Friday 27 April 2018
}Rising Upward{
Moon in Libra
|Karmically difficult third| of this week lasts until late Saturday afternoon
A spacious hall, like a museum, the walls of which are covered with symbols and hieroglyphics. A student of the mystical, or an antiquarian; curious studies. c
An old man, poorly clad, stands by the side of a river, from which he collects bits of wood and straw with a rake. One of little wit who through obtuseness falls into errors which despoil him. Thinks to gain comforts by easy ways, but scratches to himself sorrow and annoyance, partly from females. Lassitude. b
Two swords forming a cross lying on the ground, and a man standing on them with a sceptre pointing heavenward. A person of peace who confides in the higher power. c
A Sun that is rising upon the ocean waters. Restlessness and travel for the sake of discovery. Elevation and coming honors. Changes and voyages in the direction of the Orient. Fortune and distinction. Illumination. b
Holly and mistletoe. Ritualization. s
The |difficult third of the week| can bring disappointment in one area of your life or another. Thus you could be the generally accepting defeat gracefully, for a time. We need to keep our faith in our wisest choices and keep on with some effort rather than lapse into the lassitude of the old man at the riverside. The rest of the symbols are beautifully promising so if we maintain poise we should sense good things coming. The Full Moon of Taurus-Scorpio, exact on Sunday but evident now, is the Wesak festival in Buddhist tradition and tends to be serious in a deeply spiritual way; so our thoughts may be turned toward the everlasting more than the transitory.
{Friday} {Rising Upward}
Cosmic Piper
b: Signor Borelli, 19th century clairvoyant; interpreted by Sepharial who was Walter Gorn Old
c: Charubel, 19th century clairvoyant who was John Thomas
s: Sabian symbols which came through psychic Elsie Wheeler, interpreted by Marc Edmund Jones
The symbols and their interpretation are intended to apply basically during the hours from dawn to midnight. Often a planet will move from one degree to another during the day, so I use a time near mid-afternoon for all of them, so that they shall be exactly right during most, often all, of the daylight hours. The period from midnight to dawn could partake of the nature of either day or both.
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