"Anonymous. Always put an (and ) after beat three. Never just finish with the count of three."
On the contrary, you should stay up on the rise until you have decided what figure you will dance next. Whatever you do, don't lower and then stop - the lowering cannot be completed until you move, so if you lower with no plan to move, you have killed the waltz action.
But this hardly has anything to do with your conceptual mistake which we have been discussing.
"I cannot find anywhere in any of my technique books any thing about a foot being part way between two and three."
Did you miss the passage I just quoted, defning the end of step two and the start of step three as that position???
"It is hoped that no student will be foolish enough to be gulled into the belief that a Parrot knowledge of its contents will be sufficient to satify an astute examiner.."
Parroting is exactly what you did when you started this thread. You criticized others for not dancing the rise and fall exactly as it is written. But then it turned out that what you though was written is not what actually is - you read it as if it were written in terms of beats, when actually it is written in terms of steps - which DO NOT MATCH the beats in the way you think they do.
The unthinking part of your parroting comes in when you ignored the evidence posted from that same book which indicates your mistake.
"To go over it again. You wrote.
The end of sidestep between such as the side step of a Natural Turn when the feet are to close on the third step is aproximately when the third step has closed half way to the second step..
What exactly do you think Richard Gleave is teaching. You've been doing it all the time."
No. You are still missing the critical detail that this halfway closed position, which you consider to be the and of beat two, but which is actually the beginning of step three. Because the rise is defined in terms of the steps rather than the beats, this half-beat offset between beet numbers and step numbers means that the rise will not occur the way you said, but actually a half beat earlier - at least if it is to be consistent both with what is written in the books and with your opinion of where the beats should go.