\Courage on the Edge/
Moon in Virgo
A deserter from the navy. Defiance. s
A warrior in bright armor with drawn sword, pursuing a savage multitude. One with great occult ability, and who has a mission to accomplish; a White Magician! Go and conquer. c
A man scaling a wall by means of a rope ladder. In his teeth he holds a sword, and in his right hand a firearm. Daring and courageous. Rises to positions of honor and overcomes all obstacles. Eloquent, carrying defense in his mouth. Prowess. b
A narrow vista of considerable extent, resembling a square tube, the interior of which is luminous, rendered so by some means I do not understand. Power of concentration. May discover some one thing, some force in nature, perhaps, according to the bent of his or her genius. Maybe connected with optics or some new phase of electricity, or chemistry. Possibly this may apply to the metaphysical or the transcendental. c
A cat arguing with a mouse. Justification. c
A female in the state of nudity. Voluptuous, liable to be carried away by the lower passions. c
A well-appointed table, with the remnants of a feast lying upon it. Worldly tendencies, an appetite for the good things of life, which will not be denied. Extravagant and reckless, prone to all kinds of excess, and passionate impulses, whereby the fortunes will be damaged. A certain richness of heart and camaraderie. Goodwill finds expression through the sensuous nature. Sensuality. b
The deserter apparently re-finds his commitment in the second symbol, and in the third displays his prowess courageously or eloquently.
The luminous square tube sounds interestingly like a prediction of television, which was utterly unknown at the time Charubel saw these symbols clairvoyantly. At present it could refer to smart phones, iPads, or any such technology.
The cat and mouse argument would certainly be won by the cat unless the mouse is able to run away in time. In the human sphere, people defend themselves by self-justification when that seems needed.
The final two symbols are not unpleasant yet of course our somewhat Victorian writers look down on what they represent as gross or dangerous. That is for each to determine for himself or herself.
{Tuesday} /Courage on the Edge\
Cosmic Piper
P. S. The inexorable |difficult third| of this week comes up soon.
It begins Wednesday at 11:38a PT | 2:38p ET | 6:38p UT
and lasts until Friday at 5:46p PT | 8:46p ET | 12:46a(Sa) UT
The center of it occurs Thursday at 2:28p PT | 5:28p ET | 9:28p UT (see what happens near this time)
and therefore the 24 hours girdling it (probably more intense than the earlier and later hours) are
PT: 2:28a Thursday to 2:28a Friday | ET: 5:28a Thursday to 5:28a Friday | UT: 9:28a Thursday to 9:28a Friday
That is, this could be the most difficult 24 hours of the week from one perspective.
HOWEVER, if you have something important planned for that time, do not despair; just be ready for people's sensitivities and handle them with finesse, and be reasonably careful about all matters. Try to control or modify your own moods toward hopefulness and cheer. What you meet then may be good yet challenging, so if you come through it smoothly you will have gained something important. OR, if certain things seem impossible then, it might be wise to postpone them. Routine duties, prayer, and meditation are always good.
"God created man to express Him in the manifest world. We are the outlet of a mind that seeks an adequate expression." --Charles Fillmore
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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