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A Fire in Aries; Be Cool, Don't Just Act Cool
Please Note -- we will be taking next Friday's edition off for spring cleaning and general maintenance. But we'll see you Tuesday with the Moonshine horoscope. --efc Dear Friend and Reader: With the recent equinox, the sky continues tipping from water sign Pisces into fire sign Aries. The spring season began in the Northern Hemisphere Wednesday, with the Sun joining Mars and Uranus in Aries. This is the beginning of the astrological year -- the metaphorical clock resets to midnight.
This setup is a reminder not to let yourself get knocked off balance by your environment, or by people you perceive as overpowering you in some way. Your environment (which means people and circumstances) is offering you options, and to a real extent it's showing you a reflection of yourself (illustrated by the Full Moon reflecting all those planets). It's worth recapping that Mercury stationed direct last Sunday afternoon (March 17), ending a three-week retrograde phase. That retrograde is still working itself out, and it will be for about two more weeks as Mercury re-traces the degrees where it was just retrograde (this is sometimes called the second shadow phase, or second echo phase). Some people are more sensitive to these Mercury retrogrades than others, whether psychologically, emotionally or through experiencing those odd events like computer crashes, lost keys and missing envelopes. There were a lot of planets in Pisces during this retrograde; that gives some people the feeling of emotional resonance and others the feeling that they're drowning. Mercury will remain in Pisces until April 13, when it joins the rapidly developing Aries grouping. Speaking of: Venus was the most recent planet to move from Pisces to Aries. Venus is happy in Pisces (the two have a natural affinity) and it needs more love than it's often willing to offer in Aries (the sign of Mars, so there can be some tension). It's a prickly spot for Venus, but with the promise of a conjunction with Mars in early April, there may be some fiery action in the sex department at that time. Do your best to find the balance between going after what (or rather who) you want, receiving what is offered by a partner (or someone who is not one yet, but whom you're interested in), and remembering to be extra-conscious of the other person's experience (known as empathy) -- and what you can offer them in return. We are entering a phase with a lot of Aries happening, and empathy really is the name of the game. Now, as for why the planets in Aries are big news. As you may know, there is currently a generational aspect happening -- Uranus in Aries square Pluto in Capricorn. These are two slow-moving points that are meeting in a major aspect for the first time since 1965-66. What we think of as the Sixties was mainly the combination of three major factors: a conjunction of Uranus and Pluto; Chiron in Pisces; and Neptune in Scorpio.
Friday, Mars makes a conjunction to Uranus. Soon after on March 26, it'll make a square to Pluto. That's going to add a lot of energy to what is already a high-potency alignment, which is lurking just below the surface, waiting for something to come along and do just that. This tells a story in natal charts. In my old series Born in the Sixties, I describe how aspect patterns of certain birth charts emphasize the astrology of that era, and certain ones play it down. Anyone born under the current astrology is going to have Uranus-Pluto emphasized for their whole lives because there are so many planets involved, just as certain people born in the 1960s do. At the same time, the Sun will move through Aries, form a conjunction to Uranus on March 28 and a square to Pluto on March 31. Venus will do the same thing (on the same days as the Sun -- the Sun and Venus are moving in tandem right now), and then Mercury will do the same next month (April 20 and 21). So, over and over again, inner planets -- the ones we feel and see -- will be making conjunctions to Uranus and squares to Pluto. This is a series of events that can change the world, and can also wake us up to how much the world has changed before our eyes in just a few years. The thing is, we may see what seems like a ew years' worth of changes in a matter of weeks. It's impossible to predict what this will bring, though there is likely to be some 'personal is political' effect in the world. When astrology like this heats up, many people get the urge to participate.
And while the Uranus-Pluto square, the defining aspect of our time in history, seems to last for a while, it will go by faster than you think. Now is your moment to dare; now is your moment to make a difference, in your own life and that of the larger culture. As for the personal being personal: do your best to stay cool and keep your head through this astrology. This is the time to be cool, not just act cool or 'play it cool'. Cool means reflective, aware and clear. It means being aware of time and timing, and knowing when you're ready to make your move. There will be moments when passion is called for -- you will know them when you're in them. Even then, make sure you're aware of your emotional temperature at all times. Mars and Uranus, which are conjunct today, describe a clash between personal and community interests -- therefore, orient yourself on cooperation and don't try too hard to stand out. Be real, be yourself, and notice (and feel) what's going on around you. Do your best to be part of what you say you belong to. Offer yourself a little more generously than you think you need to, or are being asked to. Everyone will feel better. Lovingly, ![]() ![]() ![]() New and Full Moons this April are potent astrological events that will continue the fiery theme that has been brewing through late March. One by one, planets have been transitioning from Pisces to Aries, tipping the feeling and experience of the astrology from water to fire. The New and Full Moons of April also bring us into the first of two eclipse seasons in 2013. Let's start with the Aries New Moon. That takes place April 10. For this event, there are six planets in Aries, five of them concentrated into a narrow band of sky with the new planet Eris at the center. You could call this the Eris New Moon. We'll have a 'proving moment' for Eris (discovered in 2005, named in 2006), when we get another example of how this planet works. Sometimes a New Moon close to a newly discovered planet will bring a revelation about what that planet is here to show us. Aries New Moon conjunct Eris Let's run through what's in Aries as of the New Moon on the 10th. Uranus is in there, about to make its third of seven squares to Pluto (that happens on May 20).
Eris is the sensation of 'all chaos, all the time'. It's the times we live in. I trace this back to the Sixties, though it's been ramping up exponentially year by year since then. Eris describes a state of global chaos as well as a personal sense of being overwhelmed. It's also about the persistent question 'who am I?' Yet one is fortunate to be in a position to ask that; typically, it's experienced as confusion. And there is plenty of that going around lately. Young people in particular have little in the way of structure they can hold onto, and if they do, they are also witnesses to a world that seems to be falling apart day by day. The twin conjunctions on either side of Eris seem to represent two possible states of relating. To one side is the Sun and the Moon -- an image of mother and father, or a traditional concept of relationship. To the other side is a conjunction of Venus and Mars, which is at least a meeting between two peers. However, in this equation Venus is in Mars's sign -- it's out of character. And while Mars rules Aries, it's not always feeling so confident there. This describes many modern relationships where men and women are out of character, or where people of the same sex are sorting out gender roles. So it's a little of the old and the new, side by side -- with a kind of chaos membrane between them. In reality, human relationships have more in common than social activists would like us to think. We are all people, alive at the same time, participating in the same society, doing our best to meet our emotional needs and offer what we can to others. Scorpio Full Moon - Partial Eclipse The Aries New Moon is followed by the Scorpio Full Moon of April 25. The Sun ingresses Taurus on April 19, and soon after is followed by the Full Moon. Planets will be ingressing Taurus through the month, and by the time of the Full Moon, Mars, the Sun, Pallas Athene, Venus and the South Node will be collected there.
The Sun is conjunct Mars, which lends passion and drive, as well as a need to express energy physically. I think this will be meaningful to honor, despite the possible distractions. That is the whole point of focusing passion -- to be able to keep your focus sufficiently to power through the noise, static and obstructions of the world. Taurus also has a mental quality that evades the very physicality that it represents. It can be lost in fantasy or lost in an idea of how things should be, or should have been. The mental quality of this event is hinted at by Venus conjunct asteroid Pallas Athene. Pallas was the goddess born directly from her daddy's head, in a full suit of armor, ready for action. That seems to color her whole delineation -- the notion of nonsexual birth, from dad, seemingly as the product of his mind. Just imagine her bursting out with her helmet and spear. Pallas therefore has a distinctly mental quality. We have an image of getting lost in one's head, doing too much to plot strategy or striving to impress others with one's intelligence. Pallas has a theme of daddy-pleasing, something we do more of than we think. In many ways the world is a story of daddy worship, from fussing over the pope to thinking the president runs the country to adherence by nearly everyone to patriarchal ways of organizing society -- even though we know there are alternatives. For this event, Mars is opposite the Moon. And the Moon is conjunct Saturn. These two aspects lend a reflective, heavy and at times frustrating quality. Fortunately this chart is an eclipse, and that's suggesting a theme of letting go of that which is frustrating. It may be necessary to take things from the mental level to the emotional level in order to work this out. It's not always obvious when your mind is tied up that your real situation is emotional in nature, which could imply physical -- emotions tend to be closer to the body than is the mind. This eclipse is the first of three. It's followed two weeks later by an annular eclipse of the Sun in Taurus. That happens May 9, in the season of Beltane. And then May 24-25, there is another lunar eclipse on the Sagittraius-Gemini axis. I'll have more about those charts a little closer to the events. ![]() The House of Representatives Thursday approved a group of measures that would keep the government running through September, but which preserved the 'sequestration' of federal money designed to starve all the programs that Republicans don't like. That is not a partisan statement -- this was the third version of the Paul Ryan budget, the same Paul Ryan who lost the election last November.
[Meanwhile, the Senate this week failed to pass a ban on assault weapons; Democratic leadership withdrew the measure, saying it didn't have the votes to carry.] The Republican budget law passed by the House Thursday is supposedly designed to balance the budget, but Ryan himself two weeks ago admitted that his budget was more of a philosophical statement. Still, that didn't stop the House from approving it. It has not gone to the Senate, and it would never pass there, so the House vote is a kind of token gesture. "We want to balance the budget. They don't," Ryan said Thursday. "We want to restrain spending. They want to spend more. We offer modernization, reform, growth and opportunity," he continued. "They want to cling to the status quo, more taxing, more spending, more borrowing." What you have here is a longterm issue -- the national debt -- being treated like an immediate problem. It would be like waking up one day realizing that you're $150,000 in debt and need to pay it off all at once, rather than just paying your mortgage on time. Ryan's proposal depends on repealing the Affordable Care Act to balance the budget, which this week the Republicans tried to do for the 34th time. Michele Bachmann, the wannabe presidential candidate, introduced yet another law to repeal the ACA, saying, "That's why we're here because we're saying let's repeal this failure before it literally kills women, kills children, kills senior citizens. Let's not do that. Let's love people, let's care about people. Let's repeal it now while we can." Don't miss the video of Bachmann's diatribe on the House floor Thursday. It's really worth 33 seconds of your time. ![]() Unsurprisingly, Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein's proposed ban on assault weapons was too tough a sell for NRA-cowed Democrats in the U.S. Congress. Had it already been part of the gun-control package moving forward (which is undefined at this time, but could include universal background checks), it would have taken 60 votes to remove it. At least, that was Feinstein's argument; that voting it out of a package would be harder to do than passing the entire package in the wake of the Newtown, Connecticut massacre late last year. Senate majority leader Harry Reid saw things differently, explaining to reporters that the necessary votes just weren't there. "I've worked 40 years on these issues -- guns. I've seen so much violence," a shaken and frustrated Feinstein told reporters Tuesday. In 1978, while working as the San Francisco County supervisor, Feinstein found the body of Harvey Milk after he and Mayor George Moscone were shot by Dan White. In 1994, following a mass shooting at a San Francisco high-rise, she successfully pushed for the Federal Assault Weapons Ban. That ban expired in 2004. Meanwhile in Colorado, home of last summer's movie theater shooting rampage in Aurora, there is more gun-related success and sadness. Earlier this week, Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper signed legislation enacting gun control laws with some actual teeth. Ammunition magazines will be limited to 15 rounds (not exactly paltry); background checks will be expanded; domestic abusers must surrender their guns; and online concealed-carry permits will be banned. Almost as if to prove some kind of point, on the eve of the gun law signing ceremony an unknown assailant shot and killed Tom Clements, the head of Colorado's prison system. Clements had answered the doorbell; police there do not believe the shooting was random. No shit. ![]() Food Democracy Now! announced late Thursday that Congress passed the Continuing Resolution spending bill, HR 933, that contains the dangerous Monsanto Protection Act (Section 735) we reported on last Friday. Section 735 strips the important concept of "judicial review" from our courts and allows GMO crops to be planted while appeals to stop them are still being heard. The bill now moves to President Obama for his signature. If you want to stop the bill from becoming law, here's a petition to the president. Grocers Say No to GMO Frankensalmon Retail grocers representing some 2,000 individual stores and food chains, today said they would not carry AquaBounty Technologies' GMO salmon, regardless of the FDA's future decision on its approval. This is the first organized grocer boycott of the genetically engineered [GE or GMO] salmon.
"GE fish only advances if there is a market to buy it. Today's announcement of a huge number of seafood retailers stating their refusal to buy the fish shows that FDA approval won't be the last word on this important debate about what consumers want their future fish to be," said George Leonard, a scientist with Ocean Conservancy who testified before Congress on the GMO salmon. Concerns include whether the salmon is safe to eat and potential escapes from the farms where they are raised. The offspring of wild salmon that crossbreed with them could be exposed to unknown genetic consequences, harming the species and contaminating them as a food supply. The Campaign for Genetically Engineered-Free Seafood is being led by consumer and environmental groups, including Friends of the Earth, Center for Food Safety, Food and Water Watch, and Consumers Union. No other genetically engineered fish is on the market, but according to the Center for Food Safety "at least 35 other species of GE fish are currently being developed around the world, including trout, catfish, tilapia, striped bass, flounder, and many species of salmon." ![]() War on Iran Delayed Til 2014 In a rather ambiguous announcement, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has stated that it will probably take Iran about a year to manufacture a nuclear weapon, if they decide to do so. President Obama -- making his first trip to Israel as president of the United States -- seemed to concur that this was enough time to wait before taking military action against Iran, saying: "We prefer to resolve this diplomatically. And there's still time to do so. Iran's leaders must understand, however, that they have to meet their international obligations. And meanwhile, the international community will continue to increase the pressure on the Iranian government. The United States will continue to consult closely with Israel on next steps. And I will repeat: All options are on the table." It's a nice little mitzvah for Israel right before Passover, what with Obama citing an "unbreakable bond" with the country and vowing to extend billions of dollars in annual U.S. aid. The two men displayed a friendly, avuncular joking relationship during the press conference, and Chuck Todd of MSNBC got in four questions when he's only allowed one. Clearly these world leaders were feeling pleased with themselves. But if you read between the lines, it sounds rather like Netanyahu and Obama have agreed to delay war on Iran until at least 2014. And, glaringly, Obama has made no mention of the illegal Israeli settlements on occupied Palestinian land. Obama is now touring the West Bank for talks with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. We'll see if he notices the new tent camp aimed at stopping the expansion of West Bank settlement that a group of activists erected ahead of his visit. Said Palestinian lawmaker Mustafa Barghouthi, "It is [Obama's] duty to see the Israeli apartheid system and the system of segregation that his ancestors suffered from." It remains to be seen whether Israeli forces will raid the camp now, or after Obama leaves. ![]() Small Cause, Big Effect? The operator of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant said Wednesday it believed a rat was the cause of an extended blackout that disabled the plant's cooling system this week -- a disturbing reminder of how very little it can take to bring on catastrophe. Tokyo Electric Power Company's engineers found the charred body of a rat inside a faulty switchboard. They believed it had short-circuited the switchboard, perhaps by chewing on the wires. The power failure began Monday, cutting off the flow of cooling water to four pools used to store more than 8,800 nuclear fuel rods. All of the affected pools were expected to be cooled by Wednesday, according to a New York Times article. Last week Fukushima and the people of Japan (indeed, people around the world) marked the two-year anniversary of a triple meltdown at the plant in March 2011 after a huge earthquake and tsunami knocked out cooling systems. "The spent fuel pools have been a particular source of concern because they contain far more radioactive material than the three reactor cores that melted down two years ago, forcing the evacuation of 160,000 people," the article said. ![]() ![]() Part of "Modern Movement," the latest installment in museum security guard Todd Balthazor's comic strip, "It Is What It Is." Todd is a security guard at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis. When Life Imitates Art Imitating Lifeā¦ A recent New York Times feature on the secret lives of museum security guards introduced one Todd Balthazor to the world beyond Minneapolis: art school grad, cartoonist, on-the-job yoga practitioner and cultural satirist. "I'm stretching all the time," said Balthazor. "You have to do that, or else you are going to stiffen up. We have some elderly workers, and they just walk like trees." He also keeps his sense of humor and his drawing skills limber by drawing the cartoon It Is What It Is, based on his encounters working at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The Walker features the strip on its blog about twice per month. Hopefully that's more often than Balthazor has to resort to memorizing museum visitors' outfits and holding his breath to stay mentally sharp, surrounded by people ‘photo bombing' major artworks for their hipster Facebook profiles. ![]() Equinox, Iraq War and the Founder of Monsanto In this week's edition, I cover the chart for the Aries equinox and the forthcoming aspect Mars conjunct Uranus in Aries. Then I look at two anniversary charts -- the beginning of the Iraq war 10 years ago today, and the death of John F. Queeny, the founder of Monsanto, 80 years ago Tuesday. In the Iraq war discussion, I mention how this scam grew out of a bigger fraud, which was the Sept. 11, 2001 incident; here's a recent article from the member archives studying that event. I also mention an International Astrology Day celebration hosted by Kepler College, the only college in the U.S. devoted to astrology. ![]() Your Monthly Horoscopes -- and our Publishing Schedule Notes The March monthly extended horoscopes were published Friday, Feb. 22. Inner Space for March was published Tuesday, Feb. 26. We published the Moonshine Horoscope for the Pisces New Moon on Tuesday, March 5th. Note that the longer monthly horoscope is being incorporated into the Friday issue after the Sun has entered a new sign; a new Inner Space is still emailed on the following Tuesday. The Moonshine horoscopes for the Libra Full Moon will be published Tuesday, March 26. Your April Monthly Horoscope is below in this issue. (standing in for weekly horoscope #943) Early Aries Birthdays (and Early Aries Rising) ![]() ![]() Order your 2013 reading from Eric Francis now, in LISTEN, the 2013 annual edition of Planet Waves. As a subscriber you can still get all 12 signs for the price of three. This is a detailed written and audio reading that you will love. You can also purchase signs one at a time (including audio and written, prior to our splitting those two products).
![]() Order your 2013 reading from Eric Francis now, in LISTEN, the 2013 annual edition of Planet Waves. As a subscriber you can still get all 12 signs for the price of three. This is a detailed written and audio reading that you will love. You can also purchase signs one at a time (including audio and written, prior to our splitting those two products).
![]() Order your 2013 reading from Eric Francis now, in LISTEN, the 2013 annual edition of Planet Waves. As a subscriber you can still get all 12 signs for the price of three. This is a detailed written and audio reading that you will love. You can also purchase signs one at a time (including audio and written, prior to our splitting those two products).
![]() Order your 2013 reading from Eric Francis now, in LISTEN, the 2013 annual edition of Planet Waves. As a subscriber you can still get all 12 signs for the price of three. This is a detailed written and audio reading that you will love. You can also purchase signs one at a time (including audio and written, prior to our splitting those two products).
![]() Order your 2013 reading from Eric Francis now, in LISTEN, the 2013 annual edition of Planet Waves. As a subscriber you can still get all 12 signs for the price of three. This is a detailed written and audio reading that you will love. You can also purchase signs one at a time (including audio and written, prior to our splitting those two products).
![]() Order your 2013 reading from Eric Francis now, in LISTEN, the 2013 annual edition of Planet Waves. As a subscriber you can still get all 12 signs for the price of three. This is a detailed written and audio reading that you will love. You can also purchase signs one at a time (including audio and written, prior to our splitting those two products).
![]() Order your 2013 reading from Eric Francis now, in LISTEN, the 2013 annual edition of Planet Waves. As a subscriber you can still get all 12 signs for the price of three. This is a detailed written and audio reading that you will love. You can also purchase signs one at a time (including audio and written, prior to our splitting those two products).
![]() Order your 2013 reading from Eric Francis now, in LISTEN, the 2013 annual edition of Planet Waves. As a subscriber you can still get all 12 signs for the price of three. This is a detailed written and audio reading that you will love. You can also purchase signs one at a time (including audio and written, prior to our splitting those two products).
![]() Order your 2013 reading from Eric Francis now, in LISTEN, the 2013 annual edition of Planet Waves. As a subscriber you can still get all 12 signs for the price of three. This is a detailed written and audio reading that you will love. You can also purchase signs one at a time (including audio and written, prior to our splitting those two products).
![]() Order your 2013 reading from Eric Francis now, in LISTEN, the 2013 annual edition of Planet Waves. As a subscriber you can still get all 12 signs for the price of three. This is a detailed written and audio reading that you will love. You can also purchase signs one at a time (including audio and written, prior to our splitting those two products).
![]() Order your 2013 reading from Eric Francis now, in LISTEN, the 2013 annual edition of Planet Waves. As a subscriber you can still get all 12 signs for the price of three. This is a detailed written and audio reading that you will love. You can also purchase signs one at a time (including audio and written, prior to our splitting those two products).
![]() Hello Pisces! So many planets in Pisces means this is a brilliant moment for you, and your 2013 birthday reading looks at this astrology carefully. Chiron, the planet of healing, Neptune, planet of inspiration, and Mercury retrograde are all included. You now have the ability to develop a gift for business and financial success, if you focus your creative talents and work cooperatively with others -- and I explain how to do that effectively. This reading is two 40-minute sessions of astrology, a tarot reading and an extended written description of your astrological sign. I've also included access to last year's reading so you can review the past 12 months and check my accuracy. Here is a link to that affordably priced reading -- which is like an extended, personal meditation on your life. You will love it -- promise. ![]() Order your 2013 reading from Eric Francis now, in LISTEN, the 2013 annual edition of Planet Waves. As a subscriber you can still get all 12 signs for the price of three. This is a detailed written and audio reading that you will love. You can also purchase signs one at a time (including audio and written, prior to our splitting those two products).
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