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I’m looking out my window on a sunny, calm day, in
this volatile city on the Pacific Rim of Fire. Last
week I re-packed the earthquake bag that sits in the
corner of the bedroom, and made a note in my calendar
to do it monthly.
There was a time when you talked about the weather
only when you were avoiding talking about more
important things. Now it’s all about the weather.
You’re just sitting there minding your business,
trying to pretend that Geena Davis or Martin Sheen is
really the president of the U.S., when suddenly a big
wind comes along and blows the roof off your house.
It plays havoc with TV reception. It’s all about
reality, folks.
Weather is reality, the most basic reality that we
human creatures know. Weather grounds us, pulls at
our connection to our mother, the earth. It reminds
us that we haven’t gone beyond her. We haven’t become
rarified creatures of the sky. We are still made up
of water and salt and dirt, just like everything else
that lives on her skin.
And weather is the way our governments are tested. If
they notice when people are standing in the streets,
holding babies in their arms, asking for food and
water - then, they are dealing with reality. If not,
they’re living in a different world from the rest of
us – or at least trying to. Clearly, in the recent
Katrina crisis, the Bush administration really could
have used a weatherman or two. They had no idea which
way the wind was blowing.
There was a time when people respected the wind and
water, prayed to them, tried to divine their purposes.
Storms were alive, they had passion and emotions.
Everyone who’s ever run through a rainstorm feels
that, somewhere in their bones. And now that we’ve
watched both Katrina and Rita directing their huge
spiraling bodies right at all those oil refineries -
well, it does make you wonder.
And so what is this earthy influence, astrologically
speaking? It’s Mars, the planet of action and will,
in the fixed earth sign Taurus. Mars slows down every
two years and goes retrograde. All through September,
it moved more and more deliberately, and now on the
1st day of October, it goes retrograde. (It will be
retrograde for two and a half months.)
When a planet is retrograde, it harkens to the past.
Whatever we’ve ignored, whatever we’ve wasted,
whatever we’ve discounted - it returns and taps us on
the shoulder. And Mars is about the physical. It’s
about our survival in these soft bodies of ours.
All through September, Mars was inconjunct Pluto, the
planet of power, and this aspect will stay in orb
throughout October as well. And so my sense is that
it will be more of the same. Mars in Taurus
represents the earth – her passions, her desires, her
will – and Pluto in Sagittarius corresponds to the
power structure, and the fanatical beliefs that are
currently shoring it up in both hemispheres. I don’t
think there’s any question who is stronger. All the
earth has to do is shift a little, and we all fall.
Taurus is the sign which relates to everything that’s
basic - sustenance, security, money. And so it’s also
interesting to see Tom DeLay being indicted by a Texas
grand jury for violations of fund-raising laws, and
having to step down as majority leader. DeLay’s
politics echo Bush’s: the born-again Christian who
has an unlimited sense of his own illustrious
political destiny. But underneath the hubris is
money, a good thick carpet of it. And now that the
earth is the focus, the foundations will be
scrutinized much more carefully.
What are we standing on? That’s the question of the
month. How have we built it? Is it strong? Is it
real?
And how about our relationship to the earth? Is it
real? Are we paying attention? As I said, Mars goes
retrograde every two years – and the last time it did
so, in the summer of 2003, Europe was burning up. The
glaciers in the Alps began to melt. It’s said that
35,000 people died from drought, boiling temperatures,
and forest fires during that summer. (And in the
northeastern US and Canada, this was the summer of the
blackouts.)
In Europe, there were also vegetable casualties.
Thirty percent of the plant life withered away, and it
took with it its ability to trap carbon dioxide and to
release oxygen. This was added to the already heavy
load of carbon dioxide in the air, caused by our human
habit of burning fossil fuels pretty much
continuously. That summer, we lost a lot of fresh
air, and this summer and fall, when Mars is retrograde
again, all that heat has come back in a different
form.
Heat breeds heat. The surface of the seas have gotten
hotter and so they are churning up hurricanes. Over
the past 35 years, hurricanes have gotten more
powerful and terrifying, according to recent study.
There are now twice as many in the Category 4 and 5
range.
As we hopscotch from one Mars retrograde cycle to the
next, what will happen to our earth? How much hotter
can we stand it? Will somebody tell the U.S.
president to sign the Kyoto Protocol before it’s too
late? Is it already too late?
And so I’ll keep my earthquake bag packed, and try to
stay real. Here on the Pacific Rim of Fire, we know
that the foundation is always changing, shifting,
flowing. In Quito, locked between the brilliant sun
and the bucking earth, we have no illusions.
Jenny's web site can be found
at: http://www.astrologerjenny.com/.
Email Jenny at: jenny_yates@yahoo.com.
Index of Jenny Yates' Writings on Lesbian.com
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