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Sea Changes and Blue Notes
Dear Friend and Reader: We are in the midst of some truly special astrology: this week, four of the traditional planets change signs. Venus ingressed Virgo on Wednesday. Mercury and Saturn ingress Scorpio together today. Mars ingresses Sagittarius tomorrow.
Synchronous with the inner planets changing signs is Saturn making its move from Libra to Scorpio. The outermost (and therefore slowest-moving) traditional planet, Saturn, takes about 10 seasons to go through a sign, and like other slow-movers, its sign placement has a way of coloring and shaping the psychic environment in which we live during that mini-era. Saturn transits influence everyone, and I know that a good few people are nervous about this one; this article may help alleviate some of your concerns, if you are, and Saturn in Scorpio is a topic I plan to return to many times. Each of these sign changes is interesting in its own right, satisfying to consider if you appreciate the way that astrology describes the world and how we feel about it, or how it describes you and how you feel about yourself. Astrology presents us with a picture of existence and how we perceive it. Remember that when astrology describes a problem, it also points us toward an answer or at least a workable response. What these sign changes all have in common is that when the planets enter their new signs, they all make aspects to Neptune in Pisces. When Venus entered Virgo earlier this week, it made an opposition to Neptune. Mercury and Saturn entering Scorpio make trines to Neptune. And Mars ingressing Sagittarius makes a square to Neptune. This means we're in a moment of sea changes. Planets changing signs means that the times around us are changing, and doing so rather suddenly. Synchronously, they describe inner movements (what you might experience as growth). Our feelings are moving as well; Mercury, Venus and Mars represent experiences that are 'close to home' in consciousness, and describe our most palpable emotional and mental experiences. Those are changing, too; how you feel being in your body and in your senses may shift noticeably as these planets make their moves. Yet there is something else going on with Neptune in the scenario -- a connection to something much larger, more collective, something that colors the whole background of experience in a way that is ubiquitous: it's everywhere and therefore can seem invisible. When planets make new contacts with Neptune, the figure-ground contrast can change, and it's often possible to see what we couldn't see before. Listening to the Planets That's a visual metaphor; let's use one based on sound. Think of Neptune as a kind of resonator. It will vibrate to the pitch of whatever aspects it. Venus in Virgo opposite Neptune in Pisces carries tension -- but if you could hear it, it would sound dissonant. Venus is associated with Pisces. The old-timey, toga-wearing astrologers from the days of yore tell us that Venus is in its 'fall' in Virgo. It may struggle to be itself, or alternately, it may utilize that sense of discomfort and become unusually strong. Venus in Virgo, for example, could express itself (in a way unlike its typical nature, but drawing on Virgo) as intellectual passion.
The interval is the relationship between C and F sharp, which is painful to listen to. C to F is a fourth; you hear that all the time in all forms of Western popular music. If you were at a concert listening to a composition based on C to F sharp, you would probably be out in the lobby, and fast. We've experienced some of that dissonance this week, though where aspects are concerned, the challenging ones often provide excellent leverage for progress and creativity. They can be frustrating, though it's necessary to tap the energy source beneath the frustration to get anything done. Today (Friday), Mercury and Saturn ingress Scorpio together. I've noticed that when there's a big planetary sign change (Saturn counts for big), there is often another planet accompanying it. In this scenario, Mercury fleets right past Saturn, dives into Scorpio and then, 10 hours later, Saturn takes the plunge. This is suggesting that we need to be attentive to messages (Mercury-related) about the forthcoming Saturn in Scorpio experience. It's also a good time to set your agenda, if you have a sense of what this transit might be about for you. Saturn and Mercury meet Neptune as a trine -- first degree of Scorpio to the first degree of Pisces. That feels harmonious and easy to listen to; it has an ear-candy feeling. The relationship is like C to G, which is a basic folksy kind of sound. It's helpful that Neptune is there to resonate with these two planets ingressing Scorpio; they pick up the Pisces flavor, which tends to soften Scorpio, helps it drop some of its possessiveness (which can influence both money and love) and control stuff, and offers access to a wider, more full-spectrum sensation of existence. This is an opening. One of the biggest problems we have on Earth is the jealousy / control / possessiveness complex, which keeps many, many people trapped on a petty level of existence, isolated from their goals, their dreams and true intimacy. We will inevitably get to address this with Saturn in Scorpio, one way or another (most likely, many ways). Jealousy would not be such a problem, were not so many people so attached to it; so deeply devoted to how much they think they can control the universe with their emotions. Indeed, this transit will be all about the nuances of sexual and emotional control -- and expression.
One opportunity of Saturn in Scorpio is to stabilize our emotions. Borrowing a phrase from Patric Walker, to many this will feel like enforced growth. By one energetic analysis of the world right now, yang (masculine) energy is out of balance and pushing things too hard. We hear this all the time: the patriarchy is out of control. Rarely, though, do we consider the ways that yin (feminine) energy is also out of balance, mainly by being overly reactive, emotive, unstable and unpredictable. How much of what goes on in the world is caused, or fostered, by this kind of instability? How much energy is lost due to the inability to keep to an agenda from day to day? Saturn in Scorpio will actually help stabilize both sides of the equation (yin and yang, in men and women). The last of this week's sign changes is Mars ingressing Sagittarius. That happens Saturday. Mars is exiting a sign of which it's the traditional ruler (Scorpio, a fixed water sign) and entering a new and very different field of experience (Sagittarius, a mutable fire sign). What I haven't said in this article and which applies to any of these sign changes is that adjoining signs (in this case Scorpio to Sagittarius) describe some of the most palpable contrasts of astrology. Mars going from deep, emotional Scorpio into open, fiery, fast-changing Sagittarius is a big shift in energy. It's magnified by Mars in Sagittarius making a square to Neptune in Pisces. The Mars square Neptune aspect is often about pushing boundaries, losing emotional control and over-indulgence in anything Neptune (drink, drugs, deception, illusions) rather than the moderation that allows these things to serve us in a creative way. Mars square Neptune can be self-destructive -- though that is mitigated significantly if you're conscious of what is going on within you and around you.
Mars square Neptune will be adding some poignancy to the feeling of life, though due to its tendency to overindulge, it needs to be handled carefully. It's a little like a spiritual dilemma. It reminds me of that moment in the life of Siddhartha, when he wakes up to how spiritually vapid all of his overindulgence is -- which prompts him to notice that there must be something deeper. Therefore, even a 'negative' experience can push us in a positive direction, just like a minor chord can emphasize the positive feeling of a chord progression by adding some darker contrast and an interesting flavor. In practical terms, this aspect is about considering the ethics of how we use desire and personal power. Denial and desire are a dangerous combination; be mindful of that. Now we're getting all of these at once, and Neptune is involved. Neptune can be subtle; it can disappear, or blend into the environment and go unnoticed. This is your opportunity to notice your environment in all of its contrasting facets: inner, outer, subtle, obvious (and harmonious and dissonant tones) and the place where all of these blend (within you). Part of why we have so many 'environmental issues' is we fail to notice the environment. In normal consciousness (as the philosopher Marshall McLuhan pointed out) the environment tends to be invisible. In this picture, you're the resonator that's being vibrated by all of the planetary transits. To feel that vibration, and sense the changes, you will need to access some non-ordinary states of awareness -- and notice where you are and how you feel. Given the current transits, that should be pretty easy if you pause, observe and take in what you're experiencing. Then, remember what you noticed, and use that information. Look through your eyes rather than with them. Remember that denial can slip in right at the point when we're about to put knowledge to practical use. Why Mitt Romney Seemed to Win the Debate Pretty much everyone agrees that Mitt Romney 'won' the debate Wednesday night, though he won the way he usually does -- by aggression, lying and cheating. I consider Obama to be a fairly typical politician, and also someone who has taken to aiding and abetting war criminals (the topic of an upcoming article, so please hold your arrows until I explain this carefully) though not quite a thug on the scale of Romney.
The debate happened shortly after Venus entered Virgo, opposing Neptune (C to F sharp, dissonance). Mitt Romney may be the most dissonant, as in acoustically and energetically ugly, human entity I've ever observed. To my ear he is even worse than Dick Cheney, who is at least in tune with how ugly he is, and can carry it off. On Wednesday night, we had Mitt Romney doing his dissonant performance under an equally dissonant aspect. He was in tune with his moment, and few people noticed how off-pitch he is. Obama on the other hand, who usually has pretty good pitch, sounded weak, defensive and out of tune. He seemed off balance from the first moments of the debate, and never found a groove. There is one example of when you'll hear C to F sharp -- it's called a blue note. A guitarist often bends a note by half a step (think of Mark Knopfler making the guitar 'cry or sing'). This sounds beautiful when you hear it for a moment, taking you by surprise, like biting into a grain of spice in an exotic dish. You just don't want that all the time, though it happens to be what Romney plays (all the time). He's the guy who cannot even agree with himself from one day to another, and who is constantly adapting (in his dark Pisces way) to what he thinks everyone around him wants him to be. For the next debate, everything changes. Mercury and Saturn will be in Scorpio, resonating with Neptune. The human environment around him will be more in harmony, the water signs will be in tune with one another, and he will be the one who seems off-pitch. In fact, to those who are sensitive, it may be that we notice that the whole discussion is off-pitch. In other words, these debates cover topics that are irrelevant, even in the context of politics. More significantly, Mars ingresses Sagittarius, and will make a square to Neptune. This will put a focus on matters of integrity. (This interval is the pleasant minor third, from C to D sharp.) In physical reality, the square can be about a clash, which is how it's often described. The conflict surfaces if the levels of reality indicated by the two sides of the square are not addressed consciously. In this case, the collective level (Neptune in Pisces) will be aspected by the individual level (Mars in Sagittarius), drawing a contrast between the two. It was not obvious from his performance Wednesday night that Mitt Romney is in this game exclusively for personal gain and greed, which clashes directly with collective interests. I think it will be a lot more obvious next time. As for Obama, who pretends to be an advocate of working people and those who struggle, we will be able to hear what he is not saying, rather than getting caught in what he's pretending to say. Get ready for an election endgame with many twists and turns, and a few surprise endings. About that Secret Meeting One other thing. I mentioned that Mercury and Saturn move into Scorpio within 10 hours of one another -- but what I didn't say is that they formed an exact conjunction in Libra earlier this morning just before they make their move later today. The location of that conjunction stated in astrological terms was at 29 degrees Libra and 57 arc minutes -- very, very close to the end of the sign (signs end at 29 degrees and 59 minutes).
You could say that Mercury and Saturn returned to the crime scene this week, where they seemed to hold a secret meeting -- right before the election. Both of these planets blend into Libra nicely and make it difficult to notice that anything strange is going on. As I have reported in Planet Waves and elsewhere, I think there is some election fraud in progress, and the Mercury-Saturn conjunction points right to it. Simply put, this is a warning. Pay attention -- we didn't last time. We let it happen, though to be fair, it was a real ambush and most were taken by surprise. That does not have to be the case now. There is no election fraud possible without public consent. Public consent can be tacit -- that is, seeing something and just going along with it and not speaking up. Or it can be overt -- pretending not to know or care, or saying that nothing you do matters anyway. It's long past time to speak up and act up, or to admit that you've given up. Have you? I don't think so. Just remember, we'll get all the freedom we deserve. Lovingly, ![]() ![]() ![]() Currently, the Moon is in Gemini, about to make a conjunction to Jupiter. This is a friendly aspect, and you might find it easy to speak your feelings, or to offer sincere praise. If you remember that a sincere compliment can turn around someone's day, you'll feel good about offering it.
One aspect I didn't mention in the lead article above is that Venus, after opposing Neptune this week, moves into an opposition with Chiron in Pisces. The opposition works through dissonance, and often, so does Chiron. This aspect may come with some emotional tension and fear. Fear is probably the single biggest problem we have on Earth. It would be nice if we were fearful only of fearsome things, though many are afraid of everything and everyone. Try to be selective, and remember what Lou Reed said -- you can't always count on the worst happening. Sometimes it does, though in truth it's pretty rare for your worst fears to come true. They are emotionally driven thoughts, and one theme of our lives right now is getting a handle on our emotions. Venus and Chiron are both square Juno, a minor planet associated with marriage and commitment. There is a reminder here that if you're committed to someone, you'll be fair with them, and you'll be sensitive to their feelings. There is a challenge here not to let attachment rule your relationship. Said another way, this whole aspect pattern is a reminder that there is a difference between love and attachment. Even if you remember that, it can take some focus to work out the equation. ![]() The general consensus is that Mitt Romney won the first presidential debate of 2012 quite handily, with Pres. Obama looking aloof at best or, as one friend of Planet Waves put it, scared in a way we've never seen before. How is it that our leonine president didn't roar back against the flat-out lies Daily Kos is calling Romney out on? By one analysis, Romney was using a debate tactic called a "Gish Gallop."
Without getting bogged down in the natal astrology of both candidates (which is rich enough for another full article -- forthcoming), it seems that the way in which a Gish Galloper runs roughshod over his opponent both suits Romney to a T and may be a particular Achilles heel for Obama. Planet Waves' own Fe Bongolan relayed this from a conversation she had with Nancy Sommers at Starlight News: "Obama has a Chiron return in his first house, exact until just before the third debate, so he's being challenged with being bullied by Romney, who has a history of being a pathological little prick. (The gang-up on the poor little "sensitive" -- AKA gay -- kid in boarding school where Mitt and his friends pounced on him and cut off his hair.) Obama has never had a father, only doting grandparents, so no father to teach him how to take a blow and punch back, or how to hold your ground with a bully. "Mitt's behavior was reminiscent of an abusive spouse, who puts his wife in a defensive dependent mode by keeping her off balance and stripping away her control. They put Obama off his game, making him retreat further into his aloofness, which though professorial and honest, comes off as too cool. This maneuver is totally [Karl] Rovian. "But the upside of this is the reaction meters showed women empathizing with Obama more during the debates by the same margin as the CNN snap poll using older Southern white men [who favored Romney]. Women didn't take to Mitt's roughhousing the entire debate." In case you missed that one, CNN conducted a snap poll in which they declared Romney the winner with 67% of undecided voters -- with one catch. The network only polled white people in the South, the majority of whom were male. That doesn't change how the two candidates conducted themselves Wednesday night. It is however a reminder to pay attention to the fine print and do your own fact checking -- especially as Mercury gets closer to stationing retrograde on Election Day. ![]() "Much of the media coverage of the dioxin debate has consisted of trying to convince the public that their common sense is wrong and that experts know best. In this case, the public's view has been largely correct. Dioxin is a dangerous and unwanted chemical pollutant."
One was a New Yorker writer, Thomas Whiteside, whose articles on Agent Orange in 1970 had triggered congressional hearings that ended military use of the chemicals in Vietnam. The other was Barry Commoner, founder of the Center for the Biology of Natural Systems, whose work on dioxin contamination of roads and horse arenas in Missouri would lead to the government evacuation and buy-out of the entire town of Times Beach. Unlike government officials, Whiteside and Commoner did not dismiss our accounts of eyeless fawns, human babies born without brains, deformed chicks and ducklings, dying horses and songbirds. Both men not only took our experiences seriously, but each in his own way also encouraged us to take action, pointing us toward sources and information that would have taken us years to find on our own. Thanks to a kick-start from them, we won a federal court injunction against further use of Agent Orange by the U.S. Forest Service. Thomas Whiteside died in 1997, earning a brief New York Times obituary headed, "Thomas Whiteside, 79, Dies; Writer Exposed Agent Orange." The writer's exceptional work on dioxins and Agent Orange is given a terse four sentences. In contrast, the Times obituary for Barry Commoner, who died September 30 at age 95, is a lengthy, ostensibly thorough account that in all its 2,280 words not once mentions the word dioxin or Commoner's pioneering, landmark works on dioxin toxicity, human effects and global atmospheric transport. (The New York Times has a long history of covering up the dioxin issue.) The Times obituary, in fact, is a masterpiece of damnation with faint praise, painting him as a "maverick" and slyly dismissing Commoner's prodigious scientific career as cover for a Marxist agenda. It mentions only two of his books, arbitrarily ending its account of Commoner's professional life 12 years before his death, suggesting that by 2000, "he was no longer getting anything like the attention he had enjoyed in earlier times." The Times thus conveniently omits mention of Commoner's landmark 2003 study on atmospheric transport of dioxin thousands of miles from sources in the U.S. and Mexico to lodge in tissues of Arctic wildlife and humans. Nor, of course, does it mention the detailed overview of dioxin issues by Commoner and Webster in Dioxins and Health, also in 2003. With its less than stellar obituary of a great scientist and champion of human rights, The New York Times continues a shabby history of denial journalism on dioxin. -- Carol Van Strum Note: If you would like to read more of Commoner's work, please see this resource, not available online: "Accidental Contamination of Soil with Dioxin in Missouri: Effects and Countermeasures," by Barry Commoner and Robert Scott, Center for the Biology of Natural Systems, 1976. ![]() Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, the former publisher, chairman and chief executive of The New York Times Company, who steered the Gray Lady through unprecedented expansion and choppy financial waters into stability, died Saturday at his home in Southampton, N.Y. He was 86.
"This was not a breach of the national security," Mr. Sulzberger said at the time, according to his New York Times obituary. "We gave away no national secrets. We didn't jeopardize any American soldiers or Marines overseas." Of the government, he added, "It's a wonderful way if you've got egg on your face to prevent anybody from knowing it, stamp it secret and put it away." Notably, journalistic integrity and profitability were never at odds under Sulzberger's leadership. He believed the latter was critical for a newspaper to maintain an independent voice -- something lacking in most mainstream media for years now. Almost as rare is a family business that gets as large as the Times and manages to avoid dysfunctional infighting: the Times is in its fourth generation of family leadership. Sulzberger passed the position of publisher to his son Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, Jr. in 1992; his grandfather had purchased the paper in 1896. ![]() ![]() Darth O'Brien Baxter, played by Hugo Farrant, revels in his government-granted power to spy on Aussies on the Internet. Don't miss the latest edition of Rap News from The Juice Media. Big Brother is WWWatching YouThe Juice Media is back with another incisive (and witty) take on global politics, media policy, freedom of speech and the prospect of the Internet becoming a giant surveillance weapon: RAP NEWS 15: Big Brother is WWWatching You. Host Robert Foster (Hugo Farrant) interviews newly appointed Thought Police General at the Pentopticon, Darth O'Brien Baxter (also Farrant), and a surprisingly lucid Terence Winston Moonseed (Farrant yet again). The Australian duo behind Rap News (it is co-written and produced by Giordano Nanni) write, "Once again, in the midst of this Grand Human Experiment, we are forced to ask tough questions about our future. Will it involve a free Internet which will continue to revolutionise the way the world communicates with itself? Or is our picture of the future a Boot stamping on this Human InterFace forever?" ![]() Planet Waves FM :: Planets Land at Neptune Airport Here is this week's edition of Planet Waves FM. In it, I have covered much of the same material as in the lead article above, though it's a more intuitive, conversational approach. I've emphasized the sexual themes of Scorpio more than the political implications of Mars leaving -- and Mercury and Saturn entering -- this emotionally intense, erotically transformative sign. That said, if you follow the link and scroll down through the comments thread, you'll be treated to a listing of the dates when Mars has ingressed Sagittarius over the last decade and the corresponding political events for each one, compiled by Planet Waves researcher Astrodem. It's a fascinating pattern. ![]() Planet Waves monthly horoscopes provide a broader perspective that surveys the themes of the coming month and often, the weeks that follow. The October Monthly horoscope was published Friday, Sept. 28. Inner Space for October was published Tuesday, Oct. 2. The September Moonshine Horoscope was published Tuesday, Sept. 18. Please note that the longer monthly horoscope is being incorporated into the Friday issue after the Sun has entered a new sign; Inner Space still publishes on Tuesdays. A recent weekly horoscope (#918) covered the Libra equinox in detail. ![]() LIBRA BIRTHDAYS THIS WEEK The time has arrived to let the momentum of your life carry you. I don't mean you should drift, but rather that you can focus on guiding your life rather than propelling yourself. You have momentum; you can trust that, and you seem to have recently experienced a sudden shift in direction that may finally have you feeling that you can trust the course of your life. That said, keep making decisions, and investing your energy acting on them. You must make a conscious effort not to be guided by your fears -- particularly those involving partnership or getting hurt in relationships. Fear has a way of creating the things that we're worried about, so if you avoid worrying, you will avoid being a magnet. Rather, concern yourself with fairness and sincerity, and look for people who treat you this way as well. NOTE -- Learn more about your astrology this year in your Libra birthday reading, which I recorded for you on the Equinox. ![]() Hello Aries -- Eric has written a new description for your sign that you have access to from this link (no password needed). If you would like to hear your Aries birthday reading, please visit this link. ![]() Hello Taurus -- Eric has written a new description for your sign that you have access to from this link (no password needed). If you would like to hear your Taurus birthday reading, please visit this link.
![]() Hello Gemini -- Eric has written a new description for your sign that you have access to from this link (no password needed). Have you listened to your birthday reading? Click here for an hour of astrology plus a tarot reading by Eric.
![]() Hello Cancer -- Eric has written a new description for your sign that you have access to from this link (no password needed). To hear your birthday reading for the year ahead, please visit this link.
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![]() Hello Libra and Libra rising readers. I've just finished your 2012-2013 birthday reading. Check this link to listen to your hour-long astrology reading plus tarot. If you're a Virgo and you missed your birthday report, it's still available at this link. All other signs, please check our audio store for your birthday reading. ![]() Hello Libra -- Eric has written a new description for your sign that you have access to from this link (no password needed). ![]() Hello Scorpio -- Eric has written a new description for your sign that you have access to from this link (no password needed). ![]() Hello Sagittarius -- Eric has written a new description for your sign that you have access to from this link (no password needed). ![]() Hello Capricorn -- Eric has written a new description for your sign that you have access to from this link (no password needed).
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