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Showing posts with label Astrology and Love. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Astrology and Love. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Heartbreak and Astrology



"Oh god, not again...."


Relationships can be hell, sometimes repeatedly so. Can astrology tell us anything about who we tend to attract and why? Check out Advanced Class in Heartbreak: Pluto and Uranus, a guest post I've written for Jeffrey Kishner's site Seduction Central.


While you're there, also check out Beth Turnage's article on the Bad Boy type, Bad Boys: The Uranus-Ruled Relationship. It's another look at those crazy relationships you just can't seem to resist.

In fact, take an hour or six to browse all of Seduction Central's great stuff on love, sex, and the stars...hey, it's better than crying into your beer.
Again.

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Attraction Factor: Mars and Venus (Part Two)





Okay, so you've read Part One and know all about projecting Mars and Venus onto other people. Before we move on to discuss how other planets are tossed into the romantic mix in Part Three, let's take a closer look at what Mars and Venus indicate in the signs.

Everyone has a natal Mars and Venus placement (if you don't know yours, you can obtain a copy of your natal chart at http://www.astro.com/ .) If you take a look at your birth chart, you'll find that your Mars and Venus were passing through one of the signs at the time you were born.

It's just like Sun sign astrology, in a way. Your Sun in Capricorn indicates that you share traits in common with other Capricorns. You can use your Mars and Venus in the same way. But whereas the Sun symbolizes core identity (which is why we place heavy emphasis on Sun signs) the other planets symbolize other parts of your life and psyche.

In general, Mars represents the way you go about acting in the world. If you need to use drive, will, effort, or physical expenditure to do something, you use your Mars. In terms of love and sex, Mars represents the more assertive, active side of things. Among other things, Mars represents the sex drive in its raw form.

In general, Venus represents the things that please and connect you. If you need to feel comfort, security, love, or aesthetic pleasure, you access your Venus. Venus is also responsible for our preferences in social interactions. In terms of love and sex, Venus represents the manner in which we receive love, the things that make us feel warm and wanted.

To put it another way, Venus represents the object, and Mars represents the subject. The term "objectification" gets bad press, but at times everyone needs to feel like the object of total devotion-- worship, even-- and Venus is the Object par excellance in all of us.

Mars is the subject that strives for the Venus object. Mars fights, woos, chases, delivers bad pickup lines, does goofy stuff to gain the attention of the object. Since the nature of the subject/object relationship is not necessarily a gendered polarity, it's easy enough to see how this works in nonstandard relationships as well as the prototypical straight setup.

(For more keywords on Mars and Venus, refer back to Part One.)


How do you express your Mars and Venus? Follow the links below.


Venus in the Signs (up soon!)


Monday, February 4, 2008

Attraction Factor: Mars and Venus (Part One)


Romantic attraction is a complicated thing. Sometimes it’s subtle, and sometimes it’s overwhelming. Sometimes it makes perfect sense, and sometimes it makes none at all. Sometimes it results in a beautiful pairing, and then sometimes Matt Greoning says it best:


Love is a snowmobile racing across the tundra and then suddenly it flips over,
pinning you underneath. At night, the ice weasels come.



Why are our experiences of love and attraction so varied? Why do different people like such different things, and can we predict attraction using the natal chart?


Astrology uses the same concept of projection that most modern psychological theories use. Let’s start with the standard hetero setup, assuming there is such a thing.

In a heterosexual woman’s natal chart, Mars indicates a large part of the masculine ideal that she carries around within her. The sign where Mars is found gives clues as to what she finds attractive in a male. For instance, a woman with her Mars in Cancer will often find something appealing about nurturing, caring men.

And now this is the important bit: it’s her Mars, and these Cancerian traits are really hers. It’s just that she tends to project them pleasurably onto males, thus becoming attracted to men who mirror back that part of herself in masculine form. She feels somehow completed by this interaction.

In a heterosexual man’s natal chart, Venus does this job. A man with his Venus placed in Aries will be drawn to impulsive, fiery women with strong wills, whereas a man with his Venus placed in Pisces will be turned on by sensitive, dreamy types, and so on.

Again, the important thing is that it’s his Venus. The fellow above with the Piscean Venus has sensitive, dreamy tendencies in him. He’s just more likely to project these satisfactorily onto a woman.

Ideally, when a couple has compatible mutual ideals about one another, projection can work to bring these psychological aspects into each individual’s sphere of awareness and utility. For instance, the woman with the Cancer Mars can get to know a portion of herself more fully through her interaction with her nurturing mate. She can see her own caring/clinginess, emotional concern/manipulation, sensitivity/overreactivity-- all the positives and negatives of her own Cancerian Mars. Eventually, she can more fully utilize the traits represented by her own Mars.

The ultimate goal is to be able to fully utilize all parts of the chart/psyche. Working these things out with a partner helps.

So what happens in those who don’t fit the standard heterosexual Mars/Venus projection system? There’s a lot more to this projection stuff, of course, but for now we’re only focusing on Venus and Mars. Let’s take a step back and review these two planets on their own.

We all know that Mars represents “maleness.” But that’s a trite, almost tautological statement in so many ways. Keywords for Mars include activity, will, drive, projective energy, aggression, assertiveness, physical confidence, impulse, temper, desire to penetrate, desire to protect, etc.. Yes, we tend to define masculinity by these standards, but that doesn’t necessarily mean they are the sole property of males. Where would a woman be if she had no will or desire to protect, for instance?

Venus traditionally represents “femaleness.” Keywords for Venus include receptivity, appreciation for beauty, sensuality, taste, empathy, kindness, grace, appetite, desire for comfort, desire to enfold, desire to nurture, and so on. The tendency, again, is to ascribe these characteristics to females, but they aren’t in themselves solely biologically feminine. A man with none of these traits is conceivable, yes, but you wouldn't want to hang around him for very long.


Homosexuals project their Venus and Mars, too. Sometimes it’s the standard setup, except the projection is done onto members of the same sex. For instance, a lesbian with a Taurus Mars may find herself attracted to butch Taurean women. In this case, she is projecting her Mars (the inner “male” ideal.)

On the other hand, if she projects her Venus (the inner “female” ideal) she will likely seek a more feminine partner.

It works the same with gay men. A man who projects his Mars onto other men seeks a more traditionally masculine partner as the most appropriate mirror, and will likely take the Venus role himself.

At this point, it’s appropriate to mention that these are all generalizations of the most heinous sort. No relationship is meant to be static; without a good back-and-forth alternation of Mars-Venus roles, most relationships stagnate and die. That’s the whole point of mirrors, regardless of gender or orientation: you watch, and interact, and grow more comfortable with the unexpressed polarity within yourself. Through interaction with the other, you become more whole.


What about bisexuals? A bisexual can project in a variety of ways, too. He or she can seek either the Venus or the Mars in a partner of either sex, although certain individual patterns tend to emerge after a life history has accumulated. A bisexual can look at the pattern of his or her relationships and get a decent feel for which planet tends to be projected onto which sex.

The point is that Mars/Venus projection can take a variety of forms, and all of them have the same ideal end result: the mirroring back to us of something we need to experience. When we gaze at the incomparable being (or complete lout) that is our lover, it’s also a piece of ourselves we’re looking at.

In Part Two, we’ll get specific about Mars and Venus in the signs. So your Venus is in Aquarius, huh? We’ll talk about what that means in terms of what turns you on.

Thursday, January 31, 2008

You And Me Baby


"You and me, baby, ain't nothin' but mammals...."

So goes the song, anyway. It's a strange song (and quite an odd video) but it does raise the question: why is sexuality so complicated for humans?

We are mammals, after all. In Class Mammalia (which includes everything from mice to men to marmots) we find a stunning array of sexual behavior. Sex for procreation, sex for stress relief, sex for domination, sex to mark territory, sex just to say "Howdy!", group sex, solo sex, rotating harems, same-sex relationships, voyerism, exhibitionism, masturbation with non-mammalian objects...you name it, and some animal other than a human is engaged in it right now.

Of course, they're probably not filming it and selling over the internet, but that's just because they haven't figured out how to call tech support.

We are called "the thinking animal" for good reason: we can't just do it like they do on the Discovery Channel. We have to think about it. And talk about it and write books about it. And hire scientists and therapists to think about it some more.

And (she grins sheepishly) ask astrologers about it. Any astrologer will tell you that the most common questions always center around the human love life.

Our sexuality lies in an entangled area of overlapping needs and desires, tempered by our culture, our personal upbringing, and our past experiences (to quote: "it's freakin' complicated.") Astrology, along with other metaphoric systems for peering at the world, can sometimes offer personal insight to those who want to dig a little deeper into the mysteries of their own complexity.

It's not so much about prediction, not really. Self-awareness is what it's all about.

It's hard to find a good balance between all those overlapping desires without some idea of what they actually are. Taking a look at your natal horoscope can be a step toward mapping out your own needs as an individual.

Yes, it's all based on the idea that we're affected by the motion of big lumps of rock and gas floating hundreds of thousands of miles away.

On the other hand, is this really any more inexplicable than the bizarre behavior of your last girlfriend?

As you may have already noticed, I'm a bit intellectually obsessed myself. I have Mars in Gemini, trine Venus in Aquarius, trine Pluto in Libra, plus an Aquarian eighth house holding Mercury and Jupiter, the planetary ruler of my chart.

What does that mean? Well, I'm going to fill you in over the next few weeks by adding information on how Mars, Venus, and Pluto in the signs affect your tendencies to like/hate/lust after certain experiences and people.

Until then...safety first, and happy hunting!


(Don't forget to check out the Monthly Horoscopes for February.)

Sunday, January 27, 2008

AstroNews: Domination, Anyone? Pluto into Capricorn


The big news: as of late January 2008, Pluto has shifted into Capricorn. The slow-moving dwarf planet Pluto moved into Sagittarius in 1995, and will now reside in Capricorn until 2023 (with one quick visit back to Sagittarius, for old times' sake.)

From here on out, it's all about the power.

Pluto represents deep transformative experience, and in the fiery, philosophical sign of Sagittarius, it expressed itself as the power of ideals. Now, all those grand visions and sky-high standards come to ground in the Earth sign Capricorn.

Capricorn is the sign of authority, the sign of the father-figure, the paternal urge, the noble and nurturing king, the terrible devourer of sons. It represents power channeled into the material world as leadership or domination.

Pluto in Sagittarius helped us refine the visions. We need to decide what it is we really want to build, and then start experimenting with the most effective way of making the vision happen. Of course, there’ll be competition for limited resources (it's just the nature of this particular universe, I’m afraid) and so shifting power roles will come into focus.

Could be an interesting decade, huh?

On a personal level, many of us will learn our deepest lessons through relationships in which power or authority is a key ingredient. We’ll face transformative experiences that center on dominance/submission dynamics—just who is in charge here, and when, and why?

Leaders and dominant figures will emerge from this period either utterly broken, or with a new respect for the true meaning of the phrase “in charge.” Hint: it’s the leader who exists to serve, not the other way around. Those who don’t already know this will have ample opportunities to learn; we’ll face a series of challenges in which the lower-case ego threatens to overpower the selfless desire to serve (the world, our friends, our partners, our selves) through responsible mastery.

Followers and subordinates will emerge from this period either as neurotic wrecks or as energized team members who are more consciously aware of the other half of the dynamic: subs must choose their masters, and choose them very wisely. Personal power given is personal power used. We’ll all be called to account for the energy we’ve lent to whatever leader we’ve chosen, wisely or otherwise. There’ll be very little room for weaseling out of consequences by saying “But they were in charge, not me!”

And the biggest secret we should learn from all this? We’re all both by turns. We all choose whom (and what) we serve and who (and what) serves us, and then we find out along the way which role is best in different situations.

Where this next chapter spins itself out-- the bedroom, the boardroom, the war room, the classroom, wherever-- will depend on countless factors. Most of us will get a taste of at least a couple of these scenarios. It might not always be painless, but it’ll be powerful.

Count on it.