I woke up
this morning with a good dose of self-doubt, but also knowing it would appear a
lot better once I was up and about! Partly it’s just a vitality thing, once you’re
up you have more energy to deal with stuff. But also at night your guards are
down, the underworld and its demons reveal themselves, which I’m sure is a good
thing, providing we can see it as that.
It’s a
fragile thing, our consciousness, it has to keep switching itself off to
re-group. It’s like a bubble on the surface of a pond. At night we merge into
the pond. At death we merge into the pond.
And then my
thoughts drifted to the Soul of the World. The split in our culture between
inner and outer. Inner is where the soul is, it’s the place of feeling and interiority
and psychotherapy. Outer has become the place of science, the blind, mechanical,
meaningless universe that (at worst) it envisages.
James
Hillman has pointed out that Soul needs to be restored to the world, to bring us back to how
the ancients felt. Otherwise psychotherapy is of no use to the world, it does not
change it. I have heard
or read 2 people in the last day talking about Teilhard de Chardin (who I have
not read) in this respect. As a balance, in one instance, to Jung, who tended
to locate the Soul within. And that de Chardin locates it without, seeing the
whole universe as one big ensouled evolutionary process (albeit from a Catholic
perspective.) (See The Archetypal Cosmos by
Kieron Le Grice.)
de Chardin had Sun in Taurus conjunct Neptune - the Soul (Neptune) in Nature (Taurus). Jung had Sun in Leo square to Neptune - the Soul (Neptune) in the individual (Leo).
And all this
connects with the planet I want to say something about, Saturn. I did a vlog on
him, and the picture quality was crap and I haven’t got time to sort it, so
here goes.
Saturn is
the planet that helps us ground our lives, to give it shape, to take our spirit
if you like and make it take form in matter. He is the planet who says “Don’t
tell me about your visions unless they grow corn.”
_________________________________
Ad Break: I offer webcam astrology
readings (£40 for 60 mins, £60 for 90 mins - ish!). Contact:
Dharmaruci71(at)hotmail.com._________________________________
He is the
planet of responsibility, hard work, patience, discipline and on a deeper
level, setting our goals, even our vocation, in the world – he is the natural ruler of the 10th
house. But those qualities of responsibility etc don’t necessarily come easily
when we are young, which is why the Saturn Return, aged 29 or 30, can be tough.
By the time of our second Saturn Return, however, aged about 58, we know those Saturnian
qualities, they are second nature, so Saturn becomes a planet of abundance
instead of restriction.
He was
classically one of the bad guys (along with Mars), but nowadays we say it’s
about learning to work him, learning his qualities. Venus-Saturn has a particularly
bad press, but I don’t
think it need be like that.
Venus of all
planets needs Saturn. Venus is romance, Saturn is common sense. They are in
that sense opposites. Saturn on his own can marry someone just for the money or
social position, Venus on her own can marry someone just because they look like
a god or buy her flowers. Put them together, give them 20 or 30 years, and you can get some sound
judgement around relationships. And relationships that work.
So Saturn at
large makes our lives real, actual. Because of the split in our culture between
spirit and matter, because of the denial of spirit by Saturnian science and by our
‘work ethic’ (with its promise of salvation), people on some sort of mission for a wider meaning often have a hard time
with Saturn. Creating a life that works, that does not look down on and reject
society (as banal or run by ‘evil’ capitalists or governments or whatever), yet
keeps the sense of vision.
The
imbalance is also the other way: we have become so good at creating wealth and
inventing new technologies, that pursuing that is all that can seem to matter. This is negative Saturn:
you are only what can be measured, the ‘inner’ does not exist.
This is
often the problem where you see the Sun in hard aspect to Saturn. These people
are very good at working hard, at achieving, but it is never enough, they are
not ease with themselves, they cannot stop. The Sun is in square to Saturn in
the US Chart, and you see it there, the great ability to achieve, to send men
to the Moon and to become the world richest and most powerful nation; but tremendous
judgement around it, dividing people into winners and losers, only feeling OK
if you’re working hard. That’s another bit of Saturn – the snobbery, the
creation of hierarchies of wealth and social position and the invidious looking
down on others and the (secret) worship of those ‘above’ you.
So Saturn can
scoop you out, in the sense that only that which can be measured has value. BUT, he can also be a
protector of the inner world. He creates boundaries, and negatively this can
mean loneliness and isolation (as in Venus-Saturn, until we have learnt his
lessons). But positively it can mean solitude, the monk's cell, the alchemical
crucible, the conditions for inner work.
So this is
the point I want to make about Saturn. He is not just the worldly taskmaster
telling you to get on your bike. He has an inner quality which in our world we
tend to undervalue and forget. He can help us listen to ourselves, to what we
are feeling, he protects us from all those voices – many of them internalised –
telling us what we ‘should’ be doing, or that we’re not good enough. Saturn has
a discerning quality, he can show us what to listen to within, and what to acknowledge
but not to heed.
Above all,
because he judges and measures, he can help us place value on the inner world,
on feeling, and help us shut out the voices that say otherwise, that say being
busy and working is all that matters. I have a picture of a bottle of medicine in my
head, it’s called Saturn’s Remedy, and it’s a dark liquid and we need to take
it once, maybe twice a day and it has a picture of a benevolent looking Saturn on
the label and the medicine has a kind of magical quality that takes us inwards
to another world.
3 comments:
I have Venus sq Saturn natally and have dealt with all the typical unfortunate qualities of that for most of my life. However, as I get older I am just beginning to feel that aspect maturing a little and becoming more positive. The solar eclipse tomorrow is conjunct my Saturn in the 5th house (and square my Venus, of course) so that should be interesting!
Interesting view on Saturn. I want to re-read Chardin's "The Human Phenomenon" while having a spoon full of Saturn's Remedy!
Yea, that would do fine (At least for now)
Cheers,
Nic
I feel a bit deja vu, responding to your Saturn post....the Pluto was a dozzie...anyhow...mmm
Venus and Saturn, I'm not convinced. As the first commenter said, the practical reality is not so teleological nor pedigogical...the two planets are pretty incompatible really, particularly in square aspect. (BTW do you have Venus/Saturn natally?) Venus needs to flow, to be natural, of the 'essence' if you like, Saturn is boundaries and restrictions and socially regulated value. Saturn definitely restricts Venus, particularly in close relationships. I have seen the aspect work somewhat positively when the person is in business. Then it seems to underscore all their interactions with people, but nevertheless it still gives a coldness and calculating feeling to all relationships. Like someone has sat down and worked out a productivity assessment on each interaction. More personally it just denies relationship, Venus is a social planet, it is about giving and receiving affection and warmth, Saturn, as you said, is master of interiority and self-sufficiency, hard work and discipline. If you apply that to Venus, you are more likely to kill it than to 'mature' it. Too many restrictions and obstacles and boundaries and lack of social acceptance and lack of opportunity and Venus just disappears, or gives up. Again, you can express Venus/Saturn in the arts (learning technique etc) or business, but you're going to need some really positive Jupiter/Venus aspects and transits to kick start something romantic and overcome the Saturn influence initially. Of course I have it natally (or I wouldn't be writing this), with Saturn sitting proudly in the 7th, and it's no picnic...it's more like a cancelled event :-). I get a bit mad when people talk about learning Saturn's lessons....sometimes Saturn just says 'No, you can't have that', which , when it comes to Venus, is not a very palatable thing to learn.
One final point...talking about an ensouled world, I think you have to acknowledge that if the outer world is ensouled, then other beings and nature itself has agency, and therefore not everything that happens to us is projection. If our values (Venus) are different to the outer values of society (Saturn) then Saturnian figures will pass judgement upon us. We won't gain the rewards or acceptance available to those with more mainstream values. there will be structural boundaries to our outer success. Enough for now :-)
Post a Comment