Rob Brezsny's Astrology Newsletter
Rob Brezsny's Astrology Newsletter
October 23, 2019
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See a pretty version of this newsletter: https://bit.ly/PlayfulWork
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SUBTERRANEAN PRONOIA THERAPY
excerpted from my book *Pronoia Is the Antidote for Paranoia: How the
Whole Wolrd Is Conspiring to Shower You with Blessings* —
https://bit.ly/Pronoia
1. The greatest gift you can give might be the gift that you yourself were
never given. Give that gift.
The most valuable service you have to offer your fellow humans may be
the service you have always wished were performed for you. Offer that
service.
An experience that wounded you could move you to help people who've been
similarly wounded. Heal yourself by healing others.
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2. Declare amnesty for the part of you that you don't love very well.
Forgive that poor sucker. Hold its hand and take it out to dinner and a
movie. Tactfully offer it a chance to make amends for the dumb things it
has done.
And then do a dramatic reading of this proclamation by the playwright
Theodore Rubin: "I must learn to love the fool in me—the one who feels too
much, talks too much, takes too many chances, wins sometimes and loses
often, lacks self-control, loves and hates, hurts and gets hurt, promises
and breaks promises, laughs and cries. It alone protects me against that
utterly self-controlled, masterful tyrant whom I also harbor and who
would rob me of human aliveness, humility, and dignity but for my fool."
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3. Pathologist Paul Wolf has suggested that some of history's great artists
may have never created their masterpieces if the wonders of modern
medicine had been available to them. For example, what if doctors had
cured van Gogh's mental illness with a regimen of drugs like Prozac and
Xanax?
Maybe he would have been spared the torment that goaded him to the
outbursts of genius that erupted on his canvases.
Are there ways in which the very things that have driven you crazy might
play a role in your finest accomplishments?
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4. Some of my readers complain when I draw inspiration from a public
figure they consider a bad person. Once I cited philosopher Bertrand
Russell, and a woman from Austin went into a rage: "Russell was a
terrible father! How dare you give him any credence?"
Another time I invoked the wisdom of ex-U.S. president Teddy Roosevelt.
"What possessed you to quote such a militaristic bully?" wrote an
outraged emailer.
Here's how I respond to these grumbles: If I refused to learn from people
unless I agreed with everything they had ever said and done, I would never
learn from anyone.
What about you? Have you set up your life so that everyone is either on or
off your good list? If so, consider trying something new: Cultivate a
capacity to derive help and insight from people who aren't perfect.
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5. No matter how holy and good, everyone in the world has a portion of the
world's sickness inside them. It's known by many names: neurosis,
shadow, demon, devil. Many people try to deny that it inhabits them.
Others acknowledge its power so readily that they allow themselves to be
overwhelmed and distorted by it.
At the Beauty and Truth Lab, we take a position between those two
positions. We accept the fact that the evil is part of us, but treat it with
compassionate amusement and flexible vigilance. Our stance is partly that
of loving parents and partly that of warriors.
Once you make a commitment to explore the mysteries of pronoia, your
shadow will try to play tricks on you that it has never tried before. How
will you respond? We recommend an aggressive, tender, improvisational
approach. Be ready for anything. Avoid both blithe excesses of tolerance
and grave fundamentalism.
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6. "We are attracted to people who express the qualities we deny or
repress in ourselves," says creativity expert Shakti Gawain. Using this
idea as your hypothesis, take an inventory of the people you're most
drawn to. Ask yourself whether they have talents and dreams that you
wish could come alive in you. If you find this to be the case, consider the
possibility that it's time to claim those talents or dreams as your own.
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7. Philosopher William James proposed that if our culture ever hoped to
shed the deeply ingrained habit of going to war, we'd have to create a
moral equivalent. It's not enough to preach the value of peace, he said. We
have to find other ways to channel our aggressive instincts in order to
accomplish what war does, like stimulate political unity and build civic
virtue.
Astrology provides a complementary perspective. Each of us has the
warrior energy of the planet Mars in our psychological makeup. We can't
simply repress it, but must find a positive way to express it. How might
you go about this project?
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8. In his book *The Thought of the Heart and the Soul of the World*,
psychologist James Hillman writes: "The question of evil refers
primarily to the anaesthetized heart, the heart that has no reaction to
what it faces, thereby turning the variegated sensuous face of the world
into monotony, sameness, oneness."
What would you have to do in order to triumph over this kind of evil in
yourself?
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9. "The problem, if you love it, is as beautiful as the sunset," wrote J.
Krishnamurti. "The obstacle is the path," says the Zen proverb. What
frustrating puzzle do you love the best?
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10. Acquire a hand puppet, preferably a funky old-fashioned one from a
thrift store, but any one will do. Give the puppet a name and wear it on
your hand wherever you go for several days. In a voice different from
your normal one, make this ally speak the "shadow truths" of every
situation you encounter: the dicey subtexts everyone is shy about
acknowledging, the layers of truth that lie beneath the surface, the
agreed-upon illusions that cloud everyone's perceptual abilities.
11. All of us are eminently fallible nobodies. We're crammed with
delusions and cracked beliefs. We give ourselves more slack than anyone
else, and we're brilliant at justifying our irrational biases with
seemingly logical explanations. Yet it's equally true that we're each a
magnificently enigmatic creation unique in the history of the world. We're
immortal geniuses in continuous telepathic touch with all of creation.
Dramatize this paradox. Tomorrow, buy and wear ugly, threadbare clothes
from the same thrift store where you got your hand puppet. Eat the
cheapest junk food possible and do the most menial tasks you can find.
The next day, attire yourself in your best clothes, wear a crown or
diadem, and treat yourself to an expensive gourmet meal. Enjoy a massage,
a pedicure, and other luxuries that require people to wait on you.
On the third day, switch back and forth between the previous two days'
modes every couple of hours. As you do, cultivate a passionate indifference
to the question of whether you are ultimately an unimportant nobody or a
captivating hero.
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PURGE YOUR NEGATIVE CONDITIONING—OR AT LEAST SOME OF IT
Who knew that in one of my past lives I was a guerrilla Qabalistic
performance artist studying at Exorcise Your Television University?
Who knew that at this time I was also a New Edge anti-guru who created a
guided meditation designed to drive you sweetly crazy:
https://tinyurl.com/MassHypnosisParty
Listen to this track if you’d like help in purging your negative
conditioning!
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WEIRD ELDERS
Michael Meade says: "In old traditions those who acted as elders were
considered to have one foot in daily life and the other foot in the
otherworld. Elders acted as a bridge between the visible world and the
unseen realms of spirit and soul. A person in touch with the otherworld
stands out because something normally invisible can be seen through
them.
"The old word for having a foot in each world is 'weird.' The original sense
of weird involved both fate and destiny. Becoming weird enough to be wise
requires that a person learn to accommodate the strange way they are
shaped within and aimed at the world.
"An old idea suggests that those seeking for an elder should look for
someone weird enough to be wise. For just as there can be no general
wisdom, there are no 'normal' elders. Normal bespeaks the 'norms' that
society uses to regulate people, whereas an awakened destiny always
involves connections to the weird and the warp of life.
"In Norse mythology, as in Shakespeare, the Fates appear as the Weird
Sisters who hold time and the timeless together.
"Those who would become truly wise must become weird enough to be in
touch with timeless things and abnormal enough to follow the guidance of
the unseen. Elders are supposed to be weird, not simply 'weirdoes,' but
strange and unusual in meaningful ways.
"Elders are supposed to be more in touch with the otherworld, but not out
of touch with the struggles in this world. Elders have one foot firmly in
the ground of survival and another in the realm of great imagination. This
double-minded stance serves to help the living community and even helps
the species survive."
– Michael Meade, *Fate and Destiny: The Two Agreements of the Soul*
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WE NEED AN UNCOLONIZED IMAGINATION
Excerpts from an interview with storyteller and mythologist Martin
Shaw: We need an uncolonized imagination, a mythic intelligence. Why?
Because we are constantly being fed signs that frighten us, and then
paralyze us, and then colonize us. And imagination, through myth, wants
to give you symbols to raise you up.
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People often prefer to dismiss myth, saying: it’s not true. But a way to
think about myth is as something that never was and always is. Or as a
beautiful lie that tells a much deeper truth.
But one way or another when we lose our mythic sensibility, the powers
in this world that may not wish us well have a greater purchase on us, a
greater hold.
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Whatever we are facing now we need to have a root system embedded in
weather patterns, the presences of animals, our dreams, and the ones who
came before us.
Myth is insistent that when there is a crisis, genius lives on the margins
not the centre.
If we are constantly using the language of politics to combat the language
of politics at some point the soul grows weary and turns its head away
because we are not allowing it into the conversation, and by denying soul
we are ignoring what the Mexicans call the river beneath the river.
We’re not listening to the thoughts of the world. We’re only listening to
our own neurosis and our own anxiety.
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The days of conventional hero myths are not serving us. What is being
called for now culturally is a word you find often in Ancient Greece: metis.
Metis is a kind of divine cunning in service to wisdom.
We can’t be naïve in times like this, because we are in the presence of
underworld forces that will do one of two things: they will either educate
us, or annihilate us.
And in fairy tales whenever the movement is down – and the movement
culturally is down right now – you have to get underworld smart, have
underworld intelligence, underworld metis.
I have a strong feeling that a lot of what wants to emerge through many
ancient stories is a kind of wily, tough, ingenious and romantic force that
needs to come forward at this point in time.
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If you don’t have ancestors you have ghosts. At the moment many of us are
so impoverished and lacking in a cultural root system that what is around
us are not ancestors supporting us but ghosts depleting us.
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I notice that several times a day I go into what you could call a mild trance
state. I’m not talking about ouija boards here! I’m just talking about
falling under the influence of advertising, or various politically
engineered neuroses that might be floating around.
But I recognize I have come into a kind of enchantment. And the way I
recognize it is that I feel less than grounded. I feel I’m not in the realm of
imagination, I’m in the realm of fantasy. So the imaginal is not present;
the Earth as a lived, breathing, thinking being is not present.
What’s happening is I’m simply fretting – to use my mother’s language –
I’m spinning my wheels. And so actually I think stories have a capacity to
wake us up.
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Gaston Bachelard says, "the Earth seeks to be admired by you."
So if you do nothing else, admire natural things. Learn to give them
praise. Learn to speak their 12 secret names. You hear about the Inuit
having all these different names for snow.
Well, I thought, what are the 12 secret names of those old-growth oaks
that I see down near Greenwich docks? My advice really is what the
Hindus call the ‘joyful participation in the sorrows of the world’.
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Read the entire interview with Martin Shaw:
https://tinyurl.com/z2evq6e
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DREAM WORK AS AN AID TO ACTIVISM
Modern post-industrial societies tend to produce un-sane populations --
multitudes of people who are unbalanced in their adaptation to the
destructive stress of daily existence. One of the symptoms of this un-
sanity is the loss of contact between the waking ego and the depths of the
self, a contact that requires involvement in dream experiences and
information.
Cultures generally resist change, and modern materialist societies are no
different in this respect. Devaluation of dreaming and other spiritually
efficacious experiences is part of the foundation of 'false consciousness'
required by capitalist/materialist political economies.
Materialist cultures require that the focus of awareness be upon the
material conditions of life and away from involvement with the inner
being which is the only road to spiritual maturation.
—Charles D. Laughlin, *Communing with the Gods: Consciousness, Culture
and the Dreaming Brain* - https://tinyurl.com/j3dt36a
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MORE PRONOIA RESOURCES:
Indigenous Women Are Publishing the First Maya Works in Over 400
Years. A bookmaking collective in San Cristobal de las Casas is helping
keep the Tzotzil language alive.
https://tinyurl.com/y5doyxyp
After his grandmother got diagnosed with dementia, teen Logan Wells made
an app to help care for her. Then he released it free for all caregivers.
https://outline.com/w3m2Kq
Costa Rica will run on more than 98% renewable energy for fifth
consecutive year.
https://tinyurl.com/yyjrx796
(Note: I endorse these because I like them. They aren't advertisements,
and I get no kickbacks.)
Please tell me your own nominations for PRONOIA RESOURCES:
Truthrooster@gmail.com.
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FREE WILL ASTROLOGY
Week beginning October 24
Copyright 2019 by Rob Brezsny
https://FreeWillAstrology.com
Grammar key: Asterisks equal *italics*
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): "Sometimes the easiest way to get something
done is to be a little naive about it," writes computer engineer Bill Joy. I
invite you to consider the value of that perspective, Scorpio—even though
you're the least likely sign in all the zodiac to do so. Being naive just
doesn't come naturally to you; you often know more than everyone else
around you. Maybe you'll be more receptive to my suggestion if I reframe
the task. Are you familiar with the Zen Buddhist concept of "beginner's
mind"? You wipe away your assumptions and see everything as if it were
the first time you were in its presence.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Is it always a bad thing to be lost? To
wander in the unknown without a map? I'd like to propose a good version
of being lost. It requires you to be willing to give up your certainties, to
relinquish your grip on the comforting dogmas that have structured your
world—but to do so gladly, with a spirit of cheerful expectancy and
curiosity. It *doesn't* require you to be a macho hero who feels no fear or
confusion. Rather, you have faith that life will provide blessings that
weren't possible until you got lost.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): "Worrying is the most natural and
spontaneous of all human functions," wrote science educator Lewis
Thomas. "Let's acknowledge this, perhaps even learn to do it better." I
agree with him! And I think it's an ideal time for you to learn how to
worry more effectively, more potently, and with greater artistry. What
might that look like? First, you wouldn't feel shame or guilt about
worrying. You wouldn't regard it as a failing. Rather, you would raise
your worrying to a higher power. You'd wield it as a savvy tool to discern
which situations truly need your concerned energy and which don't.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): "Some wounds go so deep that you don't
even feel them until months, maybe years, later," wrote Aquarian author
Julius Lester. Pay attention to that thought, Aquarius. The bad news is that
you are just now beginning to feel a wound that was inflicted some time
ago. But that's also the good news, because it means the wound will no
longer be hidden and unknowable. And because you'll be fully aware of it,
you'll be empowered to launch the healing process. I suggest you follow
your early intuitions about how best to proceed with the cure.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): If you've been having dreams or fantasies
that the roof is sinking or the walls are closing in, you should interpret it
as a sign that you should consider moving into a more spacious situation. If
you have been trapped within the narrow confines of limited possibilities,
it's time to break free and flee to a wide open frontier. In general, Pisces,
I urge you to insist on more expansiveness in everything you do, even if
that requires you to demolish cute little mental blocks that have tricked
you into thinking small.
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Singapore has one of the world's lowest
fertility rate. A few years ago, this state of affairs prompted the
government to urge Singaporeans to have sex on an annual holiday known
as National Day. A new rap song was released in the hope of pumping up
everyone's libidos and instigating a baby boom. It included the lyrics,
"Let's make fireworks ignite / Let's make Singapore's birthrate spike." I
have a different reason for encouraging you to seek abundant high-quality
sex, Aries. According to my analysis, tender orgasmic experiences will
profoundly enhance your emotional intelligence in the coming weeks—and
make you an excellent decision-maker just in time for your big decisions.
(P.S. You don't necessarily need a partner.)
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MAYBE JOY AND BLISS ARE CATALYTIC SPIRITUAL EXPERIENCES
Assume that pleasure and happiness doesn't interfere with your spiritual
growth, but may in fact stimulate it. Proceed on the hypothesis that
cultivating delight and wonder might make you a more ethical and
compassionate person. Imagine that feeling good has something important
to teach you every day.
For inspiration in practicing this approach, tune in to your EXPANDED
AUDIO HOROSCOPES. They're four-to-five-minute meditations on the
current state of your destiny.
To listen to your Expanded Audio Horoscope online, go to
https://freewillastrology.sparkns.com
Register and/or log in through the main page.
You can also listen over the phone by calling 1-877-873-4888.
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The cost is $6 per sign on the On the Web. (Discounts are available for
bulk purchases.) You can also access them for $1.99 per minute by
phone.
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"The best part about your audio horoscopes is that they pat me on the head
and kick me in the ass at the same time." - Rita L., San Diego
"Your audio oracles go beyond helping me find the truth -- they inspire
me to find the WILD truth." - Patrick K., Montreal
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TAURUS (April 20-May 20): In the 1530s, explorer Jacques Cartier led
expeditions from France to the New World. As Europeans often did back
then, he and his team were rude and brutish to the indigenous folks who
lived there, stealing their land, kidnapping some of them, and
slaughtering herds of great auks in a bird sanctuary. Yet there was one
winter when Cartier's marauders got crucial help from their victims,
who gave them vitamin C-rich pine needle tea that cured their scurvy. I
suspect you Tauruses will embark on quests and journeys in the coming
months, and I'm hoping your behavior will be different from Cartier's.
When you arrive in unfamiliar places, be humble, curious, and
respectful. Be hesitant to impose your concepts of what's true, and be
eager to learn from the locals. If you do, you're likely to get rich teachings
and benefits equivalent to the pine needle tea.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Many software engineers have enjoyed *The
Pragmatic Programmer*, a book that helps them develop and refine their
code. One popular technique the book offers is "rubber duck
deprogramming." Programmers place a toy rubber duck in front of them,
and describe to it the problems they're having. As they explain each line of
code to their very good listener, they may discover what's amiss. I
recommend a similar approach to you as you embark on metaphorically
debugging your own program, Gemini. If a rubber duck isn't available,
call on your favorite statue or stuffed animal, or even a photo of a
catalytic teacher or relative or spirit.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Read the following passage from Gabriel
García Márquez's novel *One Hundred Years of Solitude*. "Gaston was not
only a fierce lover, with endless wisdom and imagination, but he was also,
perhaps, the first man in the history of the species who had made an
emergency landing and had come close to killing himself and his
sweetheart simply to make love in a field of violets." I admire the
romantic artistry of Gaston's dramatic gesture. I applaud his imaginative
desire to express his love in a carefully chosen sanctuary filled with
beauty. I praise his intense devotion to playful extravagance. But I don't
recommend you do anything quite so extreme in behalf of love during the
coming weeks. Being twenty percent as extreme might be just right,
though.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): In his song "Diplomatic Immunity," rapper
Drake disparages tranquility and harmony. "I listen to heavy metal for
meditation, no silence," he brags. "My body isn't much of a sacred temple,
with vodka and wine, and sleep at the opposite times," he declares. Is there
a method in his madness? It's revealed in these lyrics: "All that peace and
that unity: all that weak sh-- will ruin me." In the coming weeks, Leo, I
urge you to practice the exact opposite of Drake's approach. It's time to
treat yourself to an intense and extended phase of self-care.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): It's a favorable time to refresh your
relationships with your basic sources and to make connections with new
basic sources. To spur your creative thought on these matters, I offer the
following questions to meditate on. 1. If you weren't living where you do
now, what other place might you like to call home? 2. If you didn't have
the name you actually go by, what other name would you choose? 3. If you
had an urge to expand the circle of allies that supports and stimulates you,
whom would you seek out? 4. If you wanted to add new foods and herbs that
would nurture your physical health and new experiences that would
nurture your mental health, what would they be?
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Mushrooms have spores, not seeds. They're
tiny. If you could stack 2,500 of them, they'd be an inch high. On the other
hand, they are numerous. A ripe mushroom may release up to 16 million
spores. And each spore is so light-weight, the wind can pick it up and fling
it long distances. I'll encourage you to express your power and influence
like a mushroom in the coming days: subtle and airy but abundant; light
and fine, but relentless and bountiful.
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Homework: You don't have to feel emotions that others try to manipulate
you into feeling. You are free to be who you want to be. Testify!
FreeWillAstrology.com
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Submissions sent to Rob Brezsny's Astrology Newsletter
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published in a variety of formats at Rob Brezsny's discretion,
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Contents of the Free Will Astrology Newsletter are Copyright
2019 Rob Brezsny
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