Let the Dark Be the Dark

As the Sun moves into Scorpio, the days continue to darken, the clocks will soon fall back an hour, and we continue the slow movement toward the shortest day of the year—that is to say, the day with the least amount of light and the most amount of darkness: the Winter Solstice. Western culture has a curious obsession with light.  Ever since the mythological Prometheus stole fire (light) from the gods and handed it to the human beings he created out of clay, those humans have had a strong desire to carry this light, often quite literally, into dark places to see what their mysteries contain.  Built into the very mythological-archetypal definition of “hero” is the need to head into the dark underworld to slay the terrible creature within and retrieve the bright and shiny reward.

The quest for more and more light became particularly noticeable—perhaps epidemic—during the 18th century’s Age of Enlightenment, when exploring the darkness and lighting it up became of supreme importance.  With the discovery of electricity came the ability to channel light.  And while the sun never set on the British Empire, across the pond the creation of the United States of America brought with it the continued hope of an ever-more-enlightened nation, eventually leading to the torch-light-bearing Statue of Liberty, symbolizing the U.S. as a carrier of light and liberation for the world. 

From “daylight saving time” to “You Light Up My Life” to “Days of Our Lives” to “Guiding Light” to popular modern painter Thomas Kinkade trade-marking himself as the “Painter of Light,” it’s pretty clear that we’re not particularly fond of the darkness.

This is mirrored by the terrible dangers lurking in the dark as seen in popular horror movies:  there’s the razor-fingered burn victim named Freddy haunting our nightmares;  the hockey-masked killer named Jason stalking the woods; the puzzling Jigsaw wreaking havoc on our psychological sanity; or countless other more generic, warped caricatures.  Darkness is typically the storage container for our deepest and ugliest fears, worries and troubles.

More recently, Harry Potter has fought against the powers of darkness with his light-bringing magic wand.  The popular Rick Riordon modern mythology books all began with “The Lightning Thief”—a reinvention of the Prometheus myth.  And the uber-popular Twilight series involves the famed creatures of the night—vampires and werewolves—emerging into the daylight, perhaps because, symbolically, when we shine so much light into the dark we not only see what it contains, but what it contains will have nowhere to hide or mind its own business.

Perhaps it’s time to view darkness from a different vantage point.  I look back quite a few centuries and see that Celtic culture, for example, did not particularly fear darkness.  They understood and appreciated darkness in a fundamentally different manner.  Says John O’Donohue:

 “The Celtic Underworld wasn’t like the classical Underworld where there was darkness and where it was Hades.  The Irish-Celtic Underworld was the secret mother-source of all fertility.”

It’s intriguing to view darkness as a fertile source of creativity.  After all, just as crops grow up from the underworld, so too do our own human imaginations.  To access images from dreams all anyone has to do is close their eyes and go to sleep.  The images pulled from the necessary time of darkness, from places we can’t see no matter how much light we shine, are the often stunning and beautiful images that have inspired artists for centuries.  Not all darkness is filled with nightmares.  Darkness and imagination brought forth Vincent Van Gogh’s “Starry Starry Night” and countless other inspired works.

I love the quote, “When it is dark enough, you can see the stars.”  Considering that a field such as astrology, for example, is a direct result of what the imagination glimpses when looking at the stars, and the resulting capacity to infer meaning from the deep recesses of the imagination, it’s good to give credit where credit is due.  Bring on the night!

Modern western culture is as addicted to caffeine, stimulants, and “waking up” (Caribou Coffee advertises with the slogan, “Life is short – stay awake for it”) as much as it’s addicted to sleeping pills and other narcotics.  This is a sure sign that something is amiss.  Perhaps it’s time to appreciate the light that has been brought to the world, and to re-imagine our relationship with darkness and simply let the dark be the dark.

Posted on October 23, 2010 and filed under Uncategorized.

Mercury Retrograde: Can You Hear Me Now?

This week is the often-highly-anticipated astrological event called Mercury Retrograde!  (Oh no!  Run for the hills!) What does this mean?

Traditionally this three-week period is the time when otherwise-decent conversations go horribly wrong, signing a contract can have Faustian overtones, your car experiences the equivalent of a medical emergency or a neurotic breakdown, your iPod goes haywire (the worst!), or traffic becomes hugely inconvenient right when convenience would be most convenient.  Basically, as a stereotype, Mercury Retrograde is the time when the lives of good, decent, well-intentioned and thoughtful human beings can look an awful lot like an episode of Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote. 

The truth is, these kinds of things can happen any time, and they do happen anytime.  What, then, is so special about Mercury Retrograde?

With Mercury Retrograde I always imagine those cell phone commercials and the incessant “Can you hear me now?  Can you hear me now?” inquiries, as the caller questions the quality of the line as the connection drops in and out.  That is really what Mercury Retrograde is about:  looking at the quality of how things are connecting in your life―and what your thoughts have to do with that.  How do your thoughts impact and facilitate the connections in your life, or disrupt them?  You mean I got into a car accident because my mind wandered to my upcoming vacation time in the Bahamas?  Absurd!  You mean my computer was tragically and slowly dismantled by a virus because I went to a gaming site instead of paying attention to work?  Who, me?  Mercury Retrograde is a time to pay attention when things go wrong.  Mercury is a mischievous planet—a Trickster—and during Mercury Retrograde what goes wrong may not be going wrong at all.  It may be setting things right.  Right?

The Sign of Virgo

From August 20 until September 12 Mercury Retrograde happens in the sign of Virgo.  Virgo is a very practical, down-to-earth sign.  And it’s about the health of your daily life on earth, connected to the health of your body.  When people talk about the “mind-body connection,” they are talking about Virgo.

Virgo at its worst is when life is routine and you live habitually, day in and day out, just doing it (not in the Nike sense).  When life becomes habit, something is amiss, and it will likely show up in your health.  That’s how Virgo operates.

Mercury Retrograde in Virgo is about being discriminating with your thoughts, by noticing what works and what doesn’t work.  It’s the difference between being critical and being discerning.  Virgo at its best is discerning.  It’s about sifting through the finer contours of the landscape of your thoughts to discover which ones might not be serving your life particularly well.

For some people, the practice and practicality of daily life has perhaps squeezed out a great deal of the wonder and spontaneity—the spirit—of life at the same time.  If that’s you, this is a great time to reflect on how your practice of life has become a bit stale, a bit too cleaned-up.  Where has your life been dressed up in white for far too long and white just isn’t working for you anymore? 

And for other people, daily life might require a bit of grounding.  If you’re one of the types who flies around all the time from this place to that place in responsible service to everyone in your life, chilling out and paying attention to your own life may be at hand. 

The late Irish poet and mystic John O’Donohue asks a couple of really wonderful questions that I think apply to Mercury Retrograde in Virgo, for working on improving the overall quality of your life.

He asks, “When was the last time you really listened to your heart?”

And, “If you were to clearly explain to your heart how brief your time in the world is, what are the things your heart would make you stop doing right now?”

If Mercury Retrograde can often seem to lack any subtlety whatsoever, in Virgo it may just be the Trickster’s merciful style of getting us to, as O’Donohue says, “attend to the subtle life we have, and look after it, and come into touch with it.”  It's Mercury's way of asking, "Can you hear me now?"      

Mercury goes retrograde on August 20, at around 3pm.  Or to say it in the style of Virgo:  August 20, 2010, at precisely 2:58:32 PM CDT, Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Posted on August 19, 2010 and filed under astrology.

Saturn In Libra - Order In the Court!

The planet Saturn has entered the sign of Libra until October 2012. BlueSaturn is pretty serious stuff.  Saturn deals with weighty issues of responsibility, structure and authority, and wastes no time getting down to business.

In Libra, this serious focus turns to relationships and partnerships of all kinds (romantic, business, adversarial, etc.) and the entire notion of “relating” in general.  It also puts the focus on marriage, which is vitally important to the sign of Libra, as are issues regarding law, civility, and fairness.

You never know which side of the scale you’re going to get when Saturn is in Libra.  On the one hand, history shows us this dynamic during the United States’ Civil War (1862-1865).  On the other hand, we’ve seen the glorious wedding of Prince Charles and Lady Diana (1981).  Sometimes you get both sides: The rock band Yes said “no” and broke up in 1981, only to say “yes” again a couple of years later to re-form.

The Judge

Saturn in Libra at its best brings out the Judge archetype.  It’s about being centered, seeing both sides of any situation with a clear and level head, carefully weighing the options, and then making wise decisions.

Saturn was moving through Libra when Ronald Reagan appointed the first woman to the United States Supreme Court, taking a step toward establishing a more balanced Court, a balance that continues to slowly equalize to this day, during this Saturn in Libra cycle, as Elena Kagan becomes the 4th female judge to hold a seat.

The next two years could see important steps forward in legal issues regarding marriage, especially the issue of gay marriage, or it could see some major steps backward.  It all depends on how willing and able both sides are to respond to the challenges wisely.

The Victim

Saturn in Libra can constellate at its worst in the Victim archetype, when all that is unfair and unjust in life dominates, and when the most important question becomes, who is to blame?

In relationships, what do you consider fair and just?  How objective are you?  How thoughtful are you in your relationships?  Do you lose center and make hasty, emotional decisions, or do you take time to think about it?  These kinds of questions will tend to arise while Saturn is moving through Libra (and if they haven’t so far, they just did when you read this), and with Saturn it's time to take responsibility rather than place blame.  Perhaps the most important question is, how do you relate to yourself?  Your relationships are, after all, a reflection of yourself and what you value.

The key is to strive for balance, while remembering that balance is very delicate work, by no means easy to attain.  Balance is not fixed or stable.  Once balance is attained it must be maintained, for it will constantly shift as relationship dynamics constantly shift.  Unless, of course, you have successfully managed to live in a controlled relationship, in a controlled environment, on a controlled path, and―scratch that... that’s not a relationship!

Albert Einstein said, "It's not that I'm so smart, it's just that I stay with problems longer."  It’s a gift to have Saturn in Libra at this time, with all of its potential for wisdom and relationship.  The wise decision, however, is not usually the easy decision, which is probably why adopting a judge-like mentality for the next two years can be extremely beneficial, as can staying with problems a little longer when necessary.  When things get out of hand, demand a recess.  Or bang your gavel and shout, "Order in the court!"    Take some time, on purpose, and consider what you're building for the next 2+ years.  Love can build a bridge, or love can build a wall.  The decision is yours.

Posted on August 2, 2010 and filed under archetypes, astrology.