Double the gentle

For the next week of Libra season we get double the gentle.

Hexagram 57 – The Gentle (Subtly penetrating) of the I Ching is our hexagram host. It is one of the 8 hexagrams that has doubled trigrams.

This hexagram has gentleness as its attribute, which penetrates like the roots of a tree or the wind.

Hilary Barrett says in her translation: “Whatever penetrates subtly becomes influential – not by acting on situations or people to change their nature, but by becoming part of their nature and acting in them.”

This brings to mind one of my favorite Marie-Louise von Franz quotes: “But if a single individual devotes himself to individuation, he frequently has a positive contagious effect on the people around him. It is as if a spark leaps from one to another. And this usually occurs when one has no intention of influencing others and often when one uses no words.”

Richard Wilhem says that the “penetrating quality of the wind depends upon its ceaselessness. This is what makes it so powerful; time is its instrument. In the same way the ruler’s thought should penetrate the soul of the people….Only when the command has been assimilated by the people is action in accordance with it possible. Action without preparation of the ground only frightens and repels.”

I’m sure we can all think of times when someone – or maybe we ourselves! – forced a change too abruptly and it caused chaos. There are certainly countless examples of it in the news stories on any given day.

One would be hard pressed to find a leadership book about this. “7 Steps to Leading Like the Wind” probably wouldn’t be a bestseller! For the wind isn’t visible; its effects can only be felt gradually and subtly. You can’t make an action plan for acting in situations instead of on them.

Each of us has our own journey and individuation process; the effect it has on others can’t be mapped out.

Libra season is a perfect time to contemplate The Gentle, as its qualities are in keeping with Libra and its host planet Venus. During this next week perhaps you’ll become a bit more aware of the sparks that leap from you to others, and vice versa that often go unnoticed.

References:

I Ching or Book of Changes translated by Richard Wilhelm

I Ching: Walking Your Path, Creating Your Future by Hilary Barrett

Man and His Symbols by C.G. Jung

Continue ReadingDouble the gentle

The depths of intuition, Scorpio, the I Ching … and You

When I ponder the meaning of “depth,” there are several archetypes and personality typology functions that immediately come to mind.

There’s Scorpio, the fixed water sign that is the domicile of the yin version of Mars. Especially if Mars, Mercury, or the Moon are placed here.

Mercury-Pluto, per Richard Tarnas, has “a tendency to think with acute, penetrating intensity that in exceptional cases reflected the possession of a powerful, driven intellect; an unusual capactiy for…shrewed analysis of underlying or hidden motivations.”

The I Ching itself is about depth. Johnson F. Yan says, “The I Ching penetrates to the soul and then demands soul-searching.”

Introverted intuition likes to go deep into whatever it is interested in. John Beebe says, “When introverted intuition is operating well, an image of the deeper reality compellingly presents itself.”

Introverted sensation also can provide deep insight and can, per Beebe, “single out from all the possible meanings that one meaning which tells us what is the specific psychic activity behind the dream and how it can be brought into the foreground of consciousness.”

Then there’s depth psychology, that inexhaustible source of wisdom for many of us. Psychology is the study of the soul and the soul refers to the deep. Depth psychology approaches the whole person and connects us to our own depths by engaging the unconscious.

By the way, we’re considering depth today because of Hexagram 48 – The Well of the I Ching*: “The well from which water is drawn conveys the further idea of an inexhaustible dispensing of nourishment.”

The flip side of depth is superficiality. Have you ever noticed that the people most interested in depth are sometimes the most fearful that they are too superficial?

Encounters with depth are also defeats for the ego. Jung wrote in his autobiography about how when he regularly attended to his depths, he repeatedly was brought up short: “Aha, here is another thing I did not know about myself.”

Mercury enters Libra tomorrow, October 5. It doesn’t probe the depths the way Scorpio does, but it gently prepares the way for that.

Diplomatic, other-centered Libra, a yang air sign that is the domicile of Venus, can help remind us that, as James Hollis says, “each of us is, after all, a character of great depth.”


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References:

I Ching or Book of Changes translated by Richard Wilhelm

DNA and the I Ching: The Tao of Life by Johnson F. Yan

Memories, Dreams, and Reflections by C.G. Jung

What Matters Most by James Hollis

Cosmos and Psyche by Richard Tarnas

*The 64 hexagrams of the I Ching, an ancient Chinese text, are arranged along the ecliptic (the celestial equator) in Human Design. In astrology there are 12 zodiac signs along the ecliptic, so there are 5.3 hexagrams per zodiac sign. I’m contemplating these hexagrams as a way to engage with astrology, the I Ching, and Jungian psychology.

Continue ReadingThe depths of intuition, Scorpio, the I Ching … and You

Aries Full Moon breaking through gentle indifference

Year ago, before I finally accepted the fact that I am not a gardener, I tried growing tomatoes. Year after year most of them would never ripen and would end up just soiling on the vines.

I never figured out the root cause. One theory is the walnut tree inhibited the tomato plants, but who knows.

Hexagram 18: Work on What Has Been Spoiled from the I Ching is our hexagram host for this next stretch of Libra season.

Richard Wilhelm’s translation of Hexagram 18 says that “gentle indifference” (I love that phrase) and “rigid inertia” have caused stagnation. Both of those set in each time I gazed upon yet another failed tomato harvest and gave up.

This hexagram makes it seem like there has been some slacking off since the end of Virgo season, which is associated with the harvest.

The remedy: “Decisiveness and energy must take the place of the inertia and indifference that have led to decay, in order that the ending may be followed by a new beginning.” Today’s energetic Aries full harvest Moon arrived just in time!

Mercury is still there in Virgo until October 6, to help us dig into the root cause of any decay going unaddressed around us: “We must first know the causes of corruption before we can do away with them; hence it is necessary to be cautious during the time before the start…Success depends on proper deliberation.”

Enjoy the Aries full Moon this weekend and take a look at her if you can. Maybe she will inspire you to break through gentle indifference.

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References:

I Ching or Book of Changes translated by Richard Wilhelm

*The 64 hexagrams of the I Ching, an ancient Chinese text, are arranged along the ecliptic (the celestial equator) in Human Design. In astrology there are 12 zodiac signs along the ecliptic, so there are 5.3 hexagrams per zodiac sign. I’m contemplating these hexagrams as a way to engage with astrology, the I Ching, and Jungian psychology.

Continue ReadingAries Full Moon breaking through gentle indifference

Pushing upward from the fall equinox

Today is the fall equinox, which is one of two days each year where the amount of light and darkness are in equal balance.

Hexagram 46 – Pushing Upward of the I Ching is our hexagram for the fall equinox and the first week of Libra season.

It seems a little oxymoronic to consider pushing upward during a time of the year where the amount of darkness is increasing here in the novrthern hemisphere. After all, during the chillier mornings, pushing the covers upward can seem like an accomplishment!

I attended an equinox fire circle tonight. We were given two sticks of wood – one was to set an intention for the next six months.

The other was for our own private prayer for Mother Earth.

Of course I couldn’t help but think of how hexagram 46 is comprised of both the wood trigram and the earth trigram.

I like how Alkoanand Diaz describes “pushing upward”: “Pushing upward doesn’t sound like there is a lot of effort involved, it’s not like pushing forward. Pushing upward is basically an aspiration, a yearning to realize the oneness of all things. It’s an elevation in consciousness because it’s the only way you can push up the consciousness – looking for meaning, for sense.”

It sounds like the right intention for this yin time of year;. There will be time enough to push forward in six months during Aries season.

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References:

The 64 Gates Through the Rave Mandela by Alokanand Diaz

*The 64 hexagrams of the I Ching, an ancient Chinese text, are arranged along the ecliptic (the celestial equator) in Human Design. In astrology there are 12 zodiac signs along the ecliptic, so there are 5.3 hexagrams per zodiac sign. I’m contemplating these hexagrams as a way to engage with astrology, the I Ching, and Jungian psychology.

Continue ReadingPushing upward from the fall equinox

How conflict can unblock you

So here we are with conflict in the aftermath of last week’s adversity.

In Hexagram 6: Conflict from the I Ching, which is in play for this next week of Virgo,* heaven and water are moving in opposite directions. We had a similar dynamic going on back during Gemini season, when earth and heaven weren’t aligned. “As above, so below” isn’t happening.

There was recently a lot going on in Virgo. There was the New Moon last week, and Mercury just stationed direct, meaning the retrograde is over. I don’t know about you, but I was feeling low energy late last week as Mercury came to a standstill during the end of the retrograde. Maybe the conflict in Hexagram 6 will help me wake up!

Regarding conflict, this hexagram reminds us that we must face the conflict within if we want to be able to conquer the danger from without.

As Jung said, “And the man at peace with himself, who accepts himself, contributes an infinitesimal amount to the good of the universe. Attend to your private and personal conflicts and you will be reducing by one millionth millionth the world conflict.

Steve Myers, the author of one of my favorite typology books, says: “The more we recognise the conflict as being within ourselves, the better we are able to deal with any actual conflict there may be in the world. This can in some instances lead to more conflict, at a conscious level. By learning to engage in an inner dialectic, we can recover the lost art of disagreement that not only develops ourselves but encourages more constructive debates in society- ‘a sane and normal society is one in which people habitually disagree though agreement is equally important.’

That all sounds great, but how best to attend to your personal conflicts? An “inner dialectic” immediately brings to mind the parts work technique of Internal Family Systems and the Jungian practice and active imagination, where one dialogues with inner dream figures. It’s all the more motivating to know that this inner work can help us in real life dialogue with people.

From a personality typology perspective, John Beebe’s 8 function model shows us our inner conflicts. The “opposing personality” function is the opposite of our “hero” – the strongest, dominant function – and is a source of inner conflict. Also, people who have your opposing function as their hero function are people with whom you might more easily disagree. This knowledge makes it easier to navigate difficult encounters with others.

Plus there is the inferior function – “life’s great problem” as Marie-Louise von Franz said. The type of person we can’t stand most often resembles our inferior function. Then there is the “senex” shadow function, which can lash out at others; it is opposite our parent function and therefore is similar to a critical parent.

From an astrology perspective, the location of Mars in your natal chart, and aspects other planets make to Mars, give you some insight about how you handle conflict.

One of my favorite takes on Mars is from Howard Sasportas: “If you are chronically ill or depressed, I would encourage you to examine closely the house Mars is placed in your chart. We don’t normally think of Mars as a significator for illness or depression, but these states can be caused by an “unused” Mars. Perhaps becoming more active, expressive or assertive in that domain will unblock you, improving your health and vitality, and get you going again.”

If we get going again, then we can flip the script so that “as below, so above.”

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References:

Myers-Briggs Typology vs. Jungian Individuation by Steve Myers

C.G. Jung Speaking by C.G. Jung

The Inner Planets: Building Blocks of Inner Reality by Liz Greene and Howard Sasportas

*The 64 hexagrams of the I Ching, an ancient Chinese text, are arranged along the ecliptic (the celestial equator) in Human Design. In astrology there are 12 zodiac signs along the ecliptic, so there are 5.3 hexagrams per zodiac sign. I’m contemplating these hexagrams as a way to engage with astrology, the I Ching, and Jungian psychology.

Continue ReadingHow conflict can unblock you

Finding the life and growth within the walls

An empty lake is the image of oppression for Hexagram 47 of the I Ching.

The other image for this hexagram is of trees growing in a tight space and being unable to spread their branches. This symbolizes those times when we are trapped and isolated or feel like we can’t reach out to others.

There is some encouragement here for us in this image, however, as Hilary Barrett writes in her translation of Hexagram 47: “The great person finds good fortune in constancy to an inner ideal. This is the supreme test of character: whether you can hold to your purpose when there is no encouragement, no confirmation from outside, but only your own inner resources. The lack of outward signs of progress does not mean that you are wrong or that the world is wrong. Rather than resenting the walls, concentrate on the life and growth within them.”

I know I’ve mentioned this before, but I want to pause again and enthuse about how much I like that the I Ching uses imagery from nature.

Astrology does, too, with animals being the symbols of several of the signs, the four elements of air, water, earth, and fire, the effects of the Moon and Sun, and so on, but it’s easier to overlook this. That is why I often advise astrology students to frequently step away from the astrology books and videos and develop an experiential relationship with astrology. One practice I recommend is tracking the daily movements of the Moon and seeing how they play out in your daily life.

Anyway, we are in a mercurial time of year with it being Virgo season hosted by Mercury.* Mercury likes to look at the parts of things and is into being analytical and theoretical. It and can suffer from paralysis by analysis, which is but one way we can oppress ourselves.

From a typology perspective, this is like the axis of introverted thinking (seeking understanding above all) with its opposite of extraverted feeling (connecting with the feelings of others).

Jupiter, the opposite of Mercury, is, among other things, known as a “remover of oppression,” as author Robert E. Svoboda describes it. It prefers cohesive wholes rather than breaking things into parts and analyzing them.

Jupiter is considered to be in exile in Virgo, which reminds us of that tension of opposites between Mercury and Jupiter. That doesn’t mean we should try to dial down the Mercury in our lives right now or lean more on Jupiter. In sessions with clients I often say astrology isn’t about “shoulds.” Rather, it’s simply about becoming more conscious of those opposites, letting them be, and thereby becoming more at peace with the tension.

Above all, our inner guidance can help us during times of oppression. As Jungian analyst James Hollis says: “Something in us always knows what is right for us and is undertaking measures to bring that confluence of will and nature about, even as it may be oppressed by the burdens and incursions of the outer world or opposed by our behaviors and treatment plans.”

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References:

I Ching: Walking Your Path, Creating Your Future by Hilary Barrett

Living Between Worlds: Finding Personal Resilience in Changing Times by James Hollis

The Greatness of Saturn by Robert Svoboda

*The 64 hexagrams of the I Ching, an ancient Chinese text, are arranged along the ecliptic (the celestial equator) in Human Design. In astrology there are 12 zodiac signs along the ecliptic, so there are 5.3 hexagrams per zodiac sign. I’m contemplating these hexagrams as a way to engage with astrology, the I Ching, and Jungian psychology.

Continue ReadingFinding the life and growth within the walls

Making harmony with your past

One of the things I’ve learned in the second half of life is that time is circular, not linear.

This has been a lesson of astrology. There are planetary cycles that repeat at certain intervals. For example, Jupiter spends approximately a year in each sign and is currently in Taurus. You could review the last time Jupiter was in Taurus 12 years ago to gain insight into what might happen for you this time and apply any wisdom previously learned.

Hexagram 64: Before Completion of the I Ching is the final hexagram. And yet it basically says we are similar to how we were at the beginning. It helps us to review the past and, of course, astrology is one way to do that.

So often the focus in astrology is to offer archetypal predictions of the future. My favorite thing to do as an astrologer, however, is to help people make sense of their past and offer a meaningful narrative about what they have been through.

When you make harmony with your own past, including any unfinished business of your ancestors that may have been passed on to you, you have more clarity about yourself and are therefore more capable of accepting others for who they are.

Mercury is retrograde in Mercury-ruled Virgo right now. Retrogrades are a good time for review of the past and, of course, Mercury is the planet associated with that kind of analytical work, especially in Virgo.

Hexagram 64 uses the image of a fox crossing the river only when there is solid ice. If the fox instead crosses when the conditions aren’t right, and gets its tail wet, then the fox’s effort is in vain.

The lesson here, per Richard Wilhelm’s translation, is that “deliberation and caution are the prerequisites of success…Thus the superior man is careful in the differentiation of things, so that each finds its place.” That is very Virgo.

There are daily opportunities to excavate one’s history and help tune into the conditions in your soul so as to better make those figurative river crossings. James Hollis recommends asking yourself the following questions in your journal each day, so I will close with these:

“What got touched today? What generated a significant amount of energy? Where did that energy come from? What did that touch in my history? What satellite issues might that have activated?”

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*The 64 hexagrams of the I Ching, an ancient Chinese text, are arranged along the ecliptic (the celestial equator) in Human Design. In astrology there are 12 zodiac signs along the ecliptic, so there are 5.3 hexagrams per zodiac sign. I’m contemplating these hexagrams as a way to engage with astrology, the I Ching, and Jungian psychology.

References:

I Ching or Book of Changes translated by Richard Wilhelm

A Life of Meaning: Relocating Your Center of Spiritual Gravity by James Hollis

Continue ReadingMaking harmony with your past

Doing the work of thunder and rain through forgiveness

Once again we see thunder associated with harmony, like we did back in Gemini season. And once again I find that a little oxymoronic, given that I find thunder always a little jarring, probably due to my inferior sensation function.

Hilary Barrett says in her translation of Hexagram 40: Liberation (Delivearance) of the I Ching* that “Humans do the work of thunder and rain through forgiveness.”

I love that image. One can liken it to what it feels like after a thunderstorm when the tension is over and the air feels cleansed. Because of the rain, there is fluidity, which is the best condition for forgiveness and the liberation that comes from it. In my experience, nothing is more liberating than forgiveness.

There’s a lot going on in Virgo right now. The Sun is there. Mercury is retrograde in Virgo for a couple more weeks and then will turn direct. Liberation is yours for the taking if you’ll have it.

This is all the more enhanced because the lightning-bolt effect of Uranus in Taurus is forming a trine to all that Virgo activity. Astrologer Rick Levine said in an interview that Uranus is about “the instantaneous resolution of irresolvable opposites” and that is its only job. I’m not sure about it being its only job, but during a recent transit of Uranus to the natal Moon in my chart, that was certainly a key dynamic.

If you have Virgo rising, Sun, Moon or other planets in Virgo, take note of this dynamic in the week ahead. If you don’t have natal Virgo planets, you will still feel it in the area of life that Virgo represents in your natal chart.

So with that in mind, here are some questions from Hilary Barrett that you may ponder if you so choose:

If nothing could bind you, where would you go?
Do you ‘have to [fill in the blank]’? Who says?
Which path leads to where you want to be?

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*The 64 hexagrams of the I Ching, an ancient Chinese text, are arranged along the ecliptic (the celestial equator) in Human Design. In astrology there are 12 zodiac signs along the ecliptic, so there are 5.3 hexagrams per zodiac sign. I’m contemplating these hexagrams as a way to engage with astrology, the I Ching, and Jungian psychology.

References:

I Ching: Walking Your Path, Creating Your Future by Hilary Barrett

Rick Levine interview about Uranus on The Astrology Podcast

Continue ReadingDoing the work of thunder and rain through forgiveness

Liberation from old boundaries

So here we are, the first day of Virgo season, and Hexagram 59: Dispersion/Dissolution recommends that we become less rigid by having a religious type of awe:

Through hardness and selfishness the heart grows rigid, and this rigidity leads to separation from all others. …Therefore the hearts of men must be seized by a devout emotion. They must be shaken by a religious awe in face of eternity – stirred with an intuition of the One Creator of all living beings, and united through the strong feeling of fellowship experienced in the ritual of divine worship.”

The I Ching, Richard Wilhelm translation

This reminds me of what Jung told Bill W., the founder of A.A. (Alcoholics Anonymous). Jung told Bill W. about his experience with an alcoholic patient who became sober after meeting with Jung for a year and a half. The patient later relapsed.

Jung’s conclusion was that the patient’s situation was hopeless “so far as any further medical or psychiatrict treatment might be concerned.”

He also said, when asked if there was any hope: “there might be, provided he could become the subject of a spiritual or religious experience – in short, a genuine conversion.”

This led to the famous Step One of A.A: “We admitted we were powerless over alcohol – that our live had become unmanageable.” And also Step Two: “Came to believe that a Power greater than ourselves could restore us to sanity.”

So what does any of that have to do with Virgo? Virgo’s planetary host is Mercury, and one would normally associate spiritual experience and converesion more with Jupiter, Mercury’s opposite.

When you look beyond the stereotypes, Virgo is about the fluidity between spirit and matter. Virgos are working to be of this world while not being of this world.

Virgo is adaptable and not rigid, because it is one of the four mutable signs. It is mutable because it will be handing off to Libra, where the amount of darkness during the day will become greater than the amount of light.

We just left Leo season, which, among other things, is associated with the heart. Leo is a fixed sign, not an adaptable and mutable one. So if you are leaving Leo with any traces of rigidity of heart, Mercury, Virgo’s host, might just be a good antitodte. Mercury is like a spirit guide and helps bring change.

I’ll leave you with three questions from Hilary Barrett’s commentary on this hexagram:

Where and how can you be less rigid?
Where are the walls in a current situation you are facing, and what can you see as they dissolve away?
As energy and vitality is liberated from old boundaries, where will it go?

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*The 64 hexagrams of the I Ching, an ancient Chinese text, are arranged along the ecliptic (the celestial equator) in Human Design. In astrology there are 12 zodiac signs along the ecliptic, so there are 5.3 hexagrams per zodiac sign. I’m contemplating these hexagrams as a way to engage with astrology, the I Ching, and Jungian psychology.

References:

I Ching: Walking Your Path, Creating Your Future by Hilary Barrett

The War of the Gods in Addiction by David Schoen

I Ching or Book of Changes translated by Richard Wilhelm

Continue ReadingLiberation from old boundaries

Learning the way of the deep places

Five years ago this month I got to experience what it is like to be caught unexpectedly in a flood.

I was driving my daughter to her viola lesson on a sunny day and just as we exited the highway a torrential downpour began out of nowhere.

All the cars were at a standstill on the ramp and it was clear we weren’t moving anytime soon.

The ramp is on a decline so the water quickly accumulated; within minutes our car was sitting in several inches of water.

The tires of our car were just barely touching the ground.

Water was ever so slightly seeping into the vehicle.

Periodically a water rescue ambulance would drive by, which caused waves, and anxiety.

There was the occassional pickup truck or other large vehicle that would impatiently drive past all of us and created more waves. Exasperating.

My daughter kept anxiously asked me to do something about this situation.

I said I felt that, if I tried to drive, the tires wouldn’t hold firm to the ground and we’d float and crash into cars.

So we waited.

And waited.

Eventually some cars started to leave. To my daughter’s consternation, we stil waited.

About three hours after getting stuck in this situation, I felt the waters had receded enough and I drove successfully to the nearby mall so we could get out of the car and get a snack.

I carefully studied the traffic situation on Google Maps and tried to find information online about the storm.

Afterwards I learned the area received 11-15 inches of rain in 24 hours, with 2-4 inches of rain falling per hour during the peak which, of course, was the time period we were caught in it.

There has never been a storm like that here in our part of Wisconsin and it impacted the water levels of our lakes for months afterwards.

This was the story that immediately came to mind as I started pondering Hexagram 29: The Abysmal (Water) from the I Ching, which corresponds to these last days of Leo.*

It may seem strange that the fire of sign of Leo is associated with water, but Leo is about the strength to stay with things. That kind of strength is needed when you are caught in an abyss or in a dangerous situation.

I like this quote from Hilary Barrett’s commentary on Hexagram 29:

These are pits, where you fall into the deep, dark waters, flowing on into the swirling unknowable dark. The chasms repeat: there is no detour that would take you round them, so you must practise and learn the way of these deep places.

In these kind of situations, like the one of my own I described above, our typology comes into play and gives us a language to use.

I have INFJ tendencies and was suddenly confronted with a massive amount of extraverted sensation (the weakest part of my personality) to have to deal with. My strong introverted intuition and weak extraverted sensation, which are opposites, had to work together.

These last days of Leo might be a good time for you to reflect on how you have used the opposites within you to access your inner Leo strength to resolve a difficult situation.

How have you practiced and learned the way of the deep waters?

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*The 64 hexagrams of the I Ching, an ancient Chinese text, are arranged along the ecliptic (the celestial equator) in Human Design. In astrology there are 12 zodiac signs along the ecliptic, so there are 5.3 hexagrams per zodiac sign. I’m contemplating these hexagrams as a way to engage with astrology, the I Ching, and Jungian psychology.

References:

I Ching: Walking Your Path, Creating Your Future by Hilary Barrett

Continue ReadingLearning the way of the deep places