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Welcome to Llewellyn's astro e-newsletter. I've just returned from a
microcosmic experience—the Northwest Astrological Conference
(NORWAC)—an annual astrological conference that's held in Seattle. The
conference truly was a miniature version of something bigger--astrology
is huge. One truth about astrology is that there is no "right" way to
do it. There are many. Within these various methods, astrologers talk
about what is important to them—we verbalize our "ideals." And, we
should have high ideals. Right? Of course, but perhaps what we need is
perspective on our ideals—a reality check, in other words. What all
this comes down to is "thinking," which is the foundation of an ideal,
and "doing," which is interpretation.
Ideal
is a very slippery word. If I say, "The weather is ideal: it's sunny,
warm, and breezy," I'm telling you what my ideal day is like. And your
ideal day is probably different. An ideal can also be what is
"unattainable, impractical, and hypothetical." You may be thinking: So
what? It's important because how we think about ourselves is closely
connected to what we do in the world. Now, think about this: When you
lock the front door and go about your daily activities, whose ideals
are you living by?
It's been said that we live in a universe of infinite possibilities. I agree that the universe is infinite, but not all
possibilities are available to every person. I can dream until I'm
ninety about being the first woman president and it'll never happen. We
tell our children to believe in themselves and they can be anything
they want to be: If you can dream it, you can be it. But dreaming
something (and wishing, and hoping it'll be true) doesn't make it so.
Barbie dolls were supposed to represent the ideal woman. If that was
ever true (and I doubt it), I've never seen a real live ideal woman.
But someone thought Barbie should be our ideal. That ideal gave many
women a fantasy to struggle toward, it gave some men an impossible
ideal for women to live up to, and it caused others to be depressed or
to disown themselves because only surgical intervention offered them
any hope of achieving the unattainable.
Likewise, when we realize that the person who we thought would be the
ideal spouse is really an opinionated bore, or that the "dream job"
didn't really come with a career ladder (even though someone said that
it could or would or should), we're left feeling disappointed,
depressed, or disillusioned about our choices. What went wrong? How do
we sort through all the possibilities to find what we really need or
what's best for us? I suggest that it's as simple as looking at your
horoscope. Specifically, look to your Ascendant (the first door) to see
your best potential for a good life. Having a fulfilling life may be
easier than you think, and easier said than done. How's that for a
challenge?
It's easier than you think because you already know yourself,
although you may have put your real self in a dark corner for
misbehaving (at least in the opinion of someone else, you were
misbehaving). I suggest that seeing our real selves may be easier said
than done because we tend to look to other people and things in the
environment for the answers to who we are and what we need, when what
we must do is look to ourselves and at our charts to really get to
know—to be comfortable with—our own unique personality. The word
"personality" means a combination of characteristics or qualities that
form an individual's unique character. The Ascendant sign, its ruler,
and aspects indicate how we "take in" our environment and other people,
and how we "send out" information about ourselves.
The "value" given to the Ascendant varies depending on which astrologer you talk to. Some astrologers say the Ascendant is really, really
important, while others discount it as just another point in the chart,
like the Nodes, Midpoints, or Part of Fortune. It seems logical,
however, that if we put so much emphasis on the exact time of birth,
which determines the exact Ascendant, we've already admitted that the
Ascendant is extremely important.
I think we overlook the Ascendant to the extent that we discount our
essential self. When we disown our own personality, including our
talents and our warts, in favor of someone else's ideal, we put
ourselves in a dark corner. When we don't appreciate who we truly are,
we tend to look around outside of ourselves for what we are not.
The Ascendant is our doorway to the world and to the self, and both the
world and the self (symbolized by the horoscope) are circular. What
that implies is that we traverse the twelve houses and encounter all
our planets in whatever sign and house they are in, but we do it in a
contained environment—the circle of self. The Ascendant is the
personality filter through which everything inside and everything
outside of us must pass. We can only be ourselves in thought and
action—not just some ideal version of self—when we stop trying to be
whom or what we are not.
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