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Astrology Is More—A Lot More—Than Your Sun Sign
Just today I was reading a basic Sun sign astrology book. Your Sun sign provides a wealth of information about you, but it isn't everything by a long shot. There are all the other planets and the interactions among them. You need the whole chart to tell the full story about yourself or anyone you meet.
For most astrology students, the hardest thing is learning how to integrate all the details so they make sense. Llewellyn has published two books, Aspects and Aspect Patterns, to help you do just that. Aspects are relationships and energetic exchanges between planets that can influence a person's chart in profound ways. Here is a brief description of an experience with one of Robin Antepara's students (Robin is the author of Aspects):
That example combined just two planets in a chart and provided deeper insight into how the chart reflects the way our minds work. Aspect Patterns Aspect patterns among three or more planets can go even deeper into the meaning of your chart. They begin to reflect your life almost as soon as you are born. Feedback from the parents of infants indicates that tiny babies respond to the world in just the ways we would expect from looking at their birth charts. The charts are reflections of their individuality and character. Marc Edmund Jones¹ and Robert Jansky² identified and interpreted two kinds of patterns in charts. The first is the arrangement of the planets around the circle. The names of the patterns—words like bowl, bucket, and fan—describe the look of the chart as a whole. They give a quick indication of how the individual tends to process information, evaluate it, and act upon it. The second pattern involves aspects of three or more planets. When aspects connect up in geometric shapes—like a square, equilateral triangle, or pentagram figure—the energy flows continuously from one planet to the next, providing an easy energy pattern for the person to follow. Aspect Patterns considers both kinds of patterns and how they relate to each other. In the back of the book there are handy tables to help identify the patterns, with references to the myriad patterns in about seventy chart examples. Paula Abdul has a rectangle in her chart that is formed by drawing lines between the planets Mars, Jupiter, Neptune, and Pluto. At the time when Pluto had moved forward by solar arc to make one of the aspects exact, her mother said that Paula already knew she wanted to be an entertainer. In looking at this pattern, you can use words for each planet: Mars—energetic, impulsive Jupiter—aspiring, confident Neptune—imaginative, clairvoyant Pluto—actors, extra-sensory perception Interpretation is as easy as putting the words together: Paula Abdul, even at age four, was an energetic, imaginative child who aspired to be an actress (performer). Of course we could have chosen the other words for the planets: Paula, an impulsive, confident child, showed an inclination to clairvoyance or ESP. Or we could say she is an energetic, confident, clairvoyant who enjoys acting. I don't know if she is into the mystical stuff, but it would add an interesting dimension to her character, and might serve her well in her career as a performer too. As you further your studies of astrology, keep aspects and aspect patterns in mind. Or visit us online to explore other astrological studies that might interest you.
—Stephanie Clement
¹Jones, Marc Edmund. The Guide to Horoscope Interpretation. Wheaton, Illinois: Theosophical Publishing House, 1972. ²Jansky, Robert Carl. Planetary Patterns. Venice, CA: Astro-Analytics, 1975.
Excerpt from the article Maria Shaw's 2007 Love Predictions by Maria Shaw
Aries — Your love life could easily be a roller coaster ride until September, at which time heavy Saturn exits your solar fifth house of love and romance. Problems with partners ease up then and you’ll be much more carefree and optimistic. The first nine months of 2007, however, is a time in which you’ll have to make a decision; if a relationship is truly worth keeping or if it’s time to cut ties for good. Your lucky love months are August and October.
Springtime puts me in mind of the feminine in nature. How about you? When you look around, you see the feminine in many guises: Mother Nature is sprouting new growth in flora and fauna. Baby animals emerge from the safety of their dens and nests. Birds build or refurbish their nests and lay eggs. Insects emerge and add to the buzz of life. All of this activity reflects the nurturing of the feminine. |
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An excerpt from
Solar Arcs: Astrology's Most Successful Predictive System by Noel Tyl
The Circle. How does this shape, this spatial form, enter consciousness; how does it take on meaning; how does it come to be divided into 360 units; and how is it used as a measurement standard to capture the time of our lives?
Initially, man must have learned to identify the circle from the pupils of maternal eyes, and then from reading the eyes of others. Above, overseeing all, there were the moving disks of the godly Sun and the Moon. There were the intricate centers of so many flowers. Even when worked by a stick into the sand or earth, the circle had uniqueness among forms: with a cross, there was the sense of division (the beginning of the concept of 2); but with the fashioning of a circle, there was the sense of unity, of wholeness, of inviolable symmetry. We can speculate that, in development, man then began to grasp the concept of magnitude: there were different sizes of trees, rocks, animals, squares, and circles. Thought-tools were developed to express the relationships between things in terms of size, to capture comparisons and set standards. (This phase of evolution is often cited as the dawn of mathematics.) |
Cool Link
A link to very cool astronomy graphics that were created by Richard W. Pogge's at Ohio State.
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