Showing posts with label eclipse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label eclipse. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 16, 2017

Will He Do his "You're F...d" routine, or not? + UPDATE

Lawmakers Demand Donald Trump Fire Top Aides, Saying They Encourage White Supremacists

“Americans deserve to know that white nationalists, white supremacists, and neo-Nazis are not in a position to influence U.S. policy.” By Sam Levine.

It begins:
The heads of Congress’ black, Hispanic, Asian and progressive caucuses sent a letter to the White House on Monday demanding the dismissal of top aides Steve Bannon, Stephen Miller and Sebastian Gorka, saying their presence in the White House has emboldened white supremacists.

Here's a link to my post on Stephen Bannon, from November last year:

Stephen Bannon - Trump's Right-hand Man (for now)


As I wrote then, "The only hope I can imagine is that, after the new President get his "feet under the table", he will stop feeling the need for this guy's support, and prove it in an early "You're fired!" session. Wishful thinking though, that!"

Bannon's natal chart is in that post. Amazingly my post comes up on Google's first page. That was before their new algorithm started gnashing its teeth. I didn't have a birth time for Bannon, but at noon his Moon was at 28 Leo - a degree from the solar eclipse due on 21 August, and from Trump's Regulus and ascendant. It's unlikely that his Moon was really at exactly 28 Leo, but it could be within a degree or two of that. Significant? We shall see.


UPDATE Friday 18 August 2017 12.20pm


An early-working eclipse? One out of three ain't bad - now for those other two?

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

To Mark The ECLIPSE

A total solar eclipse will occur tomorrow, 22 July, though will probably not be visible to any passing reader of this blog. It will fall in the last degree of the zodiac sign Cancer. Interesting detail about this eclipse at Wikipedia.

I don't know whether eclipses have been consistently good predictive tools for world events, or in relation to natal charts. My natal Sun was directly hit by the solar eclipse in January - nothing of interest to report. Neither could I recall anything of significance from the 1990 eclipse in the same part of Aquarius. I have a sneaking suspicion that there probably needs to be at least one other factor in a natal chart "ripe" for eventfulness exactly at eclipse time, before something memorable occurs. The eclipse could provide a tipping point, or add more intensity to an event, I guess. That's just my take on it. In any one lifetime it could even happen that no eclipse arrives at just the right time to tip things into action.

A couple of items to mark the eclipse:
a Total Eclipse in Art, and a Total Eclipse of the Heart.


"ASTRONOMERS STUDYING AN ECLIPSE" by Antoine Caron (c.1575). In those days the astronomers were probably astrologers too.





TOTAL ECLIPSE OF THE HEART ~ Bonnie Tyler


Sunday, January 25, 2009

ECLIPSE, and me, and them.

This month's Solar eclipse falls directly on my natal Sun which is at 6.46 Aquarius. Well, there are 16minutes of arc difference. The eclipse falls on 6.30 Aquarius. I'll be in dreamland as it occurs here, in the early hours of tomorrow, Monday 26th.

Others who spring to mind immediately, whose natal Sun will also be very close the this eclipse (because their birthdays are on the same day as mine) are Keith Olbermann, Chief Justice Roberts (who made a boo-boo when administering the Oath to President Obama), Mohamed al Fayed (father of Dodi, Princess Di's friend), Derek Acorah, a British medium, Brugh Joy MD (my almost astrological twin), and my husband's younger daughter. My post of last year covers some of these. (Hard to be Humble Birthdays).

When I first noticed where the eclipse would fall I felt a little nervous. I tracked back to the last eclipse in a similar area, this fell in 1990, January 26, at 6.36 Aquarius, even closer to the exact minute of my Sun. I recall nothing of note during the weeks and months immediately following that eclipse. It seems, however, that 1990 eclipse was not of the same series as this current one. The last one of the same series as this touched a degree of Capricorn, in 1991. Still, an eclipse is an eclipse is an eclipse.

My nerves about the upcoming eclipse have now dissolved. I'm not convinced that eclipses are as significant as all that anyway. It's difficult to attribute happenings in one's personal life, or in world affairs, to a single celestial event. Eclipses, solar and lunar occur several times every year. In my opinion they are neither rare enough nor long-lasting enough for us to be able to say that some change or event was "a result of the eclipse".

Currently we have a Saturn/Uranus opposition in Virgo/Pisces, Pluto has recently changed signs from Sagittarius to Capricorn, Jupiter has recently moved into Aquarius for a protracted stay - and now a solar eclipse in Aquarius is added to the mix. There's a lot going on up there, so why attribute anything to a relatively fast-moving eclipse? There'll be another one along soon, then another pair later in the year. In contrast, the Saturn/Uranus opposition will be with us for a lot longer, and Pluto in Capricorn is there for the long haul. Gradual changes are bound to develop over the coming few years, with or without help from eclipses.

I regret departing from commonly held astrological theory on this, but I'm being honest - and obviously I could be very wrong. We shall see. I'll report any significant changes over coming weeks and months, and am prepared to eat my words - with a cherry on top!

Monday, January 05, 2009

Of Jupiter, Aquarius and Me

In several hours Jupiter will be rolling into Aquarius. The last time Jupiter visited the sign and exactly conjoined my natal Sun was in February, 1997. He brought me luck then. It was the exact time when I found a new place to live. We'd spent over a year in an apartment which was uncomfortable and totally unsuitable for us, after having lost everything when our previous apartment and all possessions were destroyed by fire. I found a nice house to rent, and still clearly recall the helpful lift of spirits at that time.

During the same year though my mother was diagnosed with lung and brain cancer in June, in mid-August she died. She left me her small house on the coast. I hesitate to describe this as lucky, because my mother (and I watching her) suffered terribly, but the year brought me a house which later on became home for me and my late partner, after I retired.

Each Jupiter conjunction with one's Sun occurs amid a different set of planetary aspects to other parts of the chart. So these events can't be taken in isolation. It is of interest to note them though. My natal Jupiter is in Pisces, one of its traditional rulerships, and it lies exactly semi-sextile (30 degrees from), my natal Sun. I'm not sure whether this makes its once-a-decade visits more significant or not.

A previous Jupiter transit of Aquarius, in 1985, also brought both bad news and good news. Mid-year I was told I needed a hysterectomy. There was one exploratory hospital stay and another for the operation. The good news was that there was no cancer, only fibroids, and my operation and recovery was very easy. The surgeon called me his "star patient" due to my rapid recovery. At the time of the operation, in September Jupiter was retrograde, and within a degree of my natal Sun! Life and health improved dramatically during the rest of the year.

I can go back around another 10 years to the time when Jupiter conjoined my Sun in November 1973. I entered a national competition in the UK at that time, but cannot remember the exact date. It was one of those competitions, then so common, where the task was to make up reasons for buying such-and-such product. In this case the product was Yardley perfumes, the competiton appeared in a now defunct magazine called "Over 21" (which I'm clutching in the photograph). We received the good news that I was the winner in late January 1974, and took the prize at the end of April - two weeks' holiday, VIP accommodation with spending money, in Tangier, Morocco (North Africa). Later the same year I had a couple more, smaller, competition wins.

So..... this time around, as Jupiter pays me a visit once more, I'm keeping a very open mind. The conjunction with my Sun will be exact in the first week of February. One thing I'm feeling already is that my frozen shoulder is very slowly improving, though it's too early to say there's a Jupiter connection. I've been bothered by it for around 6 months, it ought to be due for improvement any time now.

An added attraction (?) this year is the solar eclipse on 26 January which will hit my natal Sun within 10 minutes of arc. It misses my birthday by a day. Last time this happened was in 1990, and I don't recall anything significant then, or during that year. No doubt there were some minor events which the eclipse could have triggered, but they can't have been important enough for me to commit them to memory.

I'll be keeping an astro eye open for several months on both the Jupiter and eclipse fronts, and report back, should anything remarkable occur.

Wednesday, February 06, 2008

Eclipse Snippets

In my own life history I've found that the changes astrologers connect with eclipses tend to occur when an eclipse falls close to, or opposite, the lunar nodes in my natal chart. Uranus, my Sun's ruling planet, conjuncts South Node of the Moon, which no doubt accounts for this. I'm not expecting anything untoward from the eclipses in Aquarius, this year and next. If I'm still around blogland next January I'll report back on this, because the eclipse in 2009 falls exactly on my natal Sun, the day before my birthday!

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"Understanding Eclipses", by Eric Francis is one of the best articles I've read on the topic of eclipses.

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The solar eclipse tomorrow, 7 February, occurs at 17.56 Aquarius (tropical) and 24 Capricorn (sidereal). I'm wondering whether upcoming primary elections in the USA later this month and in March are in line for a shot of eclipse magic, even though the eclipse won't be visible here in the USA, it's something worth keeping in mind. The much heralded "tidal wave" of support for Barack Obama didn't quite materialise in time for "Super Tuesday". Results turned out much as expected prior to the inflated expectations of an over-excited media. They like to drum up a good story, don't they? But there is still time for that tidal wave to roll in, I guess. This eclipse falls in avant garde, "time for a change" Aquarius in the tropical zodiac, but establishment-related, "business as usual" Capricorn sidereally - I shall watch events closely!

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John Denver wrote, and sang, a song called "Eclipse" - here it is in a video I've put together:

Wednesday, September 05, 2007

Eclipses of the Sun

There's a solar eclipse coming up on 11 September. Predictions for events following eclipses occasionally prove to be partially, or even wholly accurate, but sometimes they don't. If ever I feel depressed after reading eclipse predictions I dilute that feeling by remembering that eclipses are a regular part of life on Earth. It's a bit like the slight feeling of risk involved in flying (by plane, not on a broomstick!). If ever I feel nervous I think of the number of flights in a day, all over the world, of the staff on board all those planes - the stewardesses or whatever they are called these days. They fly many times a week, month in, month out, without problem. Why would anyone feel nervous about one single flight - or one single eclipse ?

Eclipses of the Sun are dramatic events, I can't argue with that. They feature in several novels and films - there's a list of some of them at Wikipedia HERE. The only one from that list I can recall is "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court", in which Bing Crosby (playing a time traveller to the past) convinced adversaries of his power by using knowledge that a solar eclipse was due to take place.

I discovered another story involving an eclipse of the Sun quite accidentally this week. I was searching for information about Borodin's opera "Prince Igor", from which the music of the stage show and film "Kismet" was borrowed. I can't seem to get this music out of my mind these days. "Kismet" (see my husband's blog) was set in Baghdad - in the time when it was a beautiful city - it's very sad to think about that now. "Prince Igor", however, was set in Russia.

The synopsis of "Prince Igor" goes something like this: The Prince is mobilizing his army against the Polovtsians (a nomadic people) who have been attacking and raiding the Russians' territory and carrying away their people into slavery. There is an eclipse of the Sun and the sky grows dark.


The people see this as a bad omen and plead with Prince Igor to abandon his mission. Igor sees it as an omen - but whether good or bad is to be seen. His wife, Yaroslavna, begs him to stay home but he is not persuaded. He must defend his and Russia's honor. Things go badly, Igor's brother plans to depose him in his absence, Igor and his son are taken captive by the Polovtsians. In the end though, Igor escapes and returns to his wife and to defend his city. There's a sub-plot involving his son's love affair with the daughter of the Polovtsian leader.

So....there was bad news, and there was good news, after that eclipse.

I understand that Igor's story is based on historical events See HERE -

"There was apparently opposition to this campaign among members of Igor's retinue. On May 1, 1185, there was an eclipse of the sun, which the Nikonovskaya Chronicle describes: "A Portent. That same year, in the month of May, on the fist day, there was a portent in the sun; it was very dark, and this was for more than an hour, so that the stars could be seen, and to men's eyes it was green, and the sun became as the [crescent] moon, and from its horns flaming fire was emitted; and it was a portent terrible to see and full of horror." Although the Russians interpreted this phenomenon as an evil omen, Igor insisted that the campaign continue, saying, "No one knows the mysteries of God. God is the maker of this sign and of the whole world. And whether that which God does to us is for good or for ill, this too we shall see."

With regard to the coming eclipse - as Prince Igor said..... "this too we shall see".

Monday, March 19, 2007

Eclipse - bah humbug!! 'Bye for now.


According to yesterday's post we should be heading for San Antonio. All hotels in the area we wished to stay were reported full to overflowing when I tried to book on-line yesterday. The weather forecast was pretty grim too, thunderstorms expected most days this week. Once again that trip has been postponed. It wasn't 'third time lucky', after all.

Perhaps we're just not meant to go there. Or perhaps the eclipse had something to do with it? Dang!!! It was trine Scorpio (5th) in my chart, but within a degree of Mercury in my husband's, in 9th house. Sigh....I should've known.

We're still intending to head off somewhere - no idea where. If we have no plan maybe we can bamboozle the fates!

'Bye 'bye....

Sunday, March 04, 2007

Pic and Poem


This is what we saw yesterday evening in Oklahoma as the Moon rose directly behind our backyard. Later, after the eclipse, the Moon shone brighter than I've ever seen it, as though making up for the indignity of being hidden.
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A poem for all astrology buffs:
Friends of Mine by Richard Herbert Mann

The stars are friends of mine.
To lofty height, When falls the sombre canopy of night
Upon a slumb'ring world, my spirit flies
And treads with them the highway of the skies.
We stride from world to world, while they rehearse
The mighty chorus of the universe.
We wander into fields of azure blue
Sprinkled with diamonds of varied hue,
Seek the lost Pleiad through skies aflame,
And learn from her the secret of her shame.
They mark the ways of men and shake with mirth
At all the customs of this lowly Earth.
Great wisdom and great mysteries they know.
They tell the story of the Long Ago
Ere Time was born, when Chaos had its sway,
And Darkness held its mantle over Day.
Why should I prize the boasted things of Earth
When I can walk with stars and share their mirth,
Their wisdom and their mysteries divine?
I'd rather walk with stars.
They're friends of mine.