| Moon
Teachings for August 2000
Fall into the Gap:
Void of Course Moons
By Dana
Gerhardt
A good office witch or urban
sorcerer will know about moon phases. And will be aware of the void-of-course
moon, which occurs every few days for a number of hours. You won’t
know when it’s void by scanning the skies for a runaway moon. It’s
something an astrologer sees in a chart or anyone can find in a good moon
calendar. But if you hear “Woe! All is lost when the moon
is void!” cover your ears. To borrow from the Harry Potter world,
you’re in the presence of a Muggle who knows nothing about real magic.
That’s what happens when
sorcery books fall into the wrong hands. True wizarding loses its
nuance and becomes superstition. Consider the following: “During
a void of course moon don’t initiate anything, buy anything, sign anything,
contact anyone important -- nothing will come of it. Be wary of making
decisions. Your judgment is faulty; any information you get will
be wrong. Whatever you do will have to be done again.”
Scary, huh. At best
you’re counseled to spend these hours adrift. Become a couch potato.
Or if you must take action, clean your house. It’s sure to get dirty
again.
A void is an opening, a gap,
an empty space. It suggests a state of being without. Astrologically,
the moon is void when she’s without connections (or “aspects”) to the other
planets. These gaps occur before the moon changes sign, and can
last from a few minutes, to a few hours, to a couple of days, depending
on the other planets’ positions. The logic of divination is a symbolic
one. Its gift of sight draws from the moment you choose to ask about
your fate. If your query comes when the moon is void, it’s presumed
you likewise lack connections. Without outer assistance, your project
is likely to fail.
But in Muggle hands, symbol
gets confused with literal cause and context is lost. Everyone
is thrown onto the same celestial assembly line – invisibly passing through
good and bad times at once. By this logic, every one of a hundred thousand
letters mailed during a void-of-course moon will fly from the postman’s
hands and disappear under the sewer grate. All contracts signed,
everything bought will be bad. A true wizard can only shake her head!
There is another way to think
of the void-of-course moon. Pretend you’re Harry Potter in the last
chapter of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone. You’ve gone
through the trap door, escaped the tendrils of the Devil’s Snare, singled
out the right winged-key from the hundred wrong ones. You’re alone
now, your buddies out of reach, behind the purple flame. Everyone
thinks you’re a great wizard but you’re not so sure... yet it’s up
to you to retrieve the Sorcerer’s Stone before it falls into the wrong
hands. As instructed, you take a drink from the little rounded bottle
– it tastes like ice – you walk forward, not knowing what’s on the other
side.
If you’ve read the book,
you already know it works out in the end. But not before Harry enters
a horrible gap in his luck. He finds himself standing before a powerful
enemy, defenseless and alone. You could say he picked the wrong time
to drink the potion -- the wrong moon. But in this awful void
some interesting things happen. His enemy feels safe enough to
spill his secrets; many of the book-long mysteries are finally revealed.
And with no idea whether he will make it or not, Harry dives into action.
He discovers his own greatness along the way.
Good moons and bad are only
what we make of them. Wise sorcery takes note of the moment and all
that’s gone before, giving itself more than one option under any star.
Harry’s triumph suggests what any good wizard will know: Most fates
depend on your own readiness. And to be disconnected is not always
bad. The void-of-course moontime can be potent for personal heroism
and creative breakthroughs. You can cut loose from prevailing trends,
sneaking past the cultural gates. Especially if things don’t work
out as planned, study why. You could be within hearing distance of
brilliant
answers to old mysteries.
And sometimes (often, in
fact) the void of course moon won’t mean anything at all. If your
life is marching along and you stand at no brinks, there may be little
momentum for wizarding. If you’d like an excuse to drift and dream,
go for it. Being moon paranoid is silly. But stepping out of
the action at times can be a good thing. Check it out. If you’re
up for real magic, write your own truth on top of the old superstitions.
You can find a calendar for
September’s void-of-course moons at:
http://www.rowan.edu/mars/clubs/gaia/void2000.html
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