Month: January, 2012

Sun in Scorpio, Moon in Virgo: The Charade Stops Here

Don’t try to pull the wool over the eyes of a Scorpio Sun, Virgo Moon person. Scorpio is the Covert Operative of the Zodiac while Virgo is the Forensic Researcher. This is an ideal combination for anybody who needs to get to the bottom of a complex criminal enterprise as it combines the shamanistic abilities of Scorpio with the analytical prowess of Virgo.

Take a look, for instance, at this clip from the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode “Future Imperfect”. The episode was originally broadcast November 12th, 1990 making it a Scorpio Sun, Virgo Moon. (Chart) Commander Riker has awakened sixteen years in the future, but soon his Scorpio/Virgo spidey sense is telling him things are not as they seem:

Scorpio is the Olympic champion when it comes to spotting deceptions while Virgo darn near gets turned on by focusing on details. Did you notice how Riker catches Commander Data in a deception (Scorpio) by spotting the tiniest of incongruities (Virgo) in his speech patterns?

Riker’s spidey sense is dead on accurate: he’s not 16 years in the future but trapped in a hidden cave prison. The images supposedly from 16 years in the future are actually hallucinations generated by an alien who is reading his memory.

In addition to making a fantastic detective, the Scorpio Sun, Virgo Moon native has an affinity for the downtrodden, the ill, the less fortunate. Scorpio understands the depths of depression while Virgo has an inborn desire to serve. It turns out the alien who has trapped Commander Riker in the cave is not a Romulan but actually a child who has been masquerading as Riker’s future son. He’s been hiding in the cave for eons, by himself, after his own parents were killed by an invading force. He trapped Commander Riker not out of ill intent but simply out of desperation for companionship. Commander Riker, demonstrating the Scorpio/Virgo sense of devotion and duty, forgives the alien and offers him refuge on board the Enterprise.

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Copyright Matthew David Savinar, 2011

Moon in Capricorn: Symbol of Emotional Needs in the Sign of Integrity and Determination, Brass Tack Reality and Professional Responsiblity

The Moon represents a person’s emotional body, their instinctual nature, their unconscious, their true motivations, the most fundamental part of their psyche. It tells us what a person’s needs are, what type of emotional food the person must have on a regular basis in order to feel themselves. It is loosely analogous to the female or “yin” part of a person’s emotional ecosystem and is considered indicative of what they’re bringing in through the matriarchal line.

Capricorn is the sign of the Prime Minister, the Authority Figure, the Strategist, the Business Man, the General the CEO, and the Tycoon. When a person’s Moon (emotional needs) is in Capricorn their emotions “switch on” during times of austerity. This is why the Moon is considered “in detriment” when in Capricorn. Soul-crushing experiences that would break the spirits of other Moon signs are actually emotionally nourishing to the Capricorn Moon. Arnold Schwarzenegger, for instance, is a Capricorn Moon. Arnold’s abilities as a thespian were never his strong suit and his legacy as governor of California has been nothing short of catastrophic but I will say this about the man: his performance in Terminator 2 is one of the greatest expressions of all that is practical, responsible, and relentlessly determined about the Capricorn Moon. Take note of the first 20 seconds of this clip as his cybernetic alter-ego the T-800 climbs over a series of obstacles just like a Mountain Goat, the animal symbol for Capricorn:

Capricorn is the sign of kept promises so when the Moon is in Capricorn the person is actually nourished by working hard to keep their promises. In Terminator the reprogrammed T-800 portrayed by Arnold has promised to protect a young child and he keeps this promise to his grave. He also keeps his promise to the child that he will not kill anybody, a promise as difficult to keep for a cybernetic killing machine promising to lay off dairy would be for a Cancer Moon.

Capricorn Moons can spend lifetimes learning not to repress their emotions. Even at the end of Terminator 2, Arnold’s cybernetic alter-ego learns the importance humans emotions . “I know now why you cry, but it is something I can never do”, he explains to his human companion before dying. More than a few Capricorn Moons, so reluctant to show their emotions, can relate to that sentiment.

That scene, so painful and poignant to watch, left many audiences of in tears — something a number of Capricorn Moons could stand to let themselves shed every once in a while.

There’s another reason the Moon is considered in her detriment when placed in this all-business sign, one that is not all together pleasant to contemplate. Of the 12 Moon signs, Capricorn is the only one which can shut of its emotions with the ice-cold totality of a cyborg. If Arnold’s articulation of a reprogrammed T-800 in the 1991 installment of the Terminator franchise is an example of everything admirable about the Capricorn Moon then his articulation of the same character in the original 1984 version is an example of all that is potentially problematic about this placement:

Obviously few Capricorn Moons will ever take things to the sociopathic extremes expressed by Arnold but this placement does have a tendency to retreat behind a fortress like wall of bah-humbug as impenetrable as the metal endo-skeleton of the his cybernetic alter-ego.

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