Monday, 10 April 2017
Tuesday, 21 March 2017
Caring for your debilitated moon
We
learned in our last little chat that a debilitated moon generally
implies issues with our perceptive faculties, perhaps even our senses
themselves, and with unconscious processes. This means that, for
whatever reason, our senses do not always relay a clear and accurate
reflection of reality – we receive an image slightly askew,
distorted by our own mental filter through which we see events.
So,
fate has given us some work to do. How do we fix this?
How
to train your moon (now in 3D)
Thursday, 16 March 2017
The Manner and Wit of the Native
While
the temperament is an internal and largely unchanging aspect of
personality that determines character as well as the form of the body
itself, the native's manner describes his behavioural traits, those
observable characteristics that are visible to others and mark him
out as a particular sort of person. Jupiter as the planet ruling his
manners and the native might be described as generous and affable;
Saturn, austere and serious.
Friday, 10 March 2017
The Lord of the Geniture
What
is Lord of the Geniture?
The
Lord of the Geniture is, to put it simply, the most powerful planet
in the natal chart (by essential dignity) which has the power to
assist the native. Essential dignity is straightforward enough to
determine, however a strong planet with weak accidental dignity, such
as one in the 8th or the 12th house, is not
going to be of much use to the native and therefore does not satisfy
the conditions necessary to be Lord of the Geniture.
How
is it calculated?
In
his magnum opus Christian Astrology, William Lilly describes
three methods that were used by the ancients to determine the Lord of
the Geniture and then describes his own method. These methods are as
follows:
- The method of Firmicus. Here we consider the sign that the moon is in, and take as Lord of the Geniture, the Lord of the subsequent sign. For example, if the Moon is in Aries, then Venus, as Lady of the following sign of Taurus, is Lady of the Geniture; if the Moon is in Leo, the Lord of the Geniture is Mercury, ruler of Virgo.
- The hylegical places method. The planet with the most essential dignities in the degrees of the ascendant, the mid-heaven, the sun, the moon and the part of fortune is taken as Lord of the Geniture
- The method of the Greeks. The Lord of the Geniture is taken to be the planet with the most dignities in the degree of the moon or mercury (who rule over the body and the spirit respectively).
Lilly's
own method is to take that planet that has the most essential and
accidental dignities and is “posited best, and elevated most in the
Scheme” as Lord of the Geniture, with any other planet with almost
equal strength acting as a modifier of the influence of the Lord of
the Geniture.
How
will knowing it help me?
Along
with the temperament, the Lord of the Geniture has an overarching
influence over the entire nativity and, to quote Lilly again, “the
whole actions of the Native will more or less partake of the nature
of that Planet and so his Conditions, Complexion, Temperament and
Manners shall be much regulated to the properties assigned that
Planet”.
As
the most dignified planet in the nativity and with high accidental
dignity, the Lord of the Geniture is also the planet most able to
assist the native in fulfilling his destiny and it acts as a guide as
well as a helper. It is, as the astrologer John Frawley describes
it, our Internal King and ”as
king, it is this planet's job to steer the ship of state.” (Real
Astrology Applied)
Monday, 27 February 2017
Temperament and Bardon's Soul Mirrors
One
particularly useful application of the calculation of temperament for
the aspiring Hermeticist is as an aid and a guide to the creation of
the Soul Mirrors described in Franz Bardon's Initiation into
Hermetics.
If
you are not familiar with the author, the basic idea is that one
spends some time in exacting introspection to identify and describe
the largely unconscious characteristics that make up our personality.
Bardon has one begin with the Black Soul Mirror which is a
description of all of our negative characteristics. Bardon leaves it
up to the student to determine what negative means to him, but these
are, broadly speaking, qualities that hinder rather than help us. He
tells us that “... you have to be pitiless and very strict with
yourself when it comes to your shortcomings, failings, habits,
passions, urges and many other negative character traits.”
It
may seem like a horribly self-destructive and depressing task to
label all the ways in which you are an awful human being, but the
ability to look at yourself with an objective perspective is a
necessary part of spiritual growth and achieving what Bardon calls
the “magical equilibrium”, a state of being in which one is able
to act intentionally without being influenced by one's subconscious
programming. If you are following Bardon's program of study, it's a
necessity, without which you risk serious imbalance when you start
working with the elements directly.
This
done, Bardon has the student assign each of these characteristics to
an element; and then the whole process is repeated with one's
positive characteristics to create the White Soul Mirror. By
the end of this exercise, you have a basic idea of the balance of the
four elements as they exist within your personality.
The
calculation of your temperament does the same thing in a more general
sense. By considering the significators of one's temperament, one
can learn the natural elemental balance as determined by the factors
of one's birth as described in the nativity. This is one's innate
elemental makeup. It may be altered slightly perhaps by one's
environment and training, but it's there in the background
controlling most of our actions and reactions.
I
find the temperament a good guide to what the Soul Mirrors will look
like once completed , e.g., if you are predominantly choleric, you
should have the largest proportion of characteristics listed under
the Fire element. It is also an indication of the exercises and
elements you may have most difficulty with and those you and those
you will take to (forgive the pun) like a duck to water.
Tuesday, 21 February 2017
The Temperament or Complexion of the Native
One
of the first techniques in the toolbox of the traditional astrologer
used when interpreting a nativity was the calculation of the
temperament of the native. Based upon then humoral theory of the
ancient Greek physician Hippocrates, whose school of medicine had an
enormous influence on medieval medical theory and practice, the
temperament offered a basic psychological description of the person
being described in a nativity, their innate disposition through which
they experienced the world and interpreted events.
Hippocrates
posited the existence of four humours, or fluids, that resided within
the human body and which were responsible for its health and, in the
case of a severe imbalance, the cause of illness and death.
Although the humours were considered to have a physiological basis,
they were also regarded as being responsible for the emotional
differences between human beings and influenced every aspect of
mental functioning, from habits, intelligence, to morality and
dreams.
How
many temperaments are there?
There
are four basic temperaments based on the four qualities of Heat,
Coldness, Dryness and Moisture which in turn are qualities of the
four basic elements that were thought to comprise matter – Fire,
Air, Water and Earth. Although every person will have some of each
element present in their makeup, the dominance of one particular
element will determine that person's temperament.
The
Choleric, an abunbance of Heat and Dryness, the fiery Type
personality. William Lilly tells us “Cholerick people are full
of anger, quarrelsome, revengefull, ambitious, importunate,
imperious, hardy, rash, involving themselves unto necessary troubles,
seditous, many times ingenious, and easily changing their opinions.”
Due to the predominance of the fire element, people with a choleric
temperament tend to be strong willed, focused, extroverted,
goal-oriented, passionate and easily aroused to love and hate. They
are the archetypal leader and visionary, and like many visionaries
they have little patience for the details. As such, they can become
irritable when things are not going their way and are prone to
burnout.
The
Melancholic, overabundance of Cold and Dry, the Earth Type
personality. William Lilly again: “Melanchollick persons are
slow in resolutions, fraudulent, keeping close their counsels,
prudent, severe, covetous, suspicious, sorrowfull, fearfull, forward,
seldome forgeting injuries, inexorable, ambitious, loving no mans
esteem but their owne.” As the word suggests, melancholics are
often prone to melancholic episodes. They tend to be solitary,
introspective, generally intelligent (although their need to mull
things over may give the impression of dullness), and these
characteristics tend to set them apart from their peers often
resulting in loneliness and feeling that they are not understood.
Although they may sometimes appear to be emotionally cold and
callous, they can have very deep feelings and, as Marsilio Ficino
notes in his De Vita, the melancholy temperament is often associated
with artists, philosophers and genius of diverse kinds.
The
Sanguine, predominantly Hot and Moist, the Air type personality.
“A Sanguine temperament shewes men or person cheerfull, liberal,
faithfull, affable, peace-makers, open hearted, modest, religious.”
If the melancholic is the wallflower hiding in the corner, the
sanguine is the social butterfly. Optimistic, good-natured,
extroverted but, unlike the choleric, interested in other people, the
sanguine is usually the life of the party, and appears to his friends
to be either exceptionally lucky in his life or somehow able to
generate his own luck. The sanguine possesses a cheerful disposition
that is unaffected by even the most cruelest vicissitudes of fate.
The
Phlegmatic, Cold and Moist, the Water type personality. Not
having much good to say about them, Lilly tells us that phlegmatics
“are very cowards, uxorious people mutable, not capable of keeping
secrets, dull fellowes and sluggards in performing any businesse.”
Water being a passive element and by its nature amorphous (water
takes the shape of the container in which it is placed), phlegmatics
were viewed with some suspicion. Phlegmatics tend to be imaginative,
fantasy prone, empathic and can seem slightly otherworldy to others.
They tend to have a highly developed intuitive ability which they
rely on to make their decisions. Their carefree “go with the flow”
attitudes can be infuriating to some and completely mysterious to
others.
Note
that, although there are four basic temperaments, it is possible to
have two in balance. The temperament is also modified by the Lord of
the Geniture, the strongest planet in the nativity, and the Manners
of the native, the intellectual capacity and tendencies. Each
temperament is also associated with a particular planet (the choleric
with Mars, the melancholic with Saturn, the sanguine with Jupiter,
and the phlegmatic with the moon), and the strength and placement of
this planet in his geniture will have a determining factor in how the
temperament is expressed.
How
is it calculated and why should I bother?
The
calculation of the temperament is based upon the ascendant and the
planets in the first house or aspecting it, the sun, the moon and the
planets beholding her, and the lord of the geniture.
So,
now you have your temperament, what do you do with it? While
medieval medicine may seem rather odd to us today, it had much in
common with other ancient healing modalities such as Ayurveda and
Traditional Chinese Medicine, Like these increasingly popular forms
of alternative medicine, the Hippocratic-Galenic medicine of medieval
times was holistic and centred around the ideal of balance and
utilised everything from diet, exercise, herbs, surgery as well as
astrological magic to effect a cure.
While
I would not advocate a visit to your local barber for a bit of
bloodletting today, knowledge of one's temperament does offer one
some important insight that can be used to increase wellness. For
example, if you are aware that you are highly choleric, you can
determine that you may be prone to overexertion and burnout. In the
event that you are going to be in a high stress situation, this
knowledge should allow you to plan ahead to take some time out to
engage in some activities to lessen the influence of too much choler
such as meditation, or a swim in a cool lake.
What is my temperament?
If you want to know what your temperament is, choose the Temperament Calculation from the drop-down box on the right. Please include your time, date and place of birth, and I will calculate this for you.
What is my temperament?
If you want to know what your temperament is, choose the Temperament Calculation from the drop-down box on the right. Please include your time, date and place of birth, and I will calculate this for you.
Thursday, 9 February 2017
Wealth and fate – astrology and magic
This
was a response to a discussion about the utility of magic to overcome
or change the restrictions placed on our financial circumstances by
fate, karma and one's nativity.
In traditional astrology there are significators of wealth in your natal chart which describe your future financial status and your ability to accrue wealth, as well as give indications where this money will come from (and, if afflicted, how you will lose money), but the amount of wealth you could accumulate was considered largely determined by the conditions of your birth. Here's William Lilly on the traditional astrology answer regarding the question of fate and wealth:
"..for a beggar's child may have a nativity equal with a king's but then they are not both the sons of kings; therefore at what time an extraordinary direction happens, whereby a king obtains extraordinary or very great honour upon the influence thereof; the young beggar having the very same fortunate direction in his nativity, has no more falls to his share, then either to fall to some course of life, not so sordid to beg. A king has loans or money of his subjects; it happens the beggar has some more than usual bountiful alms from some good people.
A king performs some honourable exploit; a beggar has more than ordinary respect amongst his fellow beggars, for some neat piece of service he has performed for the fellowship; so that herein the one has honour according to his capacity, and the other such fame with his companions, which pleases him as well as honour." (Christian Astrology, p616)
In Lilly's day if you are born a beggar, you are never going to become king, and if your father was a stonemason, well, that's going to be your profession too. Although the level of wealth you may achieve is still largely determined by the family you are born into, if you are lucky enough to live in a wealthy country, you likely have a lot more options than anyone born before you has ever had.
Firstly,
you have the ability to relocate relatively easily to a city or
country with more options. There's an idea in traditional astrology
that the testimony of your nativity takes precedence over any horary
chart promising wealth, and likewise, the nativity of the country you
are in takes precedence of your nativity. If you cast a horary chart
that shows you obtaining piles of cash, the size of the pile is going
to be relative to the strength of the significators of wealth in your
nativity. Likewise, if your nativity promises you wealth but you live
in a relatively poor country with few options for improving your
circumstances (and the nativity of your country and its mundane
astrology show nothing improving its GDP anytime soon), the
likelihood is that you will do well in comparison to your countrymen,
but your ability to achieve wealth is restricted.
If
you are in a job that doesn't pay well, you are able to retrain for
an alternative, better paying career, and you can look for
alternative streams of income while you are doing so. You have
access to resources and information via the internet that you can
make use of.
The problem with doing magic for money isn't that magic is useless at making people wealthy, it's that most money magic is really emergency magic, and people are crap at making choices that improve their financial circumstances. It's not necessarily because people are stupid, it's just that school does not give you the skills to become wealthy. Education is indoctrination - it's about making you into a useful cog that knows its place in the machine and doesn't question its lowly condition.
If you want to use magic to make money, your plan should look something like this;
1. Figure out a way to make money and to become wealthy
2. Divine on how to make your venture a success (for example, if you are an astrologer and you want to invest money somewhere, you might do so when your significators of wealth are in a strong place, you might cast a horary chart for that stock option, or you might elect a time to invest in the market)
3. Do some magic
Magic is the last step, not the first. If everything preceding your magic is not in place, you're going to win a small amount on a scratch card or you're going to find £20 on the street. If that's all you are getting for the days of fasting, the thousands you spent on your lionskin belt and the fancy sword, the eyestrain from reading the charge to the spirit by candlelight, go back to step 1 and start again.
Friday, 3 February 2017
Saturn - The Greater Infortune
If
you were to consult any of the works of the medieval or traditional
astrologers on the planet Saturn, you would likely find expressions
like “(the greater) malefic”, “melancholy”, “decay”,
“malevolence”, “restriction”, “death”, the “author of
solitariness”, and, my personal favourite, “offensively acid, stinking".
As
the planet most remote from the earth and closest to the fixed stars,
Saturn is far removed from our normal human concerns and daily
routine. In fact, we try to avoid him as much as possible and the
things he rules. We want the riches and honours promised by Jupiter
but without the disciplined study and hard, often thankless, work
that is often required; we want the effortless and exhilarating
romantic relationships that Hollywood tells us we deserve (regardless
of how awful a person we might be), but Hollywood neglects to mention
the personal sacrifice and commitment that a long-term relationship
with another requires. Unfortunately, like ageing, gravity, death
and taxes (which, not coincidentally, are ruled by the Greater
Malefic), we cannot escape the influence of Saturn.
In
medieval astrology, due to its extreme cold and slowness of motion,
Saturn is thought to bring delays and obstacles, and its influence on
a person will often colour the personality with a tinge of
melancholy. Saturn afflicting the moon brings melancholy, Saturn
afflicting Venus or the Lord of the 7th house can bring
delays in marriage, Lord 5 a delay in having children. When Saturn
is a significator of the native, and he is ill dignified, it makes
that person – according to William Lilly, at least - “envious,
covetous, jealous and mistrustful, timorous, sordid, outwardly
dissembling, sluggish, suspicious, stubborn, a contemner of women, a
close liar, malicious, murmuring, never contented, ever repining”.
Not exactly the kind of person you would invite to a dinner party.
The
gifts of Saturn
As feared
and as hated as he was, Saturn is not all bad. William Lilly tells
us that a person with a well-dignified Saturn as his significator
“... is profound in imagination, in his acts severe, in words
reserved, in speaking and giving very spare, in labour patient, in
arguing or disputing grave, in obtaining the goods of this life
studious and solicitous, in all manner of actions austere.” He may
not be the most fun person at your dinner party, but he will likely
be the most interesting.
The
author of the Ghayat al-Hakim, one of the oldest source books of
medieval astrology, tells us that Saturn “is the planet whose
source holds great strength and has the knowledge of mysterious orbit
and the power to obtain the reason behind things and the ability to
find their intentions, the spell of wonders and knowledge of secret
and mysterious issues.” The great renaissance philosopher,
Marsilio Ficino, considered melancholy - a condition he attributed to
the influence of Saturn – to be the seed of genius, a philosophical
position which had a great influence on the writings of the Romantics
in the 18th century.
Remedies
for an afflicted Saturn- medieval avoidance and Vedic appeasement
Not
everyone wants to suffer the fate of a Chatterton or Shelley, and
even Ficino occasionally found Saturnine melancholy a little hard to
live with sometimes. The influence of Saturn, whether in one's
nativity or by transit, can be undeniably difficult to bear.
The
strategy of medieval astrology for dealing with an afflicting Saturn
was based on the notion of the four humors (and their
corresponding temperaments), a theory with roots in the
philosophy and medical practice of ancient Greece. As Saturn was
Cold and Dry in nature (corresponding to the melancholic
temperament), its cure was sought in Jupiter, whose nature is Hot and
Moist. The author of Ghayat al-Hakim tells us “...Jupiter fixes
everything Saturn damages” (Book III, Chapter 7) and Marsilio
Ficino in his De Vita says “when you fear Mars, set Venus opposite;
when you fear Saturn, use Jupiter.”
The
most common practices in medieval astrological magic involved the
creation of talismans and images corresponding to the planet in
question. In this case, we would make a Jupiter talisman at a time
elected when Jupiter is strong and unafflicted. However, this was
often part of a holistic approach which involved immersion in things
of a Jovial nature over an extended period of time; "...take
physical exercise in Jupiter's day and hour when he is reigning; and
in the meantime use Jovial things such as silver, jacinth, topaz,
coral, crystal, beryl, spodium, sapphire, green and aery colours,
wine, sugar, white honey; and entertain thoughts and feelings which
are especially Jovial, that is, steadfast, composed, religious, and
law-abiding; and you will keep company with men of the same kind -
men who are sanguine, handsome, and venerable." (Marsilio
Ficino. De Vita, Book 3, Chapter 2.) Ficino also found music
to be a useful palliative measure against the melancholy induced by
the influence of Saturn.
The
Vedic astrologers considered Saturn (Shani) a malefic
planetary deity, but a deity nonetheless. Indeed, according to the
Brihat Parashara Hora Shastra, the foundational text of Vedic
astrology, the Navgraha, the 9 planetary gods, are
manifestations of Vishnu, the universal god.
In
Vedic astrology, specific Shani transits are considered to bring
delays and difficulties, but he is considered an important teacher
with regards one's spirituality as he rules asceticism, meditation
and detachment from the world. In one story, the other gods cannot
abide the presence of Shani in a King's shrine and depart. Lakshmi,
the goddess of wealth, is the first to go - Saturn aflictions in the
nativity often bring poverty, and letting go of one's hardearned
wealth is the first step on the path to becoming a sanyasin, a
renunciate. One by one the other gods depart, until only Satya
(Truth) remains, and they return only because of the Kings dedication
to Truth.
Although
it is considered best to work with Shani's influence through
spiritual practice such as yoga, fasting or meditation, Vedic
astrology does give various remedial measures to lessen some of the
more unpleasant manifestations of Saturnine energy. These include;
asceticism (fasting for 9 Saturdays in a row), charity (offering
black clothes or iron/steel objects to beggars), and propitiation (a
shani nivarna sadhana involving the recitation of Shani's mantra).
Since all planetary deities are aspects of the universal deity, the
supreme method is considered to be yoga,
union with the universal deity.
Wednesday, 1 February 2017
What is horary astrology?
Most people are
familiar with natal astrology, the branch of astrology that deals
with the chart of a person born at a particular time. The central
idea of natal astrology is that it is possible to draw up an
astrological chart (the nativity) for the moment a person is
born. This chart is a visual representation of the position of
planets (which include the sun and the moon), certain stars and other
celestial objects with respect to the location of the person (the
native). These celestial objects have been determined by the
astrologers of antiquity to have potent and particular effects, and
through the analysis of these celestial objects in the chart it is
possible to delineate the character, personality traits, and the
probable future of the person concerned.
Modern astrology has
been heavily influenced by psychology and often the entire nativity
is dedicated to a psychoanalytic deconstruction of the personality of
the native. While this can have its uses, modern astrology is pretty
poor at making predictions about the future. Traditional medieval
astrology can certainly provide an accurate description of the native
(primarily through an analysis of the 1st house and a
calculation of the native's temperament),
but its concerns are much wider, and the nativity is believed to
describe the native's future wealth, his potential career, his family
(mother, father, siblings), his religion and deeply held beliefs,
romantic relationships, friends, children and so on. There is also a
long history and a vast repertoire of techniques to forecast future
events through traditional techniques such as profections,
directions, firdaria and transits (the latter of which is the only
one currently used in modern astrology - although even them, these
are interpreted as affecting only the native's mind).
Horary Astrology –
the astrology of a Question
A corollary of the core
principle of natal astrology - that the position of the planets in
the moment a person is born can be used to predict his likely future
– leads us to another branch of medieval astrology: horary
astrology. In horary astrology, an astrological chart of the heavens
is created for the moment a question is conceived (by the person
asking the question, the querent) or as is more usually the
case, understood by the Astrologer of whom the question is asked.
This chart shows the celestial influences acting on the moment the
question is conceived, and the chart of this unique moment in time is
interpreted to determine the likely outcome. As well as being
predictive in scope, horary astrology is also prescriptive, and it
can be used to identify the source of potential obstacles and
problems that stand in the way of success.
Monday, 30 January 2017
William Lilly's "Aphorisms and Considerations for Better Judging any Horary Question" Better Organised and in Plain English
Although
most of these are rather general statements that can be safely
ignored in favour of more specific testimonies, they are still a
useful guide in gaining a broad understanding of a horary chart.
Wednesday, 25 January 2017
Boo
Mortal through I be, yea ephemeral, if but a moment
I gaze up at the night's starry domain of heaven,
Then no longer on earth I stand; I touch the Creator,
And my lively spirit drinketh immortality.
I gaze up at the night's starry domain of heaven,
Then no longer on earth I stand; I touch the Creator,
And my lively spirit drinketh immortality.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)