Astrology Today: The Oracle for Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Today’s Oracle takes us to the Scorpio weekly of Jan. 6, 2006

The Oracle.

People who hold injuries from the past don’t often want to hear that this is an optional state of affairs. All injuries are in some way the result of the past, so I may seem to be proposing that holding onto pain is unnecessary. It all depends on who you ask. If you ask the people who hold onto their pain, they will tell you it is in fact necessary. If you ask the people who have let go of their pain, they will tell you pain is not necessary and probably offer some details. So, what I am really saying, is be careful who you ask, and even more careful whose answer you accept as the truth.

(The Daily Oracle is a random selection from one of 10,000 Eric Francis horoscopes. New horoscopes by Eric are published weekly plus twice a month in Planet Waves Astrology News and Planet Waves Light. The Oracle itself is a divination tool available to subscribers to either of these services.)

2 thoughts on “Astrology Today: The Oracle for Tuesday, April 5, 2011”

  1. I forgot to say that revisiting the depths of where that first poem came from brought up some deep sadness that took me a while to recover from. By a while I mean a half hour to 45 minutes or so. To revisit those places is painful. But it’s worth doing for a purpose, whether it’s to improve performance art or help another human being. But it’s not something I live with day to day anymore.

  2. It sounds like to me that “holding onto injuries from the past,” and people who are “holding onto their pain” are stuck in unforgiveness. I had the opportunity to revisit the past in a performance class for poets a couple of weekends ago now where I was encouraged to go inside, not just to the words I had written, but also to where those words had come from. And that poem came from a time when I was working through my feelings about being sexually abused by my dad and was not yet in forgiveness with him. Here is the poem I read:

    Dracula’s Cat

    Our incisors, long and sharp
    our eyes reflecting red
    in headlights of cars

    We prowled the night looking
    for love and sustenance.

    He had a taste for young girls
    well under the age of consent, and I
    trailed along after

    The sewer rats he attracted.
    He had a magnetic personality.

    He liked ’em young, he’d say
    their blood sweet and untainted
    with nicotine and formaldehyde

    Virgins were his special treat,
    although those with previous violations
    were easier targets

    Already cast in roles of
    submission to forces beyond their control.

    This next poem is recent, written well after I had “found my way down the secret path of forgiveness.”

    Dear Daddy
    I remember the night
    you made yourself

    Stop

    My eyes shining up at
    you in the moonlight
    at midnight

    My eyes the dividing line between
    you and our agreement
    the forgetting part
    of forgiveness

    You made yourself stop
    thinking I would
    remember to
    forget

    and I did forget
    for decades
    everything but that
    last visit
    when you stopped yourself
    before my shining eyes

    You thought that my forgetting would
    keep me safe
    from your betrayal

    Not knowing that
    others would immediately
    forge ahead

    On the path of our
    agreement
    already so solidly
    so firmly tamped down

    Silence

    I learned it
    all too well
    applying it
    in my four year old mind
    to all who came after
    the ones I didn’t forget
    to remember

    Only one careful enough
    to threaten me
    for it

    my silence
    for your life

    “Don’t tell your father.
    He’ll kill me and then
    go to prison for it.”

    I protected you
    you didn’t kill anyone
    but still I failed somehow

    To save you from prison
    the bars went up in your eyes
    the gates slammed shut
    on your heart

    And they stayed shut
    even after I found my way
    down the secret path
    of forgiveness

    Until you came to my home
    in hospice and
    death’s kindness finally
    opened your eyes

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