Post by Sowelu on Apr 10, 2005 1:59:40 GMT -5
stars.metawire.com/ericfrancis/eric.html
Friday 8th April 2005
What on Earth is happening now?
Dear Readers and Faithful Pilgrims:
The astrology this week is the approximate equivalent of a 98-degree heat wave striking New York City in July. The focal point continues to be on Aries. This article deals with one question that many are pondering -- "What on Earth is happening now?" Next week I will handle a whole raft load of your individual questions about the impact of eclipses, the current eclipses, and a few more relating to Mercury retrograde. This week I feel it's worth approaching the subject in its wider form a bit more journalistically.
Many, many questions are coming in with the same theme: how does these eclipses impact me? If Friday's eclipse is near your natal Sun, Moon or Ascendant, or if it meets any of those points in a 90-degree or 180 degree aspect, this is definitely a personal turning point for you. There can be sudden transitions, revelations of what you need, or need to do; and situations where people arrive into your life, leave your life, or take on new roles in your life. Involvement of Moon can affect physical spaces. Involvement of the Sun can affect our role in the world, and how we express ourselves. Aspects to the ascendant can shape how we see ourselves, experience ourselves, and project our sense of inner reality. If the eclipse falls particularly close to any one of these points, you can be faithful that this is a time of truly significant change.
No doubt, many people are in a time of enormous transition. Look at yourself, and listen to the stories people are telling you. We've lived through some intense planetary alignments the past two weeks, however, a lot of astrology has yet to happen; we are still (as of this posting Thursday night) on the eve of one eclipse, there is a second one in two weeks, and Mercury is in the process of stationing direct in early Aries. In the March 18 edition of this series, I offered a preview of what was coming in these weeks -- please have a look when you get a chance. That entry covered the associations of many astrological events focused on the Aries Point -- that is, on or near the beginning of the sign Aries, and suggested that it would be a moment when the world seemed to go a little wild.
If your own life is going a little wild, or if you're feeling especially restless, focus on the primary question of Aries: "Who am I, and what am I doing here?" This is a question that has a lot of currency right now. Then, while you're asking the question, make your decisions one at a time as the need arises, and trust the process of synchronicity to take you where you need to be. Eclipses are a time to meditate on the idea that all things work together for good.
Let's begin with the basics, and with a chart -- one of two that's clearly at the hub of the action -- Friday's eclipse. The other is the Mercury station direct chart for April 12, to which you've got a link to the Planet Waves chart library. Note also that we are currently experiencing a long conjunction of Venus and the Sun, the first since the momentous Venus transit of the Sun last June. That, too, was an eclipse-like event, which even from this distance is influential in the current affairs of the world.
This is the chart for the first solar eclipse of the year, set for the Vatican, where the action seems to be centered. It's an odd kind of eclipse called a 'hybrid eclipse', part annular and part total. A total eclipse is when the Sun is completely covered by the disk of the Moon. An annular eclipse is one where the alignment is close enough to cover the disk of the Sun, but where the Moon is too far from the Earth to be large enough to do so fully. Astrologer Lynn Bell pointed me to the NASA web page's definition of hybrid eclipse, which I include for scientific curiosity and journalistic accuracy. I don't recognize some of the terms, and hopefully by the end of this article I'll have some ideas about the astrological symbolism:
"A hybrid eclipse is a unique type of central eclipse where parts of the path [the path of the Moon's shadow on the Earth] are annular while other parts are total. This duality comes about when the vertex of the Moon's umbral shadow pierces Earth's surface at some points, but falls short of the planet along other portions of the eclipse path. The curvature of Earth's surface brings some geographic locations along the path into the umbra while other positions are more distant and enter the antumbral rather than umbral shadow. In most cases (like in 2005), the hybrid eclipse begins annular, changes to total for the central portion of the path, and then converts back to annular towards the end of the path."
So this is, in a sense, two eclipses in one. Eclipses and other astronomical events gain their symbolic power from their rarity or uniqueness. Here we have a good specimen of an interesting, fairly rare occurrence that is surrounded by the world being in a rather rare (or perhaps even raw) state of affairs. By the way, most of the eclipse path is through the South Pacific Ocean, and it touches Central America at the end. It will be visible mostly from tiny islands scattered around the Pacific, and then from Panama and surrounds.
Looking at the chart, we see the eclipse falls in the 5th house in Rome, as it will for most of Europe. It happens in the mid-evening on this side of the Atlantic, which is when the Sun is in the 5th. Count the houses starting with the left-hand vertical house where you see the blue circle with the x (the part of fortune) and the little purple question mark (Ceres, the largest 'asteroid', really a planet). That's the 1st house. Notice that Scorpio is rising, which is an appropriate symbol for a chart that is centered on a funerary ritual within which the whole world is participating. So, too, is Ceres in Scorpio, retrograde. Ceres often addresses the grief and pain of mothers. She has other associations with the Earth, with nourishment and with food in general, but retrograde in Scorpio is a reference to ancient grief of women. As we will see, the theme of women comes up many times in this chart.
Mars, the ascendant ruler, does some interesting things as well -- note that it's in a conjunction to Neptune, which I'll come back to.
Count the houses anti-clockwise from the 1st. Let's start in the 5th house. The eclipse is part of a grouping that includes the yellow circle (Sun), the gray crescent (Moon), Venus in blue and the North Node of the Moon, a little horseshoe, in orange. Whenever you see the Sun near either of the Moon's nodes in any chart, you can be sure that there is an eclipse or two in the vicinity.
(continued below)
Friday 8th April 2005
What on Earth is happening now?
Dear Readers and Faithful Pilgrims:
The astrology this week is the approximate equivalent of a 98-degree heat wave striking New York City in July. The focal point continues to be on Aries. This article deals with one question that many are pondering -- "What on Earth is happening now?" Next week I will handle a whole raft load of your individual questions about the impact of eclipses, the current eclipses, and a few more relating to Mercury retrograde. This week I feel it's worth approaching the subject in its wider form a bit more journalistically.
Many, many questions are coming in with the same theme: how does these eclipses impact me? If Friday's eclipse is near your natal Sun, Moon or Ascendant, or if it meets any of those points in a 90-degree or 180 degree aspect, this is definitely a personal turning point for you. There can be sudden transitions, revelations of what you need, or need to do; and situations where people arrive into your life, leave your life, or take on new roles in your life. Involvement of Moon can affect physical spaces. Involvement of the Sun can affect our role in the world, and how we express ourselves. Aspects to the ascendant can shape how we see ourselves, experience ourselves, and project our sense of inner reality. If the eclipse falls particularly close to any one of these points, you can be faithful that this is a time of truly significant change.
No doubt, many people are in a time of enormous transition. Look at yourself, and listen to the stories people are telling you. We've lived through some intense planetary alignments the past two weeks, however, a lot of astrology has yet to happen; we are still (as of this posting Thursday night) on the eve of one eclipse, there is a second one in two weeks, and Mercury is in the process of stationing direct in early Aries. In the March 18 edition of this series, I offered a preview of what was coming in these weeks -- please have a look when you get a chance. That entry covered the associations of many astrological events focused on the Aries Point -- that is, on or near the beginning of the sign Aries, and suggested that it would be a moment when the world seemed to go a little wild.
If your own life is going a little wild, or if you're feeling especially restless, focus on the primary question of Aries: "Who am I, and what am I doing here?" This is a question that has a lot of currency right now. Then, while you're asking the question, make your decisions one at a time as the need arises, and trust the process of synchronicity to take you where you need to be. Eclipses are a time to meditate on the idea that all things work together for good.
Let's begin with the basics, and with a chart -- one of two that's clearly at the hub of the action -- Friday's eclipse. The other is the Mercury station direct chart for April 12, to which you've got a link to the Planet Waves chart library. Note also that we are currently experiencing a long conjunction of Venus and the Sun, the first since the momentous Venus transit of the Sun last June. That, too, was an eclipse-like event, which even from this distance is influential in the current affairs of the world.
This is the chart for the first solar eclipse of the year, set for the Vatican, where the action seems to be centered. It's an odd kind of eclipse called a 'hybrid eclipse', part annular and part total. A total eclipse is when the Sun is completely covered by the disk of the Moon. An annular eclipse is one where the alignment is close enough to cover the disk of the Sun, but where the Moon is too far from the Earth to be large enough to do so fully. Astrologer Lynn Bell pointed me to the NASA web page's definition of hybrid eclipse, which I include for scientific curiosity and journalistic accuracy. I don't recognize some of the terms, and hopefully by the end of this article I'll have some ideas about the astrological symbolism:
"A hybrid eclipse is a unique type of central eclipse where parts of the path [the path of the Moon's shadow on the Earth] are annular while other parts are total. This duality comes about when the vertex of the Moon's umbral shadow pierces Earth's surface at some points, but falls short of the planet along other portions of the eclipse path. The curvature of Earth's surface brings some geographic locations along the path into the umbra while other positions are more distant and enter the antumbral rather than umbral shadow. In most cases (like in 2005), the hybrid eclipse begins annular, changes to total for the central portion of the path, and then converts back to annular towards the end of the path."
So this is, in a sense, two eclipses in one. Eclipses and other astronomical events gain their symbolic power from their rarity or uniqueness. Here we have a good specimen of an interesting, fairly rare occurrence that is surrounded by the world being in a rather rare (or perhaps even raw) state of affairs. By the way, most of the eclipse path is through the South Pacific Ocean, and it touches Central America at the end. It will be visible mostly from tiny islands scattered around the Pacific, and then from Panama and surrounds.
Looking at the chart, we see the eclipse falls in the 5th house in Rome, as it will for most of Europe. It happens in the mid-evening on this side of the Atlantic, which is when the Sun is in the 5th. Count the houses starting with the left-hand vertical house where you see the blue circle with the x (the part of fortune) and the little purple question mark (Ceres, the largest 'asteroid', really a planet). That's the 1st house. Notice that Scorpio is rising, which is an appropriate symbol for a chart that is centered on a funerary ritual within which the whole world is participating. So, too, is Ceres in Scorpio, retrograde. Ceres often addresses the grief and pain of mothers. She has other associations with the Earth, with nourishment and with food in general, but retrograde in Scorpio is a reference to ancient grief of women. As we will see, the theme of women comes up many times in this chart.
Mars, the ascendant ruler, does some interesting things as well -- note that it's in a conjunction to Neptune, which I'll come back to.
Count the houses anti-clockwise from the 1st. Let's start in the 5th house. The eclipse is part of a grouping that includes the yellow circle (Sun), the gray crescent (Moon), Venus in blue and the North Node of the Moon, a little horseshoe, in orange. Whenever you see the Sun near either of the Moon's nodes in any chart, you can be sure that there is an eclipse or two in the vicinity.
(continued below)