| MoonTeachings
for June/July 2001:
Eclipses: Defending Your
Life
by April
Elliott Kent
I’ve been semi-obsessively
watching and rewatching Albert Brooks' gently amusing "Defending
Your Life", currently in heavy rotation on HBO. The film presents
a vision of the afterlife in which the newly deceased are sent to
Judgment City, a sort of cosmic Ellis Island where each spends four days
in court viewing days from his or her life, defending the choices and
decisions made on earth and examining his progress in overcoming his fears.
A person who led a fairly fearful life might examine events from as many
as twelve or fifteen days of his life, while the relatively fearless
might only look at a few days. A defense lawyer helps the deceased
"defend" his life, while a prosecuting attorney points out his most serious
miscalculations. Finally, two judges rule whether he "moves on" or
returns to earth to try to get a better handle on his fears. Brooks,
as we soon see through the filmed excerpts from his life, was fairly ineffectual
at mastering his fears in life. His troubles continue in Judgment
City, where he falls in love with the radiant and fearless Meryl Streep
but limits his involvement with her out of fear he’s not "good enough"
for her. It soon becomes obvious that even his own death was not enough
to persuade Brooks to live his (after)life to the fullest!
To extend Brook's allegory,
one way of thinking about eclipses in astrology is to imagine an afterlife
in which you will be asked to defend your life based on how you handled
the most fearful planet or aspect in your chart. A tortured Sun?
A debilitated Mars? How did you handle the challenges related to
this planet and its stressful configurations? Imagine viewing scenes
from five days of your life: The days on which, at 18 year intervals, solar
eclipses conjuncted that planet in your natal chart. You were at
a turning point in your development, struggling to overcome one of your
darkest fears. What events defined these turning points, and how
did you cope with them? How effectively did you handle your fear?
Eclipses, like those filmed
scenes in Brooks' imagined afterlife, throw particular complexes in our
chart into bold relief through developmental crises. Eclipses
closely conjuncting, opposing, or squaring your most stressed natal planet
or aspect can coincide with dramatic external events -- the death of
someone close to you, an illness, a job change or relocation, a great
romance, a divorce; or simply profound internal events, like depression.
In any event these times are often marked by events so dramatic they seem
to take place in a dream state of suspended animation; when we regain consciousness
the entire landscape of our lives have changed.
Look to “personal” planets,
particularly the Sun and Moon, in difficult aspect to the outer planets
(Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, Pluto) to find your most sensitive planetary
combination. My Moon/Pluto square, for instance, is extremely
sensitive to eclipse aspects, inevitably heralding profound events which
force me to confront my fear of loss. On the other hand, eclipses
aspecting my fairly happy natal Venus (trine Neptune, sextile Pluto) usually
presage fairly pleasant transitions. Unless an eclipse triggers
a “high tension” planet or aspect in your natal chart, or one of
the angles, you are likely to experience it as a subtle or psychological
influence. About every nine years the pivotal planet will receive
a solar or lunar eclipse conjunction or opposition, and each time you
navigate this pivotal eclipse “season” you have another opportunity to
face your fear -- perhaps a fear of anonymity (the Sun), of disconnection
(the Moon), of authoring your own life (Saturn), of sudden change (Uranus).
Not all eclipses are associated
with what we think of as unhappy events. Many coincide with events
which are joyous -- a marriage, say, or the birth of a child. These
eclipse events are in some ways more traumatic than tragic ones, because
we don't expect to be frightened or disoriented by them, and receive little
support from others for our feelings ("For heaven's sake, can't you
even enjoy it when something good happens to you?"). But the
energy of eclipses is crisis, a crossroads, a turning point.
Choosing something good for your life -- a partner, a child, a high powered
career -- necessarily means closing the door on something else (life
as a single person, total freedom, relative lack of responsibility). It's
normal to mourn loss, even loss that's necessary to clear our path to joy.
Fears are nothing to be ashamed
of; we all have them. But when you think of how many of our harmful
and limiting choices in life are motivated by our fears, it soon becomes
evident that we must make peace with them in order to "move on" to a fuller
and happier life. Observing the cycle of eclipses awakening our
fears with precision every nine years or so helps us identify these moments
of truth when they come our way, and even perhaps to prepare to do battle
with them when they appear on our astrological horizon.
At the end of his film Albert
Brooks is condemned to return to earth while the woman he loves is allowed
to "move on" to the next level of evolution. It's a defining moment,
calling for desperate action. In the face of separation from his
great love, Brooks musters the courage he lacked in life (and, until
now, in death): He escapes from the tram taking him back to earth and jumps
onto his lover's speeding tram, suffering electric shock as he dangles
from the moving vehicle, unable to get inside. Elsewhere, his judges
and attorneys observe his desperate attempt to escape his destiny and be
reunited with the woman he loves. Brooks’ defense attorney turns
to the judges and asks softly, "Brave enough for you?" The judges
smile and intone to some unseen force, "Let him go." The door of
the tram opens and Brooks slips inside, next to the woman he loves, hurtling
alongside her toward the great unknown.
*
For
an indepth examination of your natal eclipse cycles, order a copy of my
exclusive eclipse report, Followed
by a Moonshadow.
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