I suppose
I’m always grappling to have a soul. And I get glimpses occasionally of how to
do it in this culture, where for a long time we have been truncated by what
Jung’s spirit guide called ‘the poison pill of science’.
I’ve been
influenced more recently by Patrick Harpur’s book The Philosopher’s Secret
Fire, in which science is presented as a series of mythologies. I like to view
everything as mythology, and that way you don’t need to oppose anything. For
when things are soulful, there is flow, you let the whole of reality flow
through you.
Fundamentalism,
the idea that there is only one true reality, whether scientific, Islamic,
free-market capitalist, liberal democratic or whatever, stands in the way of
soulfulness, that flow that connects the individual to the whole universe.
BUT.. fundamentalism is just another mythology, it’s just a story that things
are only one way. Viewed like that, it doesn’t need to be opposed, you can just
let it flow through.
I think
there’s probably always been fundamentalism, or degrees of it. It happens
whenever we try to fix things as like this or like that. It’s probably human
nature. So that’s another reason not to oppose it. Which is different to
disagreeing with it.
Soulfulness and inwardly taking a stand against a group of
people – whether it’s bankers or right wing politicians or Monsanto or hippies or lefties – are not
compatible. That doesn’t mean not protesting at some of the things people
do. But to do that, and not become inwardly polarised and dismissive, is
difficult and, I think, quite unusual.
I often come
back to the 4 elements in astrology. I can overlook them because they are so
basic, but they are powerful and tell us a lot. They each have their soulfulness.
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Incidentally,
one of my arguments for science being a sub-branch of astrology – instead of,
impertinently, science claiming to stand in judgement over astrology – is that
astrology is a system of knowledge that uses all 4 elements, whereas science
really only uses 2, Air and Earth, and is therefore only a partial system.
Science theorises (Air) about observed
results (Earth). Astrology also sees intuition (Fire) and feeling (Water) as
means to knowledge. This is why I find it hard to get my head around the academic study
of astrology, or any of the arts and humanities, because academia is
nowadays in thrall to such a large extent to science and its dry and partial
methods.
At a seminar
I was at many years ago, Liz Greene pointed out that if an element is lacking
in a person’s chart, it can become a major focus of that person’s life (can become – they may also live quite
happily without it!) If we have several planets in an element, she said, that
element is well-adapted in us, it is civilised and easily useable. If it is
lacking, on the other hand, it is undifferentiated from Nature, and therefore can
carry for us the raw power and creativity that you find in Nature.
The classic
example is Einstein, who had just one Air planet, Jupiter in Aquarius in the 9th, square to Pluto and opposite Uranus.
Yet his ideas changed the way we saw the universe, they had that kind of raw
power. Aquarius is science and innovation, Jupiter is philosophical and
expansive, the 9th House is ‘higher’ learning and teaching. (As Neptune has passed over his Jupiter in the last few years, so has Facebook been filled with bogus Einstein quotes!)
A perhaps cruder
example is Arnold Schwarzenegger, who has one earth planet, Moon in Capricorn in
the 6th House. From the body-building Mr Universe to the Terminator,
the emphasis has been on raw earth power. The Moon is embodiment, the 6th
House is health, Capricorn has practical ambition.
Last night I
was back in my yurt after several weeks off because of the weather. The yurt is
in a field with a mare and foal, up and behind the house. When it’s cold and
wet it’s not so good, but when it’s warm it’s like heaven. It’s silent, with a
view over the Teign valley. And in many ways it’s the Earth element.
I have one
personal planet in Earth (Mars) and one sort-of-personal planet in Water
(Jupiter). I am drawn to people and situations that have those elements, they
can carry a deep attraction for me because I don’t experience them readily for
myself. I carry Air and Fire in me, I don’t need to go and find them. But when
I go to the yurt after a break, I remember earth, soulful earth, which I tend
to forget about. My partner has 5 planets in water, and that has a deep draw
for me, being around her I learn water.
Of course,
those elements can be soulless. A bank, for example, could easily be soulless
earth (though remember TS Eliot worked in one!) You could say that Neptune is
the planet of soulfulness: it flows, it connects, it feels. And you could say
that Saturn is the planet of soullessness: it can value things and people one-sidedly
in terms of usefulness and money. Of course, Neptune can be in a bit of a
dream, never quite connecting with life, never quite growing up. And Saturn can
be the opposite, connected and real.
I like the
combination of Saturn and Neptune: the embodiment (Saturn) of Soul (Neptune). Saturn
needs to be in the service of the outer planet Neptune, but it’s often the
other way round, because Saturn is the more obvious, tangible planet. Saturn,
for example, trying to make something 9 to 5 that can’t be 9 to 5. Saturn, for
example, as manager in the Health Service (Neptune), where counselling is given
in a series of 6 sessions, the aims clarified at the start and the outcome measured
at the end. People, of course, do not work that way. This is Saturn dominating
Neptune.
As William
Blake said, the Body is that part of the Soul which the 5 senses perceive. Neptune
is so much bigger than Saturn.
5 comments:
Beautiful, insightful. Thanks
Thank you for such a thoughtful, soulful post - and thank you too for pointing me in the direction of The Philosopher’s Secret Fire, which I've just ordered from Amazon. I'm writing a series of novels on the theme of science and religion as mythology and this seems a fascinating look at the subject.
I'm all earth and fire, myself, not much in water, only Chiron and MC in air. My partner is a double Gemini and I write for a living.
Lovely post. Thank you.
Thanks so much! I have Saturn in Pisces at 29 degrees in my 6th house in my natal chart. I was perplexed by the Sabian and Kozminsky symbol interpretations but have managed to find more meaning. Your column as always has helped me once again to add more depth to my interpretation.
Gosh! What I needed! Very insightful, specially the part about Saturn and Neptune. Thanks!
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