^Finding One's Place^
Moon in Leo
A powerful man, holding a scourge in his right hand, and driving two slaves in manacles. A tyrant who takes delight in power apart from its uses. Opinions are bigoted and selfish. Bad karma after his death, when the slaves go free. Despotism. b
A soldier derelict in duty. Deviation. s
A burning brand beneath the paw of a lion, whose rage is against it. Sedition. Affairs marred by one's own violence. Strife, wrath. Force turned against oneself. Disintegration. b
A ram standing alone, looking towards a flock of sheep in the distance. The male principle predominates. Sympathies toward the opposite sex wanting. c
A relay race. Fitness. s
A ferry boat in the act of taking people across a wide deep stream. A guide and teacher of the public; of much service to others more than to himself or herself. c
Two cobblers working at a table. Capability. s
There could be self-centeredness, with the moon in Leo forming hard aspects plus the trend of the rather forbidding symbols. With the ferryman, they suggest visiting the realm of the dead in order to gain perspective and strength. Through the portal of imagined death is real immortality.
The first three delineate a situation in which there is lack of freedom and indeed tyranny, so that those who want to deviate from protocol know they will be punished and so are likely to suffer degradation for the sake of safety. No resolution is offered, but the fourth symbol suggests that one might be content with the situation so long as one feels that one's aloneness is significant as opposed to the supposed ordinariness of those who are merely members of the herd.
The last three provide hope. One sees that one is part of a "race" and can participate, however fit one may be, and thus become more fit. Then one perceives that one can help others and that this is even more satisfying than merely serving oneself. Finally there could be capable activity shared with perhaps one special individual.
{Monday} ^Finding One's Place^
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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