T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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560.1 | I'll have to look it up | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Tue Nov 10 1987 08:40 | 31 |
| I don't have my 21st Century ephemeris here with me today, but I
can look it up. (I did once, and the actual precession of the Vernal
Point into Aquarius does not actually occur until well into the
next century.) I'll look up the exact date tonight.
If what you might be wondering is: if the true Age of Aquarius
(astronomically speaking) doesn't start until well into the next
century, why is everybody going off the deep end about it now?
I don't have a concrete answer. But my speculations are as follows:
o the sign Aquarius is ruled by the planet Uranus, which is
famous as a "quickener" of events. In observing my own
Uranus transits, I've noticed that a Uranus-related event
almost always _precedes_ the actual aspect coming into
orb. Given this possible effect, it's no surprise to me
that people are "anticipating" the Aquarian Age so soon,
especially those with powerful Aquarius or Uranus energy
in their charts.
o the Vernal Point is now at about 5 degrees Pisces. To
digress for a moment, when the Sun is 5 degrees below the
horizon, we see daylight, even though it has not cleared
the horizon. But it is still dawn, and there's enough
light to see by, to navigate by. So perhaps this psycho-
logical effect operates to a certain extent in the transition
between Ages; it hasn't yet officially "dawned" but we can
see what's coming.
Anyway, I'll look up the exact year tonight.
Marcia
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560.2 | Rushing in the Age? | NEXUS::MORGAN | Welcome to the Age of Flowers | Tue Nov 10 1987 22:54 | 4 |
| Thanx Marcia,
I think we are all tired of Picean energies for now so perhaps we're
rushing it in just alittle bit.. B^)
|
560.3 | The Death Throes of an Age | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Wed Nov 11 1987 09:59 | 37 |
| Another interesting point I muse on is why the old Ages do not pass
quietly into the next. There is possibly an astrological meaning
to this; the first 2 and 1/2 degrees of any sign is considered to
be the most potent, and contain the full essence, or force, of that
sign's energy.
Now think about the fact that the Vernal Point _pre_cesses, that
is, moves backward through the signs. This means that as an Age
ends, it's being infused with perhaps its most pure, potent energy.
Is it any wonder, then, that as an Age draws to a close, the people
most connected to its energy will feel empowered as never before,
will fight the dawn of change? It certainly won't _feel_ like a
time for a consciousness shift to them; it will feel more like "If
we can just last through this time, then our pure energy that we
feel so strongly in the present will be established forever." (Sound
like much of the fundamentalist rhetoric that one hears these days?)
I think that this psychology can lead to all sorts of horrible
behavior. The ones who feel strongly that _their_ Age is finally
really coming into its own and that it can endure forever often
torture and try to obliterate the prophets and avatars of the Age
to come. And because the people who embrace the New Age have entered
it in a climate of torture and coercion, when their time comes to
bow out they tend to treat the next prophets and avatars of the
next Age the same way they were treated when their Age was being
born. Like the beaten child who becomes him/herself a child beater.
If there's anything that it might be vital to examine on this dawn
of the next Age, it's ways to interrupt or reform the energy of
this particular cycle I mentioned above. I think the _real_ proof
of the much-touted spiritual/consciousness advancements of the Aquarian
Age will be some 2K years from now, when that Age gives way to the
Age of Capricorn. How will those prophets and avatars be treated?
How will that transition be handled? That could show, I feel, how
"far" we've _really_ come.
Marcia
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560.4 | And where is the Water-Bearer? | LEDS::BATES | | Wed Nov 11 1987 11:04 | 21 |
|
Your point about the seeming energy/power of those who hold on
to the old age is well taken - think, for example, of the priests
and elders of the Age of Aries the Ram - (the Old Testament world
of Judaism) who fought the coming of the faith symbolised by the
fish (Christianity). And before that, the persecution of the
tribes of Israel, with the icon of their faith - the ram, in
direct opposition to the religions of the Bull (Babylon, Assyria,
Egypt, Minoan Crete).
There is an excellent, now out of print book entitled "Hamlet's
Mill" by Hertha von Dechend (published by the MIT press in the
early seventies) that looks at the relationship between astronomy
and astrology from the standpoint of myth - and the importance of
those myths to the cultures that created them. Reading the book
gives one insight into how we are now creating the myths that
will survive us milennia from now.
Gloria
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560.5 | Let's all be there in that distant future... | NEXUS::MORGAN | Welcome to the Age of Flowers | Wed Nov 11 1987 22:37 | 10 |
| Reply to .3; Marcia,
Great thoughts! I wish more people could view things in a geologic
type mode and, then, put themselves into someone elses shoes in
the far distant past or future.
Reply to .4; Bates,
Astronomy came from astrology and astrology in some cases, created
mythology, although mythology (spiritual history) came before either.
|
560.6 | A Myth is as good as a mile | LEDS::BATES | | Tue Nov 17 1987 17:16 | 15 |
|
Re .5:
Most assuredly, myth contains the essence of so-called
primitive peoples' observations of their environment -
not just that of the heavens above them, but also of
the world around them and of natural phenomena for which
these peoples (worldwide) sought explanations.
Just as certainly, we are creating myths of our own -
although we may call them something other than myths.
-Gloria
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