~Climbing Into Light~
Moon in Cancer
|Karmically difficult third| of this week continues until Sunday morning
A large figure 2 comes before my vision. Lives alone, isolated mentally. Not in sympathy with the present state of things. c
A buffalo standing on an eminence pawing the ground and snorting. Bold, forceful nature. Will suffer privation in order to maintain a semblance of freedom. Independence. b
A man lying upon the ground in the last moments of life. The Sun is setting amid clouds. Life is a severe lesson; ambition outstrips power; efforts seem futile; hopes vanish as the clouds. Self-Undoing. b
A person ascending a spiral staircase with sunshine at the top, within a dark enclosure. Much to do for small returns; busy but with little reward; nevertheless, good luck comes at the end of his days. c
A squaw selling beads. Detachment. s
An alchemist at work in his laboratory; upon his table is much gold. Patient, thrifty. By industry and inventive faculty will acquire wealth, yet live simply. Success in an eccentric vocation. Success. b
A hidden choir singing. Worship. s
Lunar aspects and their sequence, as well as the symbols, suggest amelioration through the day and into the evening. Isolation and inwardly vaunted independence could stumble into self-undoing; however, the "spiral staircase" leads to sunshine at last. The native American woman selling beads and the successful alchemist share a detachment from wealth, though one does "better" than the other in an outward sense. Both have climbed that spiral staircase into the sunshine; both survive, at peace, and are appreciated and eulogized by the hidden choir.
{Saturday} ~Climbing Into Light~
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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