Astrology Highlights:
Virgo
August 2000
by April Elliott Kent
A client was expressing frustration
over her untidy house and her struggle to manage the minutiae of her daily
life more efficiently. Hearing Virgo and the sixth house in her statement,
I summoned my Gemini moon for a lightning fast conference: “Maybe you’ve
just formed some bad habits out of fear you won’t be able to make things
perfect and keep them that way,” I suggested to her. “Why not focus on
forming new habits that help you get this day to day stuff in hand?”
It that was a pithy recommendation,
and we were both pretty pleased with it at the time. But remembering
it now, I think I did my client and her Virgo planets a disservice by pretending
her problem was one merely of housekeeping and habit. It’s not that
what I told her was wrong, exactly; but it didn’t go quite deep enough.
“Why,” I might reasonably have asked her, “have you turned the maintenance
of your life into a drudgery to be avoided?”
Habit vs. Ritual
The New Moon on August 29
forms at 6.23 Virgo, the sign associated with those routines that comprise
most of our days— working, running errands, preparing meals—as well as
the habits we form through repetition of those routines. For the
most part, we regard these habits and routines as entirely separate
from our spiritual lives, a perspective this extends to our astrological
lore, which relegates poor Virgo to the role of hapless drone while conferring
spiritual honors upon its opposite sign, Pisces. In fact, the practices
we identify as “spiritual” tend to be those traditionally associated with
Pisces—meditation, bodywork, yoga, all of which have acquired increasing
cache while the homely tasks associated with Virgo are denigrated, and
when possible, delegated.
But something is being lost,
I think, in our determination to avoid these humble occupations; it’s
often these small, ordinary tasks that offer the most accessible route
from unconscious habit to mindful ritual, as well as the most frequent
opportunities for attempting the journey.
Nag your child to finish
her homework; do it every single weeknight (whether or not she actually
has homework assigned), and soon you’ve got yourself a habit. Set
aside half an hour each evening to sit with your child and talk about school,
her assignments, and her experiences there, and you’ve entered the realm
of ritual. You can immediately sense the difference between the two
approaches; yet, both habit and ritual involve doing particular things
at regular intervals in a particular way. What distinguishes them
from one another?
Intention, and consciousness.
You can sweep the kitchen floor each evening and hardly notice doing it,
beyond a vague desire to have it over with as quickly as possible.
But imagine you instead give your full attention to sweeping the floor
carefully and thoroughly, visualizing the debris and disorder of your mind
being swept away with the bread crumbs. Feel the difference?
Why make such a big deal
out of sweeping a floor? Because we don’t live forever. Do
you really have five minutes every day—more than thirty hours each year!—to
waste on meaningless, unconscious activity? And yet the floor
needs to be swept-- a consequence of inhabiting a body that walks on things,
eats things and spills crumbs. If you don’t occasionally sweep up
the debris, pretty soon it offends the senses. So why not enjoy sweeping
the floor, clearing it of life’s thriving, lively messiness? Why
not use those five minutes as a sort of practical prayer, to celebrate
being alive?
Honoring the Invisible
Virgo is the sign of habit,
but equally the sign of ritual. Ritual is not magic; it is ordinary,
everyday action performed with magical intention. It is the union
of practical and spiritual, Virgo’s practicality and Pisces’ sensitivity.
It is honoring spirit through the offering of our humble earthly abilities—modestly,
with love and devotion.
Ritual is present in a house
of bereavement, where friends and neighbors show their concern for the
grieving with practical gifts of lovingly prepared food. It is present
when I use my grandmother’s 75-year-old masher to prepare the Thanksgiving
potatoes. It was present when my husband’s cousins spent the first
days after their father’s death building an exquisite casket from wood
their father had saved for this purpose.
Ritual is ordinary action
carefully performed with extraordinary intention. It is how we
honor the invisible with visible gestures.
From Habit to Ritual
During the first two weeks
of the cycle that begins at the Virgo New Moon, ferret out those circumstances
that bore you, irritate you, or overwhelm you. Where in your
life do you encounter drudgery, the feeling you’re “just going through
the motions”? Where are you most likely to be annoyed or short tempered
with others? What ordinary situations make you feel so overwhelmed,
you no longer know how to untangle them? These are situations that
suggest unconsciousness. They are situations which, if approached with
intention rather than a sense of distasteful obligation, present the greatest
avenue for your spiritual growth right now.
The client I mentioned at
the beginning of this article, for instance, was overwhelmed by the idea
of literally getting her house in order. She disliked housework,
yet craved the order and serenity of tidy surroundings. What were
here options? Here are a few that spring to mind:
-
Forgo cleaning the house, and
grow increasingly dispirited by the disarray.
-
Hire someone to clean the house
(not always an option).
-
Jump right in and start cleaning
the house, gritting her teeth and cursing with every stroke of her scrub
brush as her mind wanders to all the things she’d rather be doing.
-
Initiate this daunting project
by tackling a single, well-defined task—say, cleaning one closet. Putting
a favorite CD on the stereo, pouring something nice to drink, and taking
the first, satisfying step toward restoring order and sanity to her home.
Which of her options
sounds most spiritually energizing? Which carries the seed of spiritual
expression? Which honors the invisible with a mundane but visible
action?
The price we pay for too
much unconscious, habitual activity is boredom, drudgery, fatigue, and
irritability. Jupiter and Saturn, currently moving through the
sign of Gemini, and Pluto moving through Sagittarius, encourage us to challenge
unconscious activity and insist that we apply all mental and philosophical
diligence to reconciling spirit with the mundane.
So I invite you to experiment,
during the next 28 days, with offering up whatever practical, Virgoan skills
you possess in the daily service of spirit and intention. With all
the love and attention you can muster, bring order and attention to your
abundance by balancing your checkbook. Honor your mobility
and independence—wash your car! Bring serenity to your home by cleaning
your house, one room, even a single drawer. Do these things not as
a kind of hairshirt to prove your spiritual worthiness, but to celebrate
and honor the spirituality that inhabits the everday, the simple, the here
and now.