchange. From those positions the reading pointed to an unstable month with downward pressure. The month that followed was marked by drops, and many stocks tested their 1932 lows.
This case matters because it is the small scale, not the large. The 1929 reading was a tide. This is a single month, called from a single New Moon, written down before it ran. The same instrument that reads a decade reads twenty-eight days. That is what makes it a method and not a hunch about long history.
McWhirter traced U.S. Steel against its incorporation date, not against its chart. In March 1935 the stock was near $30. By March 1937 it was between $125 and $130. She argued the favourable window was legible in advance from the stock's own founding chart, the third layer of the method applied to one name.
The move ran above 300% across two years. Read it as a record, not a promise. It is shown here so a serious reader can study how one method reaches from the whole economy down to a single share, all on the same clock. It is not a claim about any stock you might buy today.
The rest of this letter exists for readers who need it. If you do not, here is the way in.
AUD $1,994 · One payment · Lifetime access · Strict no-refund policy
This is the long lunar node rhythm — the first thing the student learns to read. It shows the shape of the cycle: the rise into expansion, the warning, the low, and the recovery. What it deliberately does not show is the position that marks each phase, because that is the work you come to learn. The shape sells the idea. The reading is the course.
You might think a method from 1937 cannot read a market of index funds, algorithms, and round-the-clock futures. The participants are different. The speed is different. The reasonable doubt is whether anything that old still applies.
Here is what the method reads. Not the instruments. The timing layer underneath them. The North Node still moves through its 18.6-year cycle. The New Moon still arrives every twenty-eight days. Those clocks are astronomical, and they did not stop in 1937. An index fund did not slow the Moon. An algorithm did not move a node. The participants changed; the calendar they trade inside did not.
What the new instruments added is speed and crowding, and crowding is exactly what a timing layer is built to sit above. A faster market still has months. It still has a tone you can read before the first day. The method also names when a market inverts from the forecast — the polarity flip — so the discipline is to read each month as a probability, watch how price responds, and review the result honestly.
This is also where the teaching changes shape. A book hands you the rule and leaves. The course shows you the work being done. You watch a month read from its New Moon, written down before it runs, then reviewed against what price did. You watch a forecast that inverted, and you watch the read that should have flagged the flip. The skill you cannot get from the 1937 text is judgement, and judgement only forms over the shoulder of someone who has run the practice for years.
So the modern market does not break the method. It tests it, the way every month has. You read the cycle, state the bias, and let the live structure confirm or reject it. The objection resolves the first time you run a monthly forecast and watch the date arrive.
The cap is not a sales tactic. Specialist research loses its value when it turns into a crowd, so the seats are kept few and every student is verified.
The method does not expire, and we make no claim about a specific market window. What is finite is the room. Once 150 seats are filled, enrolment is closed until a place opens.
Waiting costs you the months you could have spent reading. This skill is not bought once and finished. It compounds. Each month you forecast, watch, and review adds a case to your own record, and that record is where the judgement lives. Twelve months from now you will either have twelve worked months behind you or none.
That is the real cost of waiting a season. Not a missed discount, but a year of cases you did not run. The student who starts this month is reading her own twelfth forecast by the time next year's student reads his first. The clock McWhirter read keeps moving whether you study it or not.
A forecasting method that circulates free stops being an instrument. It becomes a slogan, repeated by people who never learned to apply it. You have seen this happen. A real idea gets stripped to a catchphrase, the catchphrase gets sold, and the careful version drowns under the noise. That outcome devalues the study for the students who paid to learn it properly, which is why the room is gated.
You are buying a skill, not a feed. A signal expires the day it is sent. A skill does not. Once you can locate the cycle, read a month, and time a stock against its founding date, no one needs to read it for you again. You can run the same practice in five years and in twenty, on markets that do not exist yet, because the clock underneath them is the same one. The method is yours for the rest of your career.
Before access opens you submit one photo: your face beside your government-issued photo ID, through a secure portal. A member of the team reviews each submission by hand, and the NDA you sign covers redistribution, public teaching, and resale.
The refund clause: This is a strict no-refund program. Enrolment is final once you complete checkout. The verification step protects the community, not your right to a refund — if a submission needs work, the team resolves it with you directly before access is released. Read the terms before you enrol, because once you are in, the research is in your hands and we treat that transfer as final.
Each part produces the input the next part needs. The course is built large to small, because the method only makes sense in that order.
I came to McWhirter the way most chart readers do, through Gann. The book promised the thing I wanted most: the month, read before it opened. Then I tried to apply it and stalled. The terms were astronomical, the examples were from 1929, and the steps were scattered across chapters that did not teach in order. To use a single line of it I had to learn an ephemeris, build the exchange's chart by hand, and translate her 1929 cases into the language of a market I actually trade.
Before that work, my months looked like everyone else's. I waited for price to confirm a turn, then called myself early. I had no sentence for the month ahead. I treated October like June and was surprised when it was not.
The work that followed was years of reading, testing, and refining the source. The thing that clicked was the sequence. You read the long cycle first, then the month, then the single stock — and a monthly reading means one thing in a rising phase and another near a low. Out of order, the method is noise. In order, it holds.
After that I could state a directional bias before a month opened, place it inside the long tide, and review it honestly when price disagreed. The forecast went in my own hand on the first of the month, and the month either confirmed it or taught me something. The book stopped being a museum piece. It became a working practice I run every month.
I teach it now because the alternative is watching the method decay into a slogan. The honest answer is that careful study survives only when it is taught carefully, to a small room, by someone who has done the work. That is what this course is.
You locate the economy inside the 18.6-year North Node rhythm. You learn the expansion, warning, and low phases, and how the slow-moving secondary factors modify the baseline. The output is a five-year outlook you build yourself. It becomes the context for every monthly reading that follows.
You learn the NYSE natal chart, born May 17, 1792, its sensitive degrees and angles. You overlay each New Moon chart to produce the bias for the coming twenty-eight days. You state the forecast before the month opens, then watch price confirm or reject it. Assignments require a working monthly forecast before you move on.
You build charts for the stocks you follow against their incorporation dates. You learn to recognise which windows open opportunity and which call for caution. Commodities are covered with the same logic. You walk the U.S. Steel case yourself and keep your own worked record of it.
You add David Williams' solar-ingress method and running totals as a monthly climate layer. The two methods read cleanly together. You bring them into a single twelve-month practice and learn the workflow discipline that keeps it honest month after month. This is the synthesis you keep for life.
There is no refund, so the outcomes are the guarantee. Here is the capability you hold at each stage of the build.
Two things stand in for testimonials here. McWhirter's documented 1937 cases, and the worked record you keep as you learn. Both are dated. Both are checkable.
The 1937 book printed its cases with the planetary positions that produced them. The 1929 warning, six to eight months ahead of the September top. U.S. Steel, $30 in 1935 to $125 by 1937. March 1938, called unstable from its lunation chart. Each case carries a date, a published reading, and an outcome you can check against the historical record. That is the only kind of proof we will stand behind: dated, restrained, and open to inspection.
You do not take the record on faith. In Part 3 you rebuild the U.S. Steel window yourself, from the cycle position up, and see whether the founding-date reading holds. From Part 2 onward you state a monthly bias before the month opens and log how price answers it. After a year you are not holding a testimonial. You are holding a stack of your own dated forecasts, with the hits and the misses both written down. That record is the only proof that matters to a serious student, because it is the one you made.
Complete checkout via the secure page. Your enrolment immediately enters manual review. You will receive a confirmation.
NDA and identity verification protect the student files and the research process. Access is released after verification is complete. If a submission needs work, the team resolves it with you directly before access opens.
Open Part 1 and locate the long cycle. From there you build your five-year macro outlook, then your first monthly forecast. You write it down before the month opens, then watch the date arrive. The lessons are self-paced, and your working files are yours for life.
No. Part 1 builds the cycle reading from the ground up. You need to be comfortable with a price chart, which most readers of this letter already are. The astronomical terms are taught as you need them, in plain language.
The book is the snapshot. The course is the construction logic. The 1937 text gives you theory in one chapter, history in another, and application in a third, in astronomical language, with examples from 1929. You can read every word and still not know which layer to build first.
The course supplies the sequence the book scatters, the reading of a modern exchange, the software that removes the hand calculation, and assignments that make you produce a working forecast before you move on. The free PDF gives you the terms. Part 2 gives you the practice.
The instruments changed. The clocks did not. The North Node still runs its 18.6-year cycle and the New Moon still arrives every twenty-eight days. Part 4 teaches the modern application, and the method names the polarity flip when a market inverts from the forecast.
It will be, some months. McWhirter documented the inversions herself and named the polarity flip, when a market expresses the expected pressure in the opposite direction. The course teaches you to watch for it, not to pretend it cannot happen.
The discipline is the answer. Treat each month as a probability, state the bias, then watch how price responds and review the result. A wrong forecast you reviewed is study. A wrong forecast you ignored is a habit. The method that hides its misses is the one to distrust.
No. A signal service hands you a chart photograph and an alert. This teaches you to read the date ahead yourself. You leave with the method, not a feed of buy and sell calls. If you want alerts, this is the wrong room.
Yes, as a front-end filter. You take long setups when the monthly bias is bullish and treat the same setups with suspicion when it is bearish. The method gives your order-flow work a directional context it does not generate on its own.
The integration. McWhirter read the month from the Moon. Williams read the year from the Sun. Part 4 joins the two into one annual practice, so a monthly bias arrives inside a yearly frame and two independent clocks check each other.
That synthesis, taught in sequence and paired with the software that removes the hand calculation, is not something you assemble from the free book alone. The free text is one author. The course is the working method that grew from translating, testing, and pairing her with Williams.
You produce your first monthly forecast in Part 2, after the cycle work in Part 1. The lessons are self-paced. The baseline is reachable in weeks of serious study, and the rest of your career is spent refining it. Your working files are kept for life.
This is the build, not the service. You leave with a method you run yourself, not a stream of buy and sell alerts. If you want someone to read the chart for you, a subscription will suit you better.
The method gives probability, not a command. Markets invert, and McWhirter said so first. She wrote down her misses. A reader who needs to be told exactly what will happen, with no room for a flip, will be frustrated here. The honest version of this work includes the months it gets wrong, and the discipline of reviewing them.
Watching the videos gives you theory. The capability lives in your own worked forecasts and your own reviews, month after month. The method is small; the practice is years. If you will not build alongside the lessons and keep the record, the no-refund clause is not in your favour. This room rewards study, not viewing.
This is education, not advice. It does not account for your situation, and it is not a substitute for a qualified professional. If you need personal financial counsel, seek a licensed adviser.
Four parts. A five-year outlook, a monthly bias before the month opens, timing windows from the founding date, and one annual practice. The Gann Time Table course free. Yours for life, in a room of 150.
A room of 150 · Worldwide · Verified
A reactive trader asks what the chart did today. You will ask what kind of month the market has entered — and answer it before it opens.
This is the line you cross. On one side, you wait for the chart to confirm a turn and call yourself early. On the other, you write a forecast in your own hand before the month opens, place it inside the long tide, and let the date arrive to confirm or correct you. You stop reading photographs of the past. You start reading the calendar ahead, the way McWhirter did in 1937 and the way a small room of students does now. That is not a tool you rent. It is a kind of researcher you become.
Enrollment process — After payment, complete a two-minute identity check via Stripe (government ID + selfie) and sign a non-disclosure agreement. Course access is issued after both are reviewed.
Strict no-refund policy. Enrolment is final.
P.S. — Four parts: the long cycle, the monthly bias, the single stock, and Williams. The Gann Time Table course is included free, and the method is yours for life. AUD $1,994 — Enrol now →
P.P.S. — The room holds 150 students worldwide. The cap protects the study, not a countdown clock. When it is full, enrolment closes until a place opens. The skill also compounds. Every month you wait is a worked forecast you will never have. A year from now you will either own twelve months of your own cases or none of them, and the clock McWhirter read does not pause while you decide.
P.P.P.S. — This is a strict no-refund program. If you will not state a forecast, watch the date, and review the result, the method will not serve you. If you will, you join a small room and keep the practice for the rest of your career.