T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
482.1 | | SNOV17::MYNOTT | | Thu Sep 10 1987 20:31 | 16 |
| It isn't just in this conference, its everywhere.
Down under its on the roads, and believe me everybody has noticed,
its people, all being pushy, negative, finding problems hard to
cope with.
I have been told that we all have to pull our socks up and get it
together before the year 2000. The negativity can take over -
everywhere - but if enough positive thought and light is around
then it won't have a chance. Check it out, throw positive thoughts
everywhere and see what a difference it makes.
I don't mean this to be heavy, but this is like the dark before
the storm.
....dale
|
482.3 | Let them compete... | NEXUS::MORGAN | Welcome to the Age of Flowers | Thu Sep 10 1987 23:22 | 14 |
| I see it as a readjustment to the Harmonica Virgins media bliz.
While many are expecting great things others are more rational when
confronted with apparently fantastic claims.
It is unfortunate that a backlash is occuring which pours into other
areas but that is to be expected when claims of this magnitude are
placed under the public microscope for scrunity.
I've said in recent years that belief systems are (somewhat parasitic)
entities (of a non-mystical order) when they overlay human
intelligence. Don't you think they'ed compete for human energies?
So don't be lazy gang. LET THE GAMES BEGIN!
|
482.4 | | NONODE::JOLLIMORE | | Fri Sep 11 1987 08:24 | 5 |
| I feel there has been an increase. I'm not sure why. I've seen it
happen in other conferences. I think it just happens occasionally, this
conference is no exception. Some of the more passionate debates are good
reading, but personal attacks don't belong in any conference.
Jay
|
482.5 | an opinion | CIMNET::PIERSON | | Fri Sep 11 1987 09:18 | 19 |
| Perhaps... It has been discussed at length, here and elsewhere, that
electronic communication needs a new ettiquette.
Studies have bendone on electronic communications, such as this.
They indicate that opinions seem to be expressed more, ummmmm,
forcefully,in this sort of forum, than face to face. There is a
lack of the usual feedback mechanisms as to possible misintepretation,
which can lead to polarization. Also, given the "public access"
nature of these files, there can be an element of frustration in
not being able to walk away from a discussion. This, too, can lead
to polarization.
This is a new form/forum of communication we are learning to use.
I feel it is neccesary for all to be aware that we ARE learning.
This may be comounded by the growth of interest in, and participation
in, notes files.
thanks
dave pierson
|
482.6 | | AKOV76::FRETTS | Shine your Spirit! | Fri Sep 11 1987 09:55 | 15 |
|
I have definitely been aware of an "underlying" agitation with
people in many different situations, not only this conference.
Actually, I was getting quite concerned that it was going to
undermine the quality of noting that DEJAVU had acquired, and
it did to a small extent.
From my perspective, it looks like all the "cr*p" is getting
stirred up to the surface so that the cleansing process can
proceed, and also so that we get a good, clear look at it.
Carole
|
482.7 | take a deep breath ..... | ERASER::KALLIS | Exhausted? You don't know _how_... | Fri Sep 11 1987 10:24 | 30 |
| Re .0:
Interesting, that this morning before I accessed DEJAVU I was seriously
considering starting a "Disharmonic Divergence" note because I've
perceived the fraying of nerves from some ordinarily tranquil persons,
as much here as elsewhere; indeed, perhaps even a little _more_
here than elsewhere.
A bit of it could be attributed to "DECWORLD '87 nerves," I suppose
(I didn't realize how much I was on edge until, after running on
nearly no sleep for a couple of days, I discovered the night before
last that I _couldn't_ sleep more than 3.5 hours); but that's not
the whole story. Some of it locally is meteorological, but there's
something else going on.
However, being _aware_ of it going on is the first step to putting
it to rest.
My formula: when your temper starts to slip, stop and 1) give the
benefit of the doubt to an intent [short of a physical attack :-)],
2) be _honestly_ polite [yes, sometimes difficult, but you'll be
a better person for it, even if you think the person you're being
polite to is missing a few whatevers], and 3) put any disagreements
simply, concisely, and objectively; don't mix in emotions [one never
has posiotive emotions when one's temper is about to slip]. Also,
avoid being confrontational.
As I've said elsewhere, less heat brings more light.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
482.8 | | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | No final answers here | Fri Sep 11 1987 11:16 | 15 |
|
I think we are beginning an historic shakedown of religions,
philosophies and beliefs. Perhaps the convergence was a
turning point in this? I think the future will in fact prove
some people right and some wrong, as California does/doesn't
slide into the ocean, as other prophecized events do/don't
happen....
So what we see is the last chance to defend the failing
ideologies. The power structure may change, but not
without arguement and controversy. A person rationalizing
their own beliefs, can often make the loudest arguements
right before changing their mind.
Alan.
|
482.9 | Positive vibs | DARTS::LRP | | Fri Sep 11 1987 11:33 | 8 |
| I believe the best way to enter any situation is to let it happen
and turn anything in to a positive experience, to many people are
looking at the negative side of thing now a days.
I use to look at things negatively a got negative results, now that
I look at everything in a positive way, making the best of everything
life is much easier to handle.
|
482.10 | | DARTS::LRP | | Fri Sep 11 1987 11:33 | 2 |
|
|
482.11 | good reply, these days ... :-P | ERASER::KALLIS | Raise Hallowe'en awareness. | Fri Sep 11 1987 12:10 | 5 |
| Re .10:
Well, at least that was neither angry nor confrontational. :-D
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
482.12 | re.10 -??????? | USAT02::CARLSON | set person/positive | Fri Sep 11 1987 12:15 | 10 |
| I've also noticed a bit of negative energy floating around here.
It's a shame cos' I'm sure that would keep a few people from putting
in their own input. Not everyone cares to be sneered at.
The last urge I felt to enter a burning reply, I slept on it and
felt differently in the morning.
We will overcome.
Theresa.
|
482.13 | Guilty! | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri Sep 11 1987 12:38 | 19 |
| I have been a bit stressed out lately because, as near as I can
tell, of a number of individually minor and quite mundane non-occult
things (e.g., becoming a father for the first time after 36 years
of *not* having someone completely helpless depend on me).
Like Carole, I have been "concerned that it was going to undermine
the qualitiy of noting that DEJAVU had acquired". As one of the
long time proponents of "rationality" in DEJAVU, it particularly
bother(s)(ed) me when it comes from someone who is representing
put-down and intollerance of other people's beliefs as rationality.
I have reacted in several cases unwisely. Where I feel that I was
actually unfair to someone, I have appologized.
This is a formal appology to the DEJAVU community for exacerbating
the situation in trying to fix it. I'll try to keep my peace or
at least keep it "off line", in the future.
Topher
|
482.14 | Peace train, soundin' louder... | GLORY::WETHERINGTON | | Fri Sep 11 1987 12:45 | 78 |
| I have noticed a certain edginess in people that seems to have
intensified of late. I have the impression that things are getting
closer to whatever it is we seem to be approaching, and friends
that I have that are more in touch with what is going on, say that
"things are intensifying, God is coming closer to all of us, and
people are becoming more able to see the things in their lives
that are out of harmony with Him, are becoming uncomfortable,
and will become INCREASINGLY uncomfortable until some changes are
made."
I think a problem arises when the debate changes from a discussion
of the topic being debated, to a personal conflict between the
debaters. Anyone who has been on a debate team knows this is a definite
no-no. Given the highly personal nature of the things discussed
here, it is more likely that someone is going to touch a nerve and
set someone off...if the resulting debate is intelligent and logical,
and confines itself to the subject being debated, the results can
be, as was said before, interesting reading. I've certainly learned
a lot lately, and plan to leave as little emotion and as much logic
as possible in my future discussions...
If you think the topics in this conference are going to always be
discussed tranquilly and lovingly, as I wish they could be, I would
remind you of what has happened to most of the prophets in the past
who have lifted veils from people's eyes, and usually paid with
their lives.
An example of what I'm talking about...
THIS JESUS MUST DIE (from Jesus Christ Superstar)
Good Caiaphas, the council waits for you
The Pharisees and priests are here for you
Ah gentlemen, you know why we are here
We've not much time,and quite a problem here
(Crowd outside)
Hossana superstar
Hossana superstar
(Annas)
Listen to that howling mob of blockheads in the street
A trick or two with lepers, and the whole town's on its feet!
He is dangerous!
He is dangerous!
(Priest 1)
The man is in town right now to whip up some support
A rabble rousing mission that I think we must abort
He is dangerous!
Look, Caiaphas, they're right outside our yard
Quick, Caiaphas, go call the Roman guard!
No wait...we need a more permanent solution to our problem...
(Annas)
What then to do about Jesus of Nazereth?
Miracle wonderman, hero of fools?
No riots, no army, no fighting, no slogans
(Caiaphas)
One thing I'll say for him, Jesus is cool
We dare not leave him to his own devices
his half-witted fans will get out of control
But how can we stop him? His glamour increases
by leaps every minute; he's top of the poll.
I see bad things arising; the crowd crown him king which the Romans
would ban
I see blood and destruction
Our elimination because of one man
Blood and destruction because of one man
Because, because because of one man
What then to do about this Jesusmania?
How do we deal with the carpenter king?
Where do we start with a man who is bigger
Than John was when John did his baptism thing?
(Caiaphas)
Fools! You have no perception.
The stakes we are gambling are frightenly high
We must crush him completely
So like John before him this Jesus must die
For the sake of the nation, this Jesus must die
DW
|
482.15 | see you on the flip side? | MASTER::EPETERSON | | Fri Sep 11 1987 12:46 | 12 |
|
There is an "up side", however. I have noticed a number of people
spouting off and then, to one degree or another, re-thinking and
re-stateing their view. I have seen some folks come off their high
horse and I expect this will cause others to perhaps re-evaluate
their stand. One must get up on that high horse before one can
get off of it, so to speek. Letting the entire process be viewed
here in a public forum can show that everybody is human and therefore
cause us to look inside for a similarly flawed but none the less
ok person.
Marion
|
482.16 | Imagine all the people... | GLORY::WETHERINGTON | | Fri Sep 11 1987 12:54 | 5 |
| RE: .13
Ditto for me!
DW
|
482.17 | | MASTER::EPETERSON | | Fri Sep 11 1987 12:57 | 6 |
| re: .16 and my note .15
See what I mean?
Marion
|
482.18 | Spilling out all over | BAXTA::PUSHARD_MIKE | | Fri Sep 11 1987 13:04 | 8 |
| I see it as an increase in energy level and the way in which people
deal with it.Its like increasing the pressure in a water line,if
you control the flow and channel it in a positive way,you will be
better off,rather than letting it spill everywhere.
PEACE
MICHAEL
|
482.19 | | AKOV75::FRETTS | Shine your Spirit! | Fri Sep 11 1987 13:34 | 10 |
|
and as an additional aside....
congratulations, Topher (and to your wife), and for your little
one...Welcome to the world!
Carole
|
482.20 | $.02 | HPSCAD::DDOUCETTE | Common Sense Rules! | Fri Sep 11 1987 13:37 | 7 |
| Re: .18
When pressure builds up, sometimes you need a release valve.
It's amazing that we've gone through 19 replies without anyone
disagreeing! Is this a record or something? 8^)
Dave
|
482.21 | just kidding! | MASTER::EPETERSON | | Fri Sep 11 1987 13:56 | 5 |
| RE: .20
I disagree that it is a record. ;^)
Marion
|
482.22 | .. this is a recording ... | INK::KALLIS | Raise Hallowe'en awareness. | Fri Sep 11 1987 14:46 | 7 |
| Re .20, .21:
>I disagree that it is a record. ;^)
Well, it isn't _exactly_ a record; it's a Note. :-D
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
482.23 | ** 8-) ** | BARAKA::BLAZEK | | Fri Sep 11 1987 16:49 | 22 |
| With so many replies in such a short time, it really must be
noticeable to everyone!
I also agree that the energy level of the Earth is at a very
high level -- it seems that whatever a person "used to be"
has now been intensified two-fold. Fortunately for those of
us who are more spiritual people, that has helped in our search
for love and peace in our lives.
We can only try to help those less peaceful than ourselves,
though this probably entails much tongue-biting/refraining...
Good practice for NOTES... Public ATTACKS against another
person is needless, **ESPECIALLY** in DEJAVU. :-)
Let's concentrate on the positive and help to enlighten each
other. Isn't that why we're all here??
*8-)
Carla
Carla
|
482.24 | Silence from outer space.... | NEXUS::MORGAN | Welcome to the Age of Flowers | Fri Sep 11 1987 16:55 | 3 |
| We haven't heard from our discanate visitor from OtherRealms...
Wha' do ya' think Pandy?
|
482.25 | Sprinkled with kindness and understanding | FDCV13::PAINTER | | Fri Sep 11 1987 18:57 | 24 |
|
For those of you who know the other notes conference I've been in
lately........
This conference is a sight for sore eyes! Just doing some Friday
night catchup here and glad to be back.
Yes, resident skeptics and all (hiya John! (:^), this is a nice place
to be. Besides what would life be like without a lot of diversity
which is precisely what this type of an environment fosters. I'm here
for the differences, not the similarities, because this environment
is the best way of learning new ideas and thinking about things we
might not have ever been exposed to otherwise.
A (very small) request for tolerance - now, more than ever, I realize
that the only way we are ever going to achieve peace on this Earth
is if we can manage to get along one to one - REGARDLESS of the
medium. I believe the rest of you out there in DEJAVUland realize
that too...otherwise you'd have probably deleted the entry from
your notebook by now.
Peace - mixed with love,
Cindy
|
482.26 | Anyone for a little re-evaluation counseling? | WAGON::DONHAM | Born again! And again, and again... | Mon Sep 14 1987 10:39 | 22 |
|
When the red-faced, arm-waving "disagreements" disappear from DEJAVU,
so will I.
I've always believed that the closer you come to a truth, the more
uncomfortable you become. And I *know* that when long-established
belief patterns are challenged, they employ a variety of defense
mechanisms to survive, including, it seems, note-sniping.
I know it sometimes is infuriating to read what appear to be
half-witted sarcastic nonsenses, but keep in mind that the author
has put a *message* in his or her words: We must learn to separate
the fact from the emotion. This a useful tool in real life, also
(as opposed to notes life). I don't mean that we should become
non-emoting, just that we should listen to what someone is saying,
not how it is being said. It's the aural equivalent of don Juan's
"seeing."
So...fire at Will! (Duck, Will, duck!)
Tananda
|
482.27 | And, that's the other side of this life | GLORY::WETHERINGTON | | Tue Sep 15 1987 15:13 | 117 |
| I found something last night that I read years ago, that describes
a time very similar to ours that occured around the last golden
period of the Roman Empire (no, I won't get political)...I think
we as a species are approaching a time of reckoning (heavy duty
stuff...enough to put anyone on edge) I certainly feel it and see it,
and I know others do too. I will also add that I think the
fundamentalist Christians are way, way off base in their expectations
and anticipations.
So...here it goes...this Marcus Aurelius guy was all right. Sorry
for the length, but it's interesting reading in this day and age.
See also reply .8 in this note.
PREFACE TO "MEDITATIONS" BY MARCUS AURELIUS, CLASSICS CLUB LIBRARY
EDITION, quoted without permission; no author is given credit for
this preface.
*******************************************************************
The reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180 A.D.) marked the close of
the good period of the Antonine emperors, under whom Rome reached
the height of her imperial dominion and administrative efficiency.
He died fighting the restive barbarians on the Danube frontier
and was buried not far from the site of what we now call Vienna.
Under his son, the dissolute Commodus, the political decline set
in that eventually ended in the collapse of the centuries-old imperial
structure in the West and its replacement by the raw, unstable,
barbaric kingdoms of Italy, Spain, France, and England.
Already, in the lifetime of Marcus Aurelius, the intellectual
atmosphere in the magnificent capital of his empire was confused
and clouded. The old confident assurance that prosperity and happiness
lay in keeping faithful to the gods and the traditions of the ancestors
was noticeably wavering. The stately ceremonies and customs handed
down from the past were still punctiliously and lavishly performed
in public, as signs of gratitude to whatever had formerly made Rome
great and as a means of impressing the multitude. But few educated
men now took them seriously. Their minds had been trained from youth
in the schools of Greek philosophy, and Plato, Aristotle, Epicurus,
and the Stoic Zeno, each had his following. But not even the
illustrious philosophers received the unquestioning veneration that
once they had had. They spoke, after all, with too discordant voices
and out of a past too long departed. The Skeptics, who doubted that
any philosopher ever had or ever could fathom the world's mystery,
attracted many who scornfully refused to imagine certainties where
none existed.
Other men were fatalistically accepting the astrological lore
brought from the ancient East. If the eternal, all-seeing stars
were the causes of everything that happened in this transitory scene
below, what could anyone do but resign himself and submit? Others
still were turning for comfort to a new type of religion, also brought
from the East, the cults of Isis, of Mithras, and of Christ. These
all in their several ways taught faith in a god of pity, repentance
from sin, and hope of a heavenly immortality. Outwardly Rome still
stood, more resplendent and apparently more unshakeable than ever.
Inwardly she was in a state of mental and spiritual flux. The old
order was losing its hold on men's minds and the new order was yet
far off.
This book contains the writings of three men of the period, each
eminent in his own circle at Rome, which illustrate for us the conflict
of beliefs that is a characteristic feature of the age. The
"Meditations" of the emperor show how latter-day Stoicism could
stilil inspire a high-minded ruler to do his duty with fortitude
and patience. The dialogues of Lucian, the rhetorician, are a Skeptic's
devastating exposure of the weakness of all the old philosophies
and beliefs. The works of Justin Martyr, the Christian, are full
of the fervor and excitement of a convert from paganism, convinced
he has a new and uniquely divine message to proclaim to mankind.
********************************************************************
So, this is not the first time that the old order has been shook
up,and the new order shook the world as it settled in. We're feeling
the first tremors, folks.
DW
*********************************************************************
Oh, people, look around you, the signs are everywhere
You've left it for someone other than you to be the one to care
You're lost inside your houses; there's no time to find you now
Oh your walls are burnin', and your towers are turnin'
Jackson Browne, "Rock Me on the Water"
Don't you feel it growin', day by day; people gettin ready for the
news
Some are happy, some are sad
The Doobie Brothers
Somethin's happening in America
Can you feel it? Can you feel it comin'
KBC band (Kantner, Balin, and Casady...remember? They're back)
Wind starting to howl
The beast is on the prowl
Can you hear his strange cry? Winds of change are blowin' by.
Jefferson Starship
People, get ready; there's a train a comin'
Picking up passengers from coast to coast
Traditional
Now I've been smiling lately thinkin' about the good things to come
and I believe it could be something good has begun
Cause out on the edge of darkness, there rides a peace train
Oh, peace train, take this country
Come take me home again
Peace Train, Sounding Louder
Cat Stephens; "Peace Train"
|
482.28 | One more.... | FDCV13::PAINTER | | Tue Sep 15 1987 16:13 | 6 |
|
And the BEATLES! Don't forget the BEATLES!
- All you need is love.
- Imagine
- Etc.
|
482.29 | Right on the mark | SPIDER::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Tue Sep 15 1987 16:52 | 4 |
| re .27
I think you've just expressed what many of us have been feeling
on an intuitive level for awhile now. And yea,.. it sure does make
one edgy.
|
482.32 | Computer talk isn't cheap | HPSCAD::DDOUCETTE | Common Sense Rules! | Wed Sep 16 1987 10:06 | 12 |
| re: .31
Start cheap, Maybe a few microVaxes w/PCs at home (are you still
reading Ed?) There was a recent discussion about this in Tem Noon's
Cabin.
Re: ~.27
Remember that if we do not learn from our history, we are destined
to repeat it. It is a scary thought.
Dave
|
482.33 | You may say I'm a dreamer... | GLORY::WETHERINGTON | | Wed Sep 16 1987 14:24 | 20 |
| RE: .32
One of the biggest stress factors in my life is the fact that we
are not learning from history, and I sometimes feel like walking
up to people and shaking them, to get them to realize that there
are a great many things going on that are alarming enough that people
should be much more concerned than they are. Did you read my BABYLON
note? Better yet, go out and buy the album "No Protection" (Starship's
most recent) and listen to the song; something about Grace's voice
touches a chord inside me, and she sings "Babylon" in a way that
would stir anyone to action. She's got more vocal power now than she
did 20 years ago, and at least she's still trying to "change the
world" where so many of her generation have sold out to the system
and are now the very people that I (and many others my age) are
trying to get to remember some of the things they used to
feel...because the situation now is even more urgent than it was
then...looking at the big picture,I mean;I realize we don't have a war
going on now.
DW
|
482.34 | What, me worry? | GLORY::WETHERINGTON | | Thu Sep 17 1987 11:24 | 14 |
| Once again, I have said something in the fervor of the moment, that
I really could have said better. "Sold out" is not the way that
I should have put that (in .33); perhaps "got sucked up into" would
be a better way of putting it.
I firmly believe that many of the things you dreamed about back
then are now coming into the realm of realistic possibility; you had
the right ideas back then, but the time wasn't right.
"There were a half a million people on the lawn,
And we sang to the faces in the dawn"
Mexico/GS
|
482.35 | | BUMBLE::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Thu Sep 17 1987 11:44 | 1 |
| nicely said
|
482.36 | Thanks. | GLORY::WETHERINGTON | | Thu Sep 17 1987 14:09 | 2 |
| sometimes the Light's all shinin' on me
other times I can barely see
|
482.37 | The Times of our Lives | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Fri Sep 25 1987 17:43 | 111 |
| I have an idea of what's going on, from an astrological point of
view. The question I'd like to ask the DEJAVUers is:
How old are you? (What's your chronological age?)
I believe that many of us probably fall between the ages of 30 and
50. A long time span, you might say, but those 20 years contain
the most intense growth-ful and consciousness expanding transits
of adult life, with a heavy concentration of them around age 40.
Here's what they, in more or less chronological order (because of
Pluto's and Chiron's eccentric orbits, their intermediate aspects
are hard to time--a little different for everyone):
1st Saturn Return 30
Life gets "real"; important decisions about direction
often made; may tear up old structures and start over
3rd Jupiter Return 35
The first "itch" after the settling in of the Saturn
Return; "is there maybe something more? What _is_
Truth, anyway?"
2nd Lunar Node Return 36-37
Interest in "something more" intensifies; if one
happens on some "Truth" now, can become quite fixed.
1st Chiron Opposition 30-36
Desire to link up material and spiritual sides of
life; new talents start to blossom; perhaps very
subtle.
1st Uranus Opposition 39-41
This is the biggie--"mid-life crisis" time. If the
Jupiter, Nodal and Chiron transits have been brushed
off, this "now or never" desire for change can
manifest with great force. Often a desire for
revolution, rather than evolution.
1st Pluto Square 40's (for those born after late 1930's)
This square happened much later (in their 60's) for
people born much earlier in this century. Happening
around the same time as the Uranus Opposition, it
intensifies the "now or never" element; mortality
may be felt very accutely. Desires for empowerment
can become intense, especially if one has neglected
that side of the self. Time of possible sense of
loss, or of real losses as whatever is not needed
for further personal growth is shed.
1st Neptune Square 40's
Confuses the issue. Uranus and Pluto are clamoring
for change, and you can't figure out what precisely
to do--only that your life must mean something.
Can sometimes help focus the spiritual unrest that
was part of the Jupiter, Chiron and Nodal transits.
1st Chiron Return 50-51
Born again. If you've struggled hard to integrate
all the new facets of Self that have emerged in
the 40's, this is often a time of awakening to
peace and renewal. If the 40's have been spent
crushing the changes that were struggling for
birth in the Self, people can start to wither.
With all this going on, is it any wonder that people become confused,
frustrated, scattered, perhaps frantic in their own personal searches?
To make matters feel worse, there's "nothing" physical to "blame"
it all on. I feel the upheavals of the teenage years are considered
more "normal", in part, because of the tremendous, hormonally driven,
physical changes that take place. What do we have to "logically"
explain away the crisis in our souls now? No wonder some of us
feel so bad, so strange. No wonder we sometimes end up locked in
arguments for which their is no solution.
And I also feel that, like teenagers (or anyone, for that matter)
we tend to hang out with people our own age, who are undergoing
the same experiences--and to then feel that the Whole World is
undergoing our experiences of upheaval and distress.
So it may help to understand the contentiousness, the arguments,
the misunderstandings, as symptoms of growing pains. We're growing
up! Finally! Is it sometimes difficult? (Is the Pope Polish?)
I feel that the increased vigor in the discussions and arguments
is not, in and of itself, negative. It is, in fact, tremendously
positive, like the aches that occur in muscles long disused when
we become active again. It only becomes negative if we operate
from a value system that says that any and all display of unrest
is negative. It's not. It's for many of us the first step towards
actualisation, and perhaps a little compassion for ourselves and
others in the same boat is in order.
And let's argue all we want. Hey, I believe that there's "something
more" than was written on the pages of my biology and chemistry
texts. But being forced to examine, to question, even to defend
my views and experiences keeps me from becoming a mental slob.
It forces me to think! Like the exercise that I inflict [;-)]
on my body in order to keep from becoming a physical slob, it is
not always pleasant. But it keeps me growing.
Does this strike a bell with anyone out there?
Marcia
|
482.38 | | DECWET::MITCHELL | Memory drugs: just say ..uh.. | Fri Sep 25 1987 17:58 | 7 |
| RE: .37
Interesting, but what is Chiron?
John M.
Hmmmm.... Can you guess what my sign is?
|
482.39 | | GLASS::WETHERINGTON | | Mon Sep 28 1987 12:52 | 5 |
| How about Virgo with Taurus rising and moon in Capricorn?
I am an Aries with Aquarius rising and moon in Pisces.
DW
|
482.40 | back up the clocks a bit | HPSCAD::DDOUCETTE | Common Sense Rules! | Mon Sep 28 1987 12:53 | 20 |
| re: .37
Hey, I'm 27! Granted I am now questioning myself and my direction
as you said, but my questions would categorize me in my 40's according
to your chart. (My God! What is my mid-life crisis going to be
like! ;-)
I would like to share a story with you. A few weeks ago, I was
drinking in Boston with two friends (The Commonwealth Brewery) when
our discussion started to focus on life. One of my friends commented
that he started to wonder what the meaning of it all was. He felt
that he was reaching a crisis in his life (he's 25). My comment,
which was also shared with my other friend was "Are you telling
me you're twenty five years old and this is your first crisis?"
We always feel the way you described, it isn't a matter of age, but
of day. When I stop worrying about life is when I should start
worrying about myself.
Dave
|
482.41 | | AKOV11::FRETTS | Shine your Spirit! | Mon Sep 28 1987 13:54 | 18 |
|
Marcia,
Your note provides important and valid information for all of us to
consider on a personal level. Having turned 40 this year, I can
vouch for the Saturn return, the Jupiter return, and the Uranus
opposition (will let you know about the Pluto and Neptune squares!).
However, there is also the evolutionary cycle of humanity as a whole,
and that of the earth as well. I really do feel that the cycle has
just shifted into 5th gear and, whether we like it or not, we have
taken off! The combination of all of this at work at the same time
has got to have it's manifested effects. All we have to do is look
to see it.
Carole
|
482.42 | not just look and see... | UTRUST::DEHARTOG | AI is better than none! | Mon Sep 28 1987 14:02 | 5 |
| >> All we have to do is look to see it.
And act accordingly . . .
Hans (42)
|
482.43 | | AKOV11::FRETTS | Shine your Spirit! | Mon Sep 28 1987 14:07 | 8 |
|
re: 42
...agreed!
C.
|
482.44 | Did that "Taurus" come from all of my bull? | DECWET::MITCHELL | Memory drugs: just say ..uh.. | Mon Sep 28 1987 20:58 | 8 |
| RE: .39 (DW)
Well, you got the Virgo part right (how could you tell ;-)), but I don't know
enough about astrology to comment on the Taurus rising and moon in Capricorn
part. Does that fit in with a birthdate of 9/9/54?
John M.
|
482.45 | | AKOV11::FRETTS | Shine your Spirit! | Tue Sep 29 1987 10:22 | 13 |
|
John,
Having the time and place of birth would be required to calculate
the rising sign. If you were born in the very early morning
hours, you _do_ have a Capricorn moon! From the quick checking
I did, there is no way to have both a Capricorn moon and Taurus
rising on that day. Now, if someone wrote down the wrong day
and you were born late in the day on the 8th, it's another story!
Carole
|
482.46 | Astro-Ramblings | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Fri Oct 02 1987 15:12 | 85 |
| These are just some ramblings on some of the astrological questions
and comments that were made in the last 8 or so replies.
<Interesting, but what is Chiron?>
Chiron is a minor planet, discovered in 1977. It orbits between
Saturn and Uranus and has an orbital period of 50 years. It has
a _very_ elliptical orbit; it spends only a year in some signs,
up to 8 years in others. This means that the timing of the square
and oppositions (the intermediate transits) for each individual
varies tremendously. There have been quite a few books speculating
on its significance since the early 80's. Some have felt that
Chiron, rather than Jupiter, rules Sagittarius. The most recent
book I've seen on it believes that it rules the sign Virgo (which
would make it a very important planet for you, with your Virgo
Sun :-)). I have been putting it into charts since July, and trying
out its supposed Virgo rulership, and the intuition that this is
correct is stronger every day. Virgo is the sign representing the
process of mastery, and Chiron seems to be the drive to master.
The author of the Chiron-rules-Virgo book also believes that its
main function (or soul urge that it represents) is to prod us to
link up our material selves with the cosmic, spiritual sides of
ourselves. Operates as a kind of catalyst, if you will. Not
necessarily comfortable while it's happening, either.
My own feeling, too, is that wherever it is in our charts is a
place and an area of life that we feel driven to learn by doing,
by direct experiences of all kind. There is the feeling in these
areas that we have to _get it right_. And the compulsion to repeat
experiences over and over until we do.
It is interesting to note that during the Harmonic Convergence
Chiron was in a very significant position, directly opposite the
point of the Zodiac that points to the galactic center.
<Hmmmm.... Can you guess what my sign is?>
Sigh . . . I'm lamentably inept at those games, as intuitive as
a potato. (I wonder what sign of the Zodiac rules potatoes?) I
know others who are brilliant, one of whom at least correctly guessed
your Sun sign. But me, well . . . no.
<Hey, I'm 27!>
Perhaps I should have backed things up a few years, but I was focusing
on what happens after age 30, and focusing on transits only.
I left out progressions. At 26-27-28 a _very_ significant event
occurs called the progressed Lunar Return. It operates like a
forerunner to the Saturn return that occurs a couple years later.
It was, for me, the time when I suddenly _emotionally_ acknowledged
myself as an adult (the Moon is said to rule emotions) and really
began to "take the weight of the world on my shoulders". I felt
like a woman, no longer a girl. I finally got my driver's license,
opened a part-time business, changed jobs within Digital, had my
first marriage crisis, became phobic, developed numerous psychomatic
illnesses.
Now my life up to that point had certainly not been uneventful.
But I had sort of ridden the waves, so to speak. I was definitely
_not_ used to being _aware_ of the waves. My personality (which
my natal chart backs up) does not predispose me to that type of
continual experience. Perhaps other people's personalities/charts
do, but certainly not everyone's.
23-25 are an interesting few years too--the 2nd Jupiter Return
falls in that time frame. That certainly marked a time of life
that was event-ful for me: I married, left school (without
graduating), tore up my roots in Hawaii (where I'd lived for 8
years) and moved up here, got pregnant, miscarried, changed
professions. Looking back, I think I survived those years by being
basically unconcsious. My personality can operate like that. But
someone who is predisposed to awareness will consciously experience
what happens to them, rather than just turtling up. For anyone
with an active or stressed Jupiter in his/her chart, the returns
can often bring on a crisis in consciousness, a sudden longing for
growth and expansion which can, if smothered or checked, become
very frustrating. Depending on their natural tendencies, people
may or may not feel it this way, and if they do feel it, in varying
degrees of intensity.
Boy, this sure did ramble. Sorry 'bout that.
|
482.47 | I'll take mine with Capricorn on the cob | DECWET::MITCHELL | Memory drugs: just say ..uh.. | Fri Oct 02 1987 17:43 | 6 |
| RE: .46
Potatoes are ruled by Pluto, god of the underworld.
John M.
|
482.48 | In addition to Pluto eyes . . . | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Mon Oct 05 1987 10:24 | 6 |
| <Capricorn on the cob>
Hmmm . . . my Sun is in Capricorn. Is being chomped in my future?
;-)
Marcia
|
482.49 | Time to 'fess up | FDCV13::PAINTER | | Mon Oct 05 1987 15:20 | 13 |
|
(Geez John, what an old guy you are!.....:^)
I'm going to be 30 very soon - Scorpio in fact.
Cards, gifts, candy, flowers, gift subscription to Modern Maturity
can all be sent to......
These last few years, starting with age 27 have been the best and
the worst of my life. I'm still here though and looking forward
to the next 120 years.
Cindy
|
482.50 | YET ANOTHER ONE?!?!?!?! | GRECO::MISTOVICH | | Mon Oct 05 1987 17:46 | 7 |
482.51 | | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Tue Oct 06 1987 12:19 | 18 |
| Some extra thoughts on what I've been trying to convey with the
astrologically oriented notes: I'm not in any way trying to discount
the reality or intensity of the experiences people are going through.
It is entirely possible that there is something completely new in
the air, and that it's _coinciding_ with important, change-ful times
in people's lives. This can give usual growth experiences tremendous
impact. By listing the "times of our lives", I was trying to give
people a few guidelines on what is "normal" for folks in our 20-25
year age group. That way someone can better distinguish normal
courses of inner events from the truly unique; one can say, "aah,
I might be feeling this way because of this new experience layered
on top of my Jupiter Return/Uranus Opposition/Pluto square/whatever."
That is, if one accepts the correlations of certain planetary transits
to important times of our lives in the first place :-).
Marcia
(Just-passed-Jupiter-Return,-Nodal-Return-due-in-March-'88)
|
482.52 | scorpios et al | LEZAH::BOBBITT | face piles of trials with smiles | Tue Oct 06 1987 14:01 | 18 |
| scorpios? did you say scorpios?
I got 'em out the ears. The whole rest of my family (parents and
sister) were born in a 2-week span of Scorpio...and now add to just
within a week of that my fiancee. Boy... is it gonna be an expensive
fall!
(it's almost too much for a virgo to bear)
-Jody
p.s. just as an aside....remember y'all that tonight's the harvest
(first of autumn full) mooo-ooo-ooooon
(darn, how do you make a sideways smiley face with fangs?)
|
482.53 | ... the better to bite you with, my dear 9heh, heh, heh) | ERASER::KALLIS | Make Hallowe'en a National holiday. | Tue Oct 06 1987 14:38 | 18 |
| Re .52:
>p.s. just as an aside....remember y'all that tonight's the harvest
>(first of autumn full) mooo-ooo-ooooon
>(darn, how do you make a sideways smiley face with fangs?)
It's also a penumbral lunar eclipse, peaking about Midnight, EDT
[wooooooooooooooooooooo!].
How about just doing:
O O
U
\___/
V V
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
482.54 | | MANTIS::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Tue Oct 06 1987 14:41 | 1 |
| I like that Steve_:-)
|
482.55 | Let's just change the name to SCORPIONOTES | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | This statement is false | Wed Oct 07 1987 19:00 | 2 |
| Me too.
|
482.56 | | SPIDER::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Wed Oct 07 1987 21:28 | 4 |
| We air, fire and earth signs have a bet going as to just how long
you scorpios are going to continue talking about how gloriously
provocative your eyes are...(of course... we're afraid to tell you
to stop... we all know how *scorpios* can be_:-).
|
482.57 | | DECWET::MITCHELL | Memory drugs: just say ..uh.. | Thu Oct 08 1987 01:50 | 6 |
| Everyone knows Scorpios are oversexed. Now how is it you guys have
so much energy left over for this conference? ;-)
John M.
|
482.58 | Once the set and setting are in order... | PUZZLE::GUEST_TMP | HOME, in spite of my ego! | Thu Oct 08 1987 02:27 | 8 |
| re: -.1
Sorry, John, but I can't resist telling you that my good
friend Lazaris tells us that truly good sex will give you *more*
energy, not less! So, now that that explains my energy, what
do you say?
Frederick
|
482.59 | stereotype me | USAT02::CARLSON | set person/positive | Thu Oct 08 1987 10:48 | 8 |
| RE. 57
>;^) what a way to go!
t.
|
482.60 | Be the Scientist - experiment! | GRECO::MISTOVICH | | Fri Oct 09 1987 13:42 | 6 |
482.61 | | DECWET::MITCHELL | Memory drugs: just say ..uh.. | Fri Oct 09 1987 20:09 | 12 |
| RE: .58
Since "Lazaris" has never been an animal, I do not think he is qualified
to comment on animal experiences.
RE: .60
Any volunteers? >;-)
John M.
|
482.62 | Hee haw! | PUZZLE::GUEST_TMP | HOME, in spite of my ego! | Fri Oct 09 1987 20:35 | 5 |
| re: John
You animule, you!
Frederick
|
482.63 | Experimental procedure. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon Oct 12 1987 11:53 | 5 |
| I for one plan on experimenting on this one -- in my next life I'll
come back as a Scorpio. :-)
Topher
|
482.64 | ouch! | INK::KALLIS | Make Hallowe'en a National holiday. | Mon Oct 12 1987 11:55 | 5 |
| Re .63:
Topher, a stinging response. :-)
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
482.65 | | CSC32::KACHELMYER | David L. Kachelmyer, VMS-SPACE | Wed Oct 14 1987 20:52 | 5 |
| RE: .63
As a single, double, or triple scooper? ;-)
Kak
|