Season
Teachings for January/February 2003:
by Dana
Gerhardt
| What
is the work of this season?
After expanding our horizons
in Sagittarius last month, we enter Capricorn with a new determination
to make our inspirations real. The austerity and solitude of this
first winter month encourages us to go deeply inward and respond
to the seeds of our highest possibilities. What work are we here
to do? Capricorn describes the need to get practical about bringing
our gifts to the world. Society needs each of us to do something.
When we willingly take up this mission, we secure our earthly footing.
As a cardinal sign, Capricorn brings initiating energy, but it’s understood
that whatever we start now will take some time to mature. Great accomplishments
always do. This is the month to get serious about your life; recognize
your authority in something; get organized; stand firm in your own integrity;
lay your groundwork for an impressive future. |
Capricorn:
Your Annual Appointment with the Inner Coach
They wait, when they should
turn to journeys,
Then stiffen, when they
should bend.
– Louise Bogan
Perhaps in no other season
does the culture seem so out of synch with natural time than in Capricorn.
In winter, while the malls are filled with people scurrying around, many
spending more than they have, the rest of nature cuts back, goes inward,
rests. Capricorn is the most industrious sign of the zodiac, but
its business shouldn’t be confused with mere “busy-ness.” It
strips itself to essentials, like the winter itself. It goes without
now, to make more later. It stands alone, to commune with the seeds
of greatness in itself. With Capricorn we commit to big works, efforts
that can be useful to a larger world.
Capricorn wants a lasting
monument from every one of us. And it knows such things take time.
Therefore it uses this season to strengthen commitment. It asks us
to think of the year ahead, to declare our focus, to organize our resources.
It knows success will come from considered steps, timed for the right moments,
throughout a year of changing seasons. It’s willing to be our inner
coach. And this month it schedules our most important meeting.
If we resist, Capricorn will persist, but the result may be a perversion
of its pure intention for us. That’s the energetic cause behind
a couple modern archetypes for this season.
The Relentless Shopper:
Instead of quietly contemplating its larger destiny at home, the RS hears
Capricorn’s call to work and drives itself prematurely into smaller works.
It satisfies Capricorn’s desire for frugal, efficient efforts by cashing
in on bargains. The Relentless Shopper has an underlying fear of
not being good enough. It buys rather than builds. One antidote
is to build or make something at home from materials already at hand--then
marvel at how good it is!
Scrooge: Caught
in a perpetual winter, Scrooge believes the future is always bleak.
It worries so much that it becomes unkind and uses Capricorn’s caution
to withhold. Avoiding its destiny to help others, it sinks into criticism.
It perverts Capricorn’s urge toward greatness into belittling others.
Scrooge is full of fear. The antidote is to contemplate one’s death
and realize what’s really important. Then celebrate by sharing a
warm meal with those who need you.
SAD Sufferer:
Seasonal Affective Disorder, the updated name for winter depression, is
attributed to not enough sunlight. This diagnosis reveals a mindset
opposed to nature, fighting against the earth’s seasonal tilt as somehow
problematic and imperfect. Yet when the outer world goes cold and
dark, it’s the season to commune with the inner sun, the warmth and light
within. If one forgets to stoke this sustaining fire, Capricorn’s
energy will sink like a lead weight, grounding one into depression.
The antidote is to get fired up about something: contemplate a worthy
goal.
Then there are the Three
Wise Men. This archetype is still around, suggesting Capricorn,
working at its best, is yet among us. In Capricorn style, wise men
train their sights on future greatness. They honor the destiny promised
in the sky, traveling a long way to offer it gifts. They are patient,
persistent, suffer hardships on their journey, and are not discouraged
by attending a birth in a barn—they recognize how glory can come from the
humblest beginnings.
Be wise this season.
Whatever you start now may look small, but if your conviction in your greater
destiny is strong, amazing things will come. That’s what the inner
coach wants you to know, this time, every year.
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