... or try 80x((61x8)-418)=5600, where 56 is nothing.
Qabalistic patterns might not be appropriate for BOTL, Frank, I'm afraid. The TS glyph reminded me of something and when I flipped it I knew what. It is the Japanese character, "Nu". See the attached. Compare the "glyph" with the top left character.
So the glyph represents, "Anti-Nu" or Hadit and reflects the duality of the two characters. It does say to paste the sheets right to left, top to bottom, the order a Japanese newspaper is read.
This adds a whole new dimension to things.
ぬ(which has two strokes, so there Frank is your pattern) and is 27th in the alphabet, forms the classical negative of the verb. On its own it changes to nai, to mean "is/have nothing". The character comes from 奴 (yatsu) meaning man/servant. "Yattsu" means 8. The Ha in Had (pronounced Hado in Japanese) also means 8. 奴 is pronounced "Do" in the word, "Dorei", slave. We have connected Nu and Had through the number eight and a Chinese character; one is a person, the other implies an enslaver.
Aiwass: 愛和す(る)"I love you"; There are two types of love in Japanese: 愛 and 恋 Then there is the gematria and stroke counts... in a highly homophonic language. Law = ローwhich is like 労, to struggle. 9 is "khu" which is like the verb to suffer.
Of course it could just be a coincidence (yet another one), and it is odd that of all the languages that glyph could be (and it's the correct character/pronunciation too), it's the one I studied at college and Japan was home for a number of years. BOTL could almost have been written for me 😉