Month: January, 2012

Pisces Sun, Aquarius Moon: The Missionary, the Humanitarian

Aquarius is the sign of Genius, the Mad Scientist, the Truth Speaker, the Rebel, the Revolutionary, the Eccentric, the Catalyst. Symbolized as a lightning bolt that liberates people from oppression, Aquarius is associated with social tolerance, independent thinking, and radical innovation.

Pisces, the sign after Aquarius, is the sign of Mystic, the Poet, the Intuitive, the Psychic, the Daydreamer, the Hospice Worker, the Volunteer. Symbolized as two fishes, Pisces understands that the physical and emotional “spaces” where one person (or entity) ends and another begins are as permeable as the space where one ocean blends into another.

Combine the uber-compassionate, trans-dimensional identity of a Pisces Sun with the radically innovative, humanitarian instincts of an Aquarius Moon and you get somebody who puts people before profits, the environment before the ego, and integrity before instant-gratification. In his book Sun Signs Moon Signs, Jefferson Anderson emphasizes this combination’s propensity for large scale humanitarian endeavors:

Your sympathy and concern for the others is projected on a worldwide scale. This is the combination of the social activist, the zealous missionary, and the reformer. Your eyes seem to reveal your subtle wisdom and in depth understanding of human nature.

Jesus Christ is generally thought to be a Capricorn Sun but the reality, according to Astrotheme.com, is he was a Pisces Sun, Aquarius Moon. (Source) I’m not sure how they determined his actual date of birth but his story, even if totally mythological, does fit the basic psychological profile of the Pisces Sun, Aquarius Moon combination: involvement in group associations (the disciples), deep compassion for the less fortunate (prostitutes, beggars), a globally oriented sense of spirituality, a propensity for getting in trouble with the ruling authorities (the money changers, the Romans), a sense of alienation from mainstream society (40 days in the desert).

Jeremy Benthem, the political writer and social reformer of the late 1700s and early 1800s, was also Pisces Sun, Aquarius Moon. (Source) Like many of his Pisces/Aquarius astro-twins, he was both radically ahead of his time and often at odds with the ruling norms of his era. His ideas about economics significantly influenced social welfare programs that begun to take shape in the late 1800s and early 1900s. He also advocated for the abolition of slavery, the decriminalization of homosexual activity, and is considered the “patron saint of the animal rights movement”. Keep in mind this was during the early 1800s, between 100 and 200 years before some of these ideas caught on in mainstream society.

One of the greatest strength of this combination according to the Harveys is “wide acceptance of the entire gamut of society.” Bentham was instrumental in establishing the University of London which became the first university in England to admit all, regardless of race, creed or political belief.

Bentham never came back from the dead like his Pisces Sun, Aquarius Moon astro-twin Jesus Christ but he did instruct that his body be preserved and put on permanent display at the University of London. His stuffed corpse is still wheeled into every single cabinet meeting where he is listed as “present, not voting” in the meeting’s minutes. (No joke) Sounds a bit macabre but it’s pretty much par for the course for this pairing. It often has an oddball sense of humor and thrives in social settings where the bizarre, the deviant, and the unconventional are all joyously accepted as normal.

William Jennings Bryan, the popular Democratic presidential candidate of the late 1800s and early 1900s, was a Pisces Sun, Aquarius Moon. (Source) Bryan’s biography mirrors the story of Jesus Christ and Jeremy Bentham in some very interesting ways. Bryan advocated backing the U.S. dollar with silver instead of just gold, a proposition that was to his era what Jesus turning over the tables of the moneychangers was to Roman times. Bryan rose to fame following his 1896 speech entitled “A Cross of Gold” which he concluded by outstretching his arms as though being crucified.

Bryan came to be seen as a near Christ-like figure among millions of lower class Americans thrown out of work following the collapse of the railroad fueled real estate bubble of 1893. His appeal was such that he ran for president and nearly won at 36, despite widespread condemnation by the mainstream media of his time. Like his Pisces Sun, Aquarius Moon astro-twins Jesus Christ and Jeremy Bentham, Williams Jennings Bryan won himself powerful enemies among the elite 1% of society, the same portion of society that is now profiting more than ever as the planet burns.

Contact Matt Savinar for a Consultation

Copyright Matthew David Savinar, 2011

29 Degrees Sagittarius: The "Samuel Jackson Point" of the Zodiac?

Sagittarius is the sign of the quests, crusades, and devil-may-care adventures. It’s also the sign most likely to be passionately involved in religious, spiritual, or philosophical pursuits. At it’s most extreme expression, however, Sagittarius is the sign of “Doom’s Super Soldier” who will stop at nothing to achieve its quest, according to astrologer Austin Coppock. (Source)

If Sagittarius is the sign of the quasi-religious philosopher-super soldier then is it any surprise that actor Samuel Jackson, best known for playing a Bible quoting philosopher-hitman in the film Pulp Fiction, is a 29 degrees Sagittarius Sun? (Chart)

There are 30 degrees to each sign, 0-29, with each successive degree correlating to a more concentrated form of that sign’s energy. Twenty nine degrees Sagittarius is thus the most intensely concentrated degree of Sagittarius. Jackson’s wallet in Pulp Fiction is inscribed with the phrase “Bad Mother Fucker” which is basically a synonym for “Doom’s Super Soldier”, the most intensely concentrated expression of Sagittarius energy.

Sagittarius can usually be found on a spiritual quest of some sort. Not coincidentally, Samuel Jackson’s character in Pulp Fiction spends most of the film on a quest for his boss’s suitcase. We never find out for sure what’s in the suitcase but it does shine very brightly when opened, which leads us to suspect there may be some type of spiritual component to whatever is in it.

Like a textbook Sagittarius, Jackson’s character also undergoes something loosely akin to a spiritual awakening from the beginning to the end of the film. As he says to Ringo, the would be hold-up man, in the film’s famous concluding scene, “Normally both your asses would be dead as fried chicken but you happened to pull this shit while I’m in a transitional period.” He also speaks quite loudly, yet another Sagittarius trademark.

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Copyright Matthew David Savinar, 2011

I recommend the following books:

Star Trek's Mr. Spock: The Ultimate Aquarius?

Aquarius is the sign of Genius, the Mad Scientist, the Truth Speaker, the Rebel, the Revolutionary, the Exile, the Eccentric. Astrologer Judy Hall writes, “Many Aquarians feel alien on earth, as though home is a long way away, or in a future where humankind is in a better place.” (Source) Actor Leonard Nimoy, best known for playing Mr. Spock on Star Trek, has Venus (style, self-worth, love) in Aquarius on his Midheaven (career). This means his public reputation (the Midheaven) was destined to be characterized by Aquarian themes no matter what specific career path he embarked upon. (Chart)

Like a textbook Aquarius, Nimoy’s space alien alter ego Mr. Spock favored logic and rational detachment to excessively messy emotional entanglements. Spock was also an outsider, an exile among both Vulcans and Humans, but his instinctive understanding of technology and capacity to pull information out of thin air were tremendous assets to the crew.

This scene from the film Star Trek: The Voyage Home captures nicely the modus operandi of an Aquarius Moon: involvement in humanitarian endeavors, engaging in behavior that shocks, taking an opinionated approach to political matters, and even being a bit socially awkward:

Anybody whose raised an Aquarian child can probably relate to Captain Kirk’s reaction of stunned shock upon realizing that Spock had jumped into the whale exhibit at the museum.

Aquarians find it darn near impossible not to speak their truth. Spock, not coincidentally, was unable to tell a lie.

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Copyright Matthew David Savinar 2011

Moon in Aquarius: A Need for the Unusual and the Unpredictable, the Eclectic and the Eccentric

Aquarius is the sign of Genius, the Mad Scientist, the Truth Speaker, the Rebel, the Revolutionary, the Exile, the Eccentric. When a person’s Moon (emotional needs) is in Aquarius, they’re nourished by the bizarre, the unpredictable, the unconventional, and the shocking. Symbolized as two lightning bolts, Aquarius can take the “30,000 foot view” of events so it has a tendency to view things before others can. Perceiving the Earth’s inhabitants from a vantage point analogous to outer space is why Aquarius Moons often resonate emotionally with the fringes of society.

Actor David Duchovny, best known for playing FBI agent Fox Mulder on The X-Files, is an Aquarius Moon. (Chart) With his Moon (emotions, instincts) in uber-eccentric Aquarius it was easy for him to slide into the emotional body of an uber-eccentric character like Fox Mulder:

Like Fox Mulder, most Aquarius Moons have a near total immunity to the weird. They also tend to attract a bizarrely eclectic mix of friends and can have trouble picking up on subtly romantic overtures from potential partners, again, just like the Fox Mulder character.

At its highest expression, Aquarius is the sign of tolerance for others, independent thinking, and radical innovation. To illustrate: Director George Lucas, the creator of Star Wars, is an Aquarius Moon. Star Wars did to the status quo in Hollywood circa 1966 what an actual UFO landing on the White House lawn would do to the status quo in Washington D.C. circa 2012. Had Lucas told people in the mid 1970s about his plans for Star Wars they likely would have thought “That sounds totally crazy.” That’s because given the primitive special effects standards of that era, his plans for the film were totally crazy. But doing the “totally crazy” is what an Aquarius Moon needs to do in order to feel normal.

Sometimes, as with Lucas’s Aquarian brainchild Star Wars, what was originally thought of as totally revolutionary later becomes the established standard by which all others are evaluated. This is why Aquarius has two planetary rulers: Uranus and Saturn. Uranus rules radical shocks while Saturn rules established structures. The young radical who later becomes an established politician is very much an Aquarian archetype.

Aquarius Moons can often be found working in large groups where they can feel a sense of esprit de corps. “All for one and one for all”, “Liberty and justice for all, malice towards none”, and “We all hang together or we all hang separately” are sayings probably thought of by people with Aquarius emphasized in their charts. The chart of the United States includes, not coincidentally, the presence of an Aquarius Moon. (Chart)

The Moon of the United States is in Aquarius, the sign of the revolutionary who later becomes a dictator

If you can imagine the feelings the founding fathers likely had for each other that is a good approximation of the ideal emotional state of an Aquarius Moon. They came from different colonies which in those days may as well have been different nations or even different worlds. They likely had plenty of beef with one another but they knew that the good of each of them was riding on the good of all of them. Most importantly what they were doing was incredibly innovative, absolutely shocking to the rest of the world, and involved pursuing the ultimate emotional need for an Aquarius Moon: independence.

Contact Matt Savinar for a Consultation

Copyright Matthew David Savinar 2011

The South Node: The Point of Karmic Blowback

The South Node is the primary astrological indicator of past lives. I call it the “Karmic Blowback Point” as it indicates where a person likely got things wrong in their past lives as well as how they’re most likely to self-destruct in this life. The North Node is the solution to all the problems and excesses of the South Node. No matter whether we’re looking at the natal chart of an individual, a composite chart of a relationship, or the chart of an event, investing time and energy in the patterns symbolized by the North Node will get the person or situation on a path that is best for all.

To illustrate: think back to the spring of 2003. At that time the South Node was in Sagittarius, the sign of optimism, faith, expansion, overseas crusades, and belief systems including religion. Not coincidentally, we were being sold on the war in Iraq – an expansive, faith-based, overseas crusade for “democracy” with major religious overtones to it.

That’s a rough video to watch. Sitting in the middle of a foreign land, trapped alone in a stalled vehicle, watching three co-workers get executed, yelling into a radio “I’m fixin’ to get killed, I need help, I have no gun, I’m by myself” pretty much summarizes the worst possible outcome of a Sagittarius South Node.

The North Node at the time was in Gemini, the sign of asking questions. Had the country as a collective entity asked more questions during that time we might not have wasted 10 years, trillions of dollars, and untold amounts of blood on two enterprises that represented all the lowest, darkest attributes of Sagittarius.

That’s an extreme example of how the Nodes works but that’s why I use it: it illustrates the importance of the North Node in a fashion that is now obvious to all regardless of political/social leanings.

Contact Matt Savinar for a Consultation

Copyright Matthew David Savinar, 2011

I recommend the following books:

Mars at Zero Degrees Libra: "Revenge, my dear captain, is a dish best served cold. It is very cold in space . . ."

The four Zero Points: 0 degrees Aries, 0 degrees Cancer, 0 degrees Libra, and 0 degrees Capricorn are considered the four most potent, powerful, and explosive degrees of the 360 degrees that comprise the zodiac. (Source)

To illustrate how planets express themselves through the four Zero Points, consider the film Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan. Born (released) May 4th, 1982 the film has Mars at zero degrees Libra. (Natal Chart) Its trailer will give you an idea of the colossal amounts of energy this placement is associated with:

Libra is usually associated with peace and diplomacy but that’s not necessarily the case when it’s Mars in Libra. When Mars is in Libra what you’re looking at is a confrontation (Mars) between equally matched opposites (Libra). When you think Mars in Libra think of “a duel”, be it a duel under the blazing sun of the Western frontier or a duel in the icy coldness of outer space. The duel between Kirk and Khan portrayed in Star Trek is thus a great metaphor for how Mars at 0 degrees Libra will often express itself: an absolutely explosive (Zero Point) confrontation (Mars) between equally matched opposites (Libra).

The Sabian Symbol for 0 Degrees Libra is “A man with a pistol in each hand walks in a barren land, unaware that he is followed by a man holding a sword.” (Source) That’s a pretty good metaphor for the way Mr. Khan stalks Kirk through the barren vastness that is deep space.

Truly great films always have endings that correspond to their North Node, the astrological symbol of a person’s destiny should they choose to accept it. The Wrath of Khan’s North Node is in Cancer, the sign of the Great Mother. At the film’s conclusion the Genesis Device, the ultra powerful terra-forming device Mr. Khan had attempted to weaponize, is used to birth a new planet.

See also: Zero Degrees Aries: The Zodiac’s “Yippee Ki Ya Motherfucker!” Point

Contact Matt Savinar for a Consultation

Copyright Matthew David Savinar, 2011

I recommend the following books:

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