| MoonTeachings
for April/May 2002:
The Ritual Power of Electional
Astrology
by April
Elliott Kent
I recently had an accidental
match-making success. We were visited by a former student and client
who was in town on business. She is married, but in the process of
an acrimonious divorce. On a whim, I invited a close friend to dinner
on the night she was coming to town. Having seen both their charts
and noting the striking correlation between certain key placements I thought,
“Well, these two ought to have something to say to one another.” Did
they ever! They disappeared outside together about an hour into the
evening and we didn’t see them again for hours.
I didn’t exactly set them
up, but on the other hand they probably wouldn’t have even met without
my interference. Having unwittingly brought them together, I began
scrambling to distance myself from the situation lest I interfere further
in their lives! And frankly, this is something of my attitude toward
electional astrology --the astrology of choosing advantageous moments to
initiate action -- as well: that perhaps in plying this ancient
art, I’m messing around in matters that would work out just fine, perhaps
better, without my interference.
I’ve been on sabbatical from
offering astrology readings since last year, but somehow I’ve found a comfortable
niche choosing wedding dates with electional astrology. And I’ve
found I absolutely love this work, which is perfect for the Virgo side
of my nature. Counseling was the part of astrology readings that
I found most draining, and electional work requires a minimum of in-depth
counseling. Electing wedding dates is an almost purely intellectual
exercise, its dry syntactic borders as logical and comforting as a crossword
puzzle.
But while I mostly enjoy
the intellectual workout of electional astrology, a two-fold concern gives
me pause about the wisdom of “electing” wedding dates with astrology.
First, I continually question the usefulness of prediction, and a strong
argument could be made that electional astrology is prediction’s cousin:
When you elect a date for a wedding or other event, you’re basically predicting
that, based on the wonderful date you’ve chosen, the venture will ultimately
prove successful.
The other problem I have
with electing wedding dates is that the longer I do it and the more wedding
charts I look at, the more I am convinced the traditional rules for
wedding electionals are at best unreliable, at worst just plain wrong.
In the course of reviewing literally hundreds of wedding charts in preparation
for a recent lecture on the subject, I saw many, many charts of happy,
long lasting marriages, charts that break all the rules of electional astrology.
I saw just as many wedding charts that were astrologically admirable but
which resulted nevertheless in failed or unhappy marriages.
For instance, the Moon
in its rulership of mundane daily affairs looms large in the symbolism
of electional astrology. Its position by sign, house, and aspect
are considered a microcosm that describes how an action, however large
or small, will unfold and ultimately resolve. Marrying with the Moon
in Scorpio or Capricorn, the signs of its detriment and fall, is considered
tantamount to astrological suicide. Likewise, a void of course moon,
or the moon applying to difficult aspects with other planets, is to be
strenuously avoided.
Dutifully, when choosing
wedding dates I’ve scrupulously avoided days when the moon was debilitated
in these ways. But in the past year I’ve seen far too many exceptions
to not question the rule.
The Duke and Duchess of Windsor,
for example, had a long and famously close marriage, yet their wedding
chart 1
is astrologically horrible, with a void of course moon and late degree
Venus square Pluto. And recently I looked at the wedding chart for
my aunt and uncle, who had been married 49 years when she died two years
ago. The chart is an astrological nightmare, featuring a void
of course Scorpio moon square Pluto, as well as Mercury retrograde and
a host of other horrors. True, in the course of their marriage they
suffered the loss of a child, an industrial accident that almost killed
my uncle, and my aunt’s deteriorating health. But there was enduring
fondness between them until the day my aunt died, her husband at her bedside,
so bereft that we put him on an informal suicide watch for a week.
The love between them, and the strength and endurance of that marriage
despite great trials, is a testament to the positive potential of Scorpio
that belies the kneejerk naysaying of the astrological tradition.
Hard-line advocates of electional
astrology would propose that had they married on a different day, all the
difficulties my aunt and uncle endured together could have been avoided.
But how about the woman I unwittingly introduced to my friend, in the story
at the beginning of this article – a woman whose wedding date I personally
elected, a woman who was divorcing her husband after only a year of marriage?
That
was a pretty sweet chart, but it didn’t make the marriage any happier or
more enduring.
I suspect, actually, that
electional astrology is irrelevant to the outcome of matters large or small.
In fact, I think using astrology in an attempt to influence anything
actually minimizes its power in an attempt to increase our own. But doesn’t
it stand to reason that if there is indeed “a time to every purpose under
heaven,” that it would make sense to try to align your activities with
this purpose? If astrology isn’t any good for this, what is it good
for? Perhaps as a tool to lead to better understanding of the
real forces that influence our lives, influences such as upbringing and
social conditioning and our own freedom to make choices.
Besides, the mysterious truth
is that trying to squeeze an unhappy relationship into a happy marriage
chart is doomed to failure. I’ve chosen wedding dates for many, many couples,
and I can tell you without hesitation that wedding dates can rarely
be chosen by an astrologer. Oh, I can and do propose astrologically
near-perfect moments for a couple to wed, but if they are not themselves
perfectly ready to wed, “something” will prevent the marriage from
taking place at the most favorable time. The location they want to use
will be unavailable, a key relative will be unable to attend at that time,
or one of them will have an aversion to marrying on a Sunday. The
couple will come back to me and gradually, unconsciously, through the process
of elimination, negotiate their way to the date and time that perfectly
reveals the most important issues they must face together, and then ask
for my astrological blessing. Stubborness? I prefer to
think that the influence at work is the wise moon, perfect as she is in
any sign or aspect, guiding this couple as she has so many others to the
starting gate that’s exactly right for them -- however forbidding it may
look to us.
We can approach astrology
forcefully and nonorganically, as a way to bend life to some abstract ideal.
Or we can approach it with the wisdom of the moon, respecting its mystery.
We can use it to analyze the moments we spontaneously gravitate toward
-- just as we spontaneously gravitated toward the moment of our birth,
with all its potential for pain and glory -- to see what secrets those
moments can reveal to us. And we can use the traditional rules
of electional astrology as would candles or any other ritual device, not
as an innoculation against life but as an invocation to align ourselves
with a greater wisdom. And that’s not such a bad use for astrology.
1 Duke
and Duchess of Windsor married 3rd June 1937 at 12 midday at Monts,
France.
Read more articles
by April at her website, Big
Sky Astrology.
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of past articles
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