Sunday, November 22, 2015

Forecast for Monday 23 November 2015

Monday 23 November 2015

\Effort as Play and Playful Learning/


Moon in Aries-->Taurus
/moon void-of course   * /
until it enters Taurus at 8:27a PT | 11:27a ET | 4:27p UT   ** /

I'm hinting at a one-star and then two-star day because of vacuous lunar aspects, and also because Mercury and the sun are moving closer to Saturn, a heavy, serious planet requiring much of us. 

I have struggled with the degree-symbols of the planets for each day, for many years, in fact decades, trying to find the best formula for accuracy in understanding daily events. Often I have put them into quatrains, most recently three of them each day. But I think a prose interpretation can work successfully. Because they are symbols, they go deep, and you may not see what they mean until the end of the day, so the following forecast should be re-read then to get the full flavor or essence of what the symbols are trying to say. They were delivered by three different clairvoyants in the 19th and 20th centuries and seem perennially relevant. I could give historical examples of that (perhaps shall if I am ever able to write something more permanent about them such as a book). 

Monday: 
There is shrewdness of self-protection. You feel you need shelter, and want to shelter someone else. A young person's obsessions or complicated feelings and motives are weighing on you. Yet there can be adventure. You could be with this person or someone else in a company of change, with intriguing sharing.

Some have firm foundations in their lives they do not want questioned. Those could be home, belief, religious awareness or philosophic orientation. These individuals are intelligent but could be didactic and self-assertive without flexibility. Perhaps they ought to be more deferential to you, as well as you to them. They need to realize that the conclusion of things is not in sight, at least not in the same way to everyone. Irritability could be transformed into irrepressibility and hopeful personal anticipations.

Changefulness also leads to the arts and music. A performer could entrance you. That which is refined is uplifting when moods waver. There is ingrained goodwill. The symbols speak of someone working outside his cottage, happy and contented with the natural goodness around him. Faithfulness leads to expressing heartfelt feelings amid prosperity.

There is hospitality, with fine fare presented to you or others three days ahead of Thanksgiving. Someone opens the door to you. Still, mixed with such kindness is sorrow, as if someone were mourning the loss of a loved one. This does not have to be total frustration, but rather a reorientation to glories ahead. 

"A girls' basketball team" suggests teamwork, cooperation and adaptability. People want to enhance their repute by working for the team. This could develop in both social and job situations. There is shrewdness in protecting people from difficulties together with hospitable sharing. A game-like approach minimizes irritability and opens the heart to joyful interaction.

{Monday} /Effort as Play and Playful Learning\

Cosmic Piper

P. S. Today is the birthday of Sri Sathya Sai Baba. (He left this world, apparently, in April of 2010.) If you know little or nothing of him, you might benefit greatly by reading the book "Modern Miracles" or, the same book under another title, "Miracles are My Visiting Cards." Now I see on Amazon that there is a new edition--wonderful!--and its title is definitely "Modern Miracles." 
I am very happy to recommend it as a thoroughly researched and wise approach to the paranormal, written by a professor of parapsychology. I have had experiences with Sai Baba which convince me he is real and they include not only "miracles" of healing and reassurance but emotional openings which resulted in crying for maybe a half hour at a time while looking at his picture. If that sounds silly to you, consider that a couple months ago, years after that experience, I read that Wayne Dyer, the self-help author, had the same experience--conveyed in his own words--looking at photos of Sai Baba and crying. Something real is going on there. You might wish Sai Baba a happy birthday by repeating "Jai Sai Ram." "Jai" means "salute," more or less. Pronounced "jay." Sai is pronounced either "Sigh" or "Sah-ee." Ram is of course "Rahm." 

Jai Sai Ram! Om Sai Ram! Jai Sai Ram!

Hugh
Cosmic Piper

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