Milwaukee Floods Strike My Neighborhood, My Basement Wall Collapses
My GoFundMe
This is Part 1 of a three-part series about a brutal storm that forced a rebuild of my house.
- Milwaukee Floods Strike My Neighborhood, My Basement Wall Collapses
- Brewers Win Free Burgers for Milwaukee Amidst Devastating Floods
- Brewers Captain Christian Yelich and His Syncs to the Milwaukee Floods
In the year 2025 on August 10th, written 8/10 or 10/8, the city of Milwaukee, Wisconsin was inundated with approximately a foot of rain within six hours, causing devastating floods to many of its communities.
225 + 81 + 108 = 414
414 is the primary area code for Milwaukee:
Just a couple of hours before the worst of the flooding began, the Milwaukee Brewers were playing the New York Mets in their “City Connect” jerseys, which features the number 414 embedded into the city’s initials MKE:
The date of this game was Saturday, August 9th. As the game was unfolding, a racecar driver named Robbie Brewer died after suffering a heart attack in the middle of a race:
Robbie Brewer?!?!
Not only did he share a last name with Milwaukee’s baseball team, but his first name was Robert – the same as Bob Uecker, a.k.a. “Mr. Baseball,” who passed away in January of this year after 54 seasons as the Brewers’ radio announcer.
Uecker’s final game in the booth for the Crew was on October 3rd of last year, which was the deciding Game 3 of the Wild Card series against the New York Mets – the same team the Brewers were playing as the floods began to rage. See my work on that crazy playoff game, which I identified as a tribute to Mario Mendoza and the famous “Mendoza Line” (a .200 batting average). Incredibly, Uecker’s lifetime batting average was exactly .200.
Game 3 of last year’s series was won by a 3-run home run off the bat of Mets first baseman Pete Alonso. In the August 9th “Flood” game, Alonso opened the scoring with his 252nd career home run, tying Darryl Strawberry for the all-time lead in franchise history.
The Milwaukee Brewers haven’t made it to the World Series since ’82.
The driver named Brewer died at Bowman Gray Stadium.
Bob Uecker died on 16/1 (or 1/16)
The storms began during the Brewers’ 116th game of the season
He died 10 days before his 91st birthday:
Uecker died just ten days shy of his 91st birthday.
The 91st Prime number is 467
Over the past month, I’ve been discussing how July’s deadly floods in Texas were connected to the Milwaukee Brewers. Check out the first few minutes of this video, and also see 1:03:45 of my most recent Super Stream. If you’re unable to watch, here is a quick rundown:
- Talented guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughan‘s debut album was called Texas Flood. He died in a helicopter crash in 1990 in the state of Wisconsin.
- In 1990, Wisconsin’s baseball team, the Milwaukee Brewers, had a player named Greg Vaughn.
- One year earlier, the film Major League came out. One of the movie’s main characters is named Ricky Vaughn, and it was filmed in Milwaukee, featuring announcer Bob Uecker, who died in January of 2025.
- Immediately after this year’s Texas Flood, the Brewers called up former White Sox player Andrew Vaughn, who has suddenly become one of the best hitters in the league, despite several years of lackluster performances in Chicago.
This all told me there was a major “Flood” riddle for the Brewers. Little did I know, not only was I right – I would end up being victimized by the very storm I should have seen coming.
At approximately 2:10 in the morning, I was woken up by a loud creaking noise that culminated in a huge BANG! My immediate thought was that a car had hit the house. Seeing that wasn’t the case, I ran into the basement, where I found myself knee-deep in water, and it was rising quickly. While I couldn’t see it at the time, a chunk of my home’s foundation had collapsed, sending rainwater gushing in. Within minutes, the water had made its way up the stairs, where it would ultimately stop just short of my main floor:
Almost comically, the very first thing I did when I saw water in the basement was call an emergency plumbing company, thinking a pipe may have had some catastrophic failure. While on hold, I looked out my window and saw this:
*click* – I immediately hung up with the plumbers and began corraling my pets to the upstairs attic.
I had been following the weather radar for most of the day and all night until I went to bed. We had absolutely no clue this was coming. The storms just kept continuing to pop up out of nowhere, sending wave after wave of heavy downpour.
The waters continued to rise, the rain continued to fall, and I was almost 100% convinced at one point that I and the cats would have to be rescued from upstairs. Panic set in and I began moving as many valuables as I could upstairs.
By the grace of God, although the water DID get high enough to reach my front door, the ghetto blockade of paper towels and bath towels that I made worked. Although my basement was completely underwater, the main floor stayed dry, which may have saved my house in the end.
Finally, the rain began to lighten up, and the water began to drain back into the sewers. Once I saw the water begin to recede, I was able to calm down and even catch a quick nap at around 4:30 am. Much to my surprise, the water was completely gone from the street when I woke up about an hour later. Indeed, a classic flash flood.
I typically don’t get deep into the topic of weather control and manipulation, or geoengineering, because I simply don’t understand it. Cloud-seeding is one thing, but if this storm was manufactured, then it’s being done by something far more advanced than that.
That being said, I will probably go to the grave betting this storm was not natural. I’ve lived in this part of the world my entire life, and never have I experienced anything like it. The rain seemed to just keep coming out of nowhere. Typically, a massive storm like this brings with it a change in weather, but the following days were virtually identical to the ones before it. It’s not as if a cold front moved in.
I won’t say much more than that, given my lack of knowledge on the topic, but that will be changing in the future as the disasters I spent so much time decoding have now (literally) arrived at my own front doorstep.
While the storms may not have been natural, the insurance company’s response of “Piss off” was. “Groundwater,” a term for rainwater after it lands, is not covered by the vast majority of policies. To rub salt in the wound, according to the inspectors, there was nothing I could have really done to prevent this (other than not buying an old house). This has led to a pretty rough situation for me, and my sister-in-law launched a GoFundMe page to assist with the expenses.
And yes, for the record, this is the same sister-in-law who lost her father in a workplace accident on the same day the Cubs won the World Series, which is the event that led me to build the original Gematrinator Calculator and begin sharing this knowledge with the rest of humanity.
If you have the means to help, and enjoy this Blog, my numerology tools, or even my videos, then any amount would be greatly appreciated. It’s highly unlikely the donations will cover the costs, but they are absolutely making a dent, and it’s been extremely humbling to see how many people have assisted so far.
If you’ve already given, or even if you’re just a member of Gematrinator.com, I owe you tremendous gratitude, and I promise to work harder than ever to ensure the Creator’s handiwork can continue to be seen through this awe-inspiring code of numerology and synchronicity.
Much love,
-Derek
Continue reading for more on these floods:
- Milwaukee Floods Strike My Neighborhood, My Basement Wall Collapses
- Brewers Win Free Burgers for Milwaukee Amidst Devastating Floods
- Brewers Captain Christian Yelich and His Syncs to the Milwaukee Floods