Saturn's Homecoming

By ERIC FRANCIS





Image: "Water Lilies on Orcas Island"
by O'Vivian, www.ovivian.com




However you envisage the process of conception, implantation, gestation and eventual birth, there is a sense in which it is the taking on of substance, or the coagulation of substance into a new form ... This is the past/present that we are, plunging into it, or absorbing it, or taking it on ... when you get to the depths of where Saturn is, there is no end, no bottom, no final cause.


-- Melanie Reinhart

Dear Inquisitive Intuitive:

I'm getting the feeling lately that I might be the only person excited about the new-born transit of Saturn across Cancer, which began Tuesday night (Wednesday morning in the eastern US and the UK). Most astrology fans are taking the news well, if a little solemnly. Others are brooding, muttering to themselves, "This can't be good" as they trudge toward the 7th Ave. subway. Thing is, the planets move. They always provide new challenges and new resources. In this world, anyway, attitude is just about everything.

Saturn is not exactly everyone's favorite planet. But it's certainly one of the most useful and necessary energies. If Saturn in Capricorn represents one's bones, Saturn in Cancer represents the shell and boundary that separates us from the larger world. Those critters that have crab-like shells -- they're called arthropods -- are the most successful phyla on the planet. You find them from the depths of the oceans to the highest mountain peaks where life exists. They organize vast nations (ant colonies spanning hundreds of miles) or survive by scavenging. It helps to have a shell. Especially one that flexes at the joints.

We last experienced Saturn in Cancer in the heart of the 1970s, spanning from Aug. 2, 1973 through June 6, 1976. (There were brief interludes during that timeframe when, at the beginning, Saturn dipped back into Gemini and toward the end, forward into Leo.) If you were alive then, scroll back to that era in your life and get a sense of what was happening. If it wasn't especially pleasant, remember that you're now an adult with a lot more power than the child or young person you may have been at the time of the prior transit. This makes a significant difference. The hard-won skills you acquired in that time you can now put to use.

When we think of these years, we might think of "The Energy Crisis," with its gas lines, the OPEC embargo, daylight savings time in the middle of winter and Jimmy Carter wearing a sweater while making speeches from the Oval Office to show that the White House thermostat was turned down to a responsible 68 degrees.

According to the Oak Ridge National Lab's (nuclear power salesmanship) homepage, "Waiting in long lines for short supplies, many Americans realized for the first time how central a role energy plays in the good life -- and how vulnerable some forms of energy are to political vagaries. Thus began, after the Mideast oil embargo of 1973-74, a rush to diversify America's energy base and to reduce U.S. dependence on imported oil." www.ornl.gov/swords/seventies.html The message was we needed to grow a shell and take care of ourselves.

We also might think about the special kind of idealism that characterized the era, what you might call the values of the 1960s coming home -- literally into the home -- after the Vietnam War ended. Many elaborate and beautiful visions for a greater world emerged during the Sixties. The years immediately after were the time to put those visions to work.

This ethos was expressed in few places better than in the publication Whole Earth. According to its "about" page, at www.wholeearthmag.com/about.html, "Originally titled Co-Evolution Quarterly, the magazine was first published in 1974. For its time, it was very pragmatic and principled. It furthered social change and new movements by introducing ideas such as the Gaia hypothesis, watershed consciousness, whole system thinking and voluntary simplicity to readers. It featured many of the catalog's facets: access to information, book and tool reviews, essays, interviews with, and articles by seminal thinkers of the day. An early issue was edited by the Black Panther Party, another by beat poets Lawrence Ferlinghetti and Michael McClure."

Much of what we think of as being part of the Sixties zeitgeist was really about the 1970s. The Sixties were run by the engine known as the Vietnam War, which pushed numerous social movements and helped people raise their awareness of important issues. When the war ended, there were big social changes as part of that process, and a lot of people with impassioned ideals on their hands, and their lives began changing. For some it was time for a sane and normal life, to settle down and start a family. For others, it was time to move to a commune and get back to the land. Many headed for the suburbs.

We also think of feminism as a central idea of this era. Well, there was feminism (a much older idea) and then there was that bizarre thing called Women's Lib and the push for equal rights. When I think of women's progressive movements of the 1970s, I think of Betty Dodson, my esteemed colleague, astrology client and goddessmother. She was not a women's libber and she defined feminism her own way -- naked. And, for the record, as neither "hetero" nor "lesbian." In an era when you were really, really queer when you were bisexual (allegedly a fence-straddler who couldn't commit), Betty was a good three decades ahead of her time -- now that it's all kinds of fashionable to be trans, bi and multi-gender.

Saturn in Cancer was the peak era of Betty's work with CR groups -- that is, consciousness raising groups -- which under Betty's engineering program involved nude women talking, getting to know their bodies and masturbating together. In 1974, the first version of her book, then called Liberating Masturbation: A Meditation on Self Love was published, shortly after her famous article finally appeared in Ms. Magazine (two years after submission and what she describes as "many" edits that converted her 17-page manifesto into a personal masturbation confession). The edits happened with Saturn in Gemini; the book materialized with Saturn in Cancer, and has sold a million copies under various titles and versions.

Betty had been going strong with her one-women awareness campaign since 1971, but describes the mid-70s as "a very dynamic time." Liberating Masturbation, the summary of all she had learned since going public, encourages women to go past their romanticized ideas about sex, to share masturbation, and to make the equation between raising awareness and spirituality. Betty is one among many visionaries who were stepping out of their shells at this time and daring to actually experiment with something positive rather than just protest against something negative. But like others, she had a measure of strength and autonomy and could brave the challenges of the world.

"I had gone to a NOW [National Organization of Women] meeting and I thought, my god, it's a meeting. They had by-laws and you had to vote on stuff. So I sought out younger women who said I should start a CR group," Betty said yesterday. "These were the cells of women's community."

In the 1970s, American society was settling down from a tumultuous decade, which ended with the Watergate scandal and the resignation of old Dick Nixon, but there was a sense of both necessity for change and potential for something better. In many ways, the theme of the era was that ideas needed to manifest in concrete, practical form; that as the button says, wearing buttons is not enough.


* * *


So what's the big deal about Saturn in Cancer? Some people know that Saturn is in its "detriment" in Cancer. Saturn rules Capricorn, hence, it's said to be weaker in its opposite sign. (The same is true for Saturn in Leo, by the way, since in the ancient system and in modern common sense, Saturn is the ruler of Aquarius. Hence for the next five years, Saturn is in detriment.) In this respect, a little knowledge is a dangerous thing. Conceivably, Saturn in Cancer is bad for Saturn, not necessarily for you. But given how well Saturn worked the last time it was in Cancer, that is, how well it did its most valuable public service of manifesting effective structural changes, I suggest we stop worrying and start working.

When a planet is in a weak sign -- in detriment or fall, or in a number of other positions that might compromise its efficacy -- it can function chirotically, like Chiron. That is, the perceived weakness can become a stimulus for strength and healing. By my reckoning, that was very clearly the case in the mid-1970s.

Perhaps part of the issue is that Cancer is considered such a maternal sign and Saturn comes with images of the Grim Reaper, Satan and the Dark Father. You know, corporations, governments and the school principal. We think of the official, buildings, heavy gray lead and all that stuff from old astrology books that give us material significations but no spiritual basis or method for dealing with the information. Saturn has an extraordinarily complex mythography -- I'd like to get into some of it -- but has an incredibly bad rap. Some of it had to do with being the "greater malefic" planet (Mars is said to be the "lesser malefic"). Even in modern psychologically-based astrology, the issues that Saturn is said to rule are some of the more challenging ones we seem to contend with: structuring our lives, dealing with limitations, and dealing with authority. Everyone in our culture has authority issues of one kind or another.

So I don't blame people for being a little nervous about Saturn in Cancer.

"We're afraid of father because nobody knows what a good father is. We try to do it but we have no template for it, no pattern to follow on the emotional level," Denice Taylor said to me today. "Very few people know how it supports, they know how it hurts to be related to in a masculine way."

Denice points out that we usually do have functional images of being related to in a nourishing way by a feminine figure since most of the nurturing in the world happens by and through women. But there's a missing volume on dad. In our culture, at least when most of us reading were kids and to a great extent today, it's dad who leaves the home when there is a problem; or dad was missing in action, always at work; or drunk and having affairs; mother is presumed to be the responsible, dominant parent and the one who will remain present.

"I think that when we force Saturn, when it's made into the scapegoat, we limit our own ability to manifest and give physical form to our creations. Maybe Saturn in Cancer will help us create more complete emotional definitions of words like father and mother, and family, and home," she posted yesterday to the Vision List.

Cancer is the sign of the home. When a planet transits Cancer, something or someone comes home. I would hope that any planet would be welcome here. Saturn is often associated with a parental figure, but the question is which parent. I take Saturn as a maternal figure at least as much as I do a paternal one. Isabelle Hickey, author of the beautiful Astrology: A Cosmic Science, takes Saturn as a distinctly feminine archetype, describing "her peace and her quiet power." There is the feeling that Saturn will represent the rising of an inner authority who will help us restore some sanity to our tumultuous emotions, and restore some order in our homes, and perhaps in our world. ++

As Isabelle writes,

She was the angel of Eternal Dawn
Lifting her hood I saw her face
And knew the glory that hid her grace.
From earth blinded eyes too dim to see
That only through her, could we ever go free!


This essay is from the June 6, 2003 edition of Planet Waves Weekly, with which you also get Eric's weekly horoscopes. You are invited to subscribe here or by calling Chelsea on (850) 222 1382. Thank you for supporting Planet Waves.


Continue to Planet Waves

Planet Waves Home | What's New | Horoscopes | Subscriber Login | About Subscribing


Planet Waves Astrology | Saturn in Cancer | Saturn's Homecoming by Eric Francis