Justin,
I see Bart has posted a swift file showing the rolling-x pattern. This is certainly one way to solve the issue you are having, but there is another way too. The rolling-x is probably the most used and most talked about method, when it comes to uneven blades. As effective as it is though, the method is somewhat problematic for those just starting out.
The reason I say this is because those of us who use this method frequently, take for granted the muscle memory we have developed for its use. Learning the rolling-x will, most likely, be the most frustrating manuvers you will tackle. It requires an x-stroke with a bend of the wrist and a dropping and lifting of the heal and toe. And, that all has to happen in one very smooth stroke in both directions. But, let's leave that until later.
The other method requires more observation than skill, so get the following materials together and we can get started.
Razor, hone, water, rag, wide permanent marker, black electrical tape, scissors.
Cut a piece of tape, about 3" or 4" long and lay it upside down across the fingers in one hand. Take your blade and lay the spine down on the center of the tape lengthwise. fold the tape over on each side and seal it flat. Cut any remaining tape off the end of the blade.
Take the cap off the marker and mark the edge of the blade on both sides. Blow on the mark, wave it in the air or whatever to dry it.
The tape, of course, is optional. I won't hone a razor without it unless I am specifically requested to do so. Just my OCD.
While that is drying, get your stone ready. You now need to do just one stroke in each direction on your stone. This is a normal stroke and the blade should be held square to the stone. Toe and heel follow a perpindicular line to one edge. The stroke should be very slow in each direction, maybe take 2 to 3 seconds.
Pick the blade up and look at the edge. If you see the marker line remove totally along the whole edge, then you have no issues to worry about. If, however, you see spots that the marker was not removed, we need to remedy that.
If you have unremoved marks showing, first check if they match on opposite sides of the blade. They usually will so let's look at our solution for this scenario.
For every location, that shows no marker removal, take a piece of tape and cut it to roughly that length and apply it to the spine above that area. Once you have done this, remark the blade and dry it. Once it is dry, do the same test on the stone, only this time do 3 strokes in each direction. Remember, very slowly.
Wipe the blade off and see what is happening. The removed marker area should be migrating into the unremoved areas. If you see that happening, continue stroking the blade until the line of removal is completely down the edge.
What we are doing here is removing metal on the edge parts that have already shown removal of the marker and bringing them in line with the non marker removed areas.
Once we have a complete line, mark and dry the edge and do one stroke in each direction. If the marker is removed along the whole edge, remove the tape used for shims, remark the edge and try it again. You should have a line show the whole length of the blade. Now you can continue to create the bevel and it should be even along the complete edge.
If you don't pass one of the marker test, keep going until you do, then move on and not before.
This method will stop the possibility of having a bevel that looks like a rollercoaster. If you have marker show up on only one side and not the other, then cut and put the shim tape on one side only.
Give this a try and let me know how it works for you.
Enjoy!
Ray