Jan. 12th, 2023

23 Pisces

Jan. 12th, 2023 02:34 pm
A MATERIALIZING MEDIUM GIVING A SEANCE


Commentary:
‘A Materializing Medium’ has a sensitivity to and awareness of spiritual forces. She is ‘Giving a Séance’, and can manifest messages from spirit that are given from the “other side”. Roget's Thesaurus defines ‘Medium’ as meaning “That by which something is accomplished or some end achieved: agency, agent, instrument, instrumentality, instrumentation, intermediary.” She is an “instrument” who is able to receive radiations, frequencies, or vibrations that cannot easily be sensed by most people.
Oracle:
Many things can be ‘Materialized’ in our lives; they can come seemingly out of nowhere. They may be messages, voices, noises, stories or episodes from one’s life. Objects can be ‘Materialized’ as well; we can conjure them up. Sometimes it can cause confusion, other times enlightenment. Realizing that one can create their own reality and the responsibility implied can lead to the belief that just about anything is possible in one’s life. The things that are ‘Materialized’ can be tangible and rewarding things, however, there should be some caution as sometimes they can have more to do with drama and show rather than having any real or lasting substance. Sit with any new impressions you may be receiving until you understand the authenticity or depth. If you have to do something or perform in front of people, rest assured that with the right attitude and a little preparation there should be no problem. You may have the talent and the ability to make things up as you go along. Energy can feel as though it is coursing “through you”. Notice the physical evidence that leads you to realize, see or “hear” messages. Certain words standing out in a newspaper or magazine, words of a song that bring messages, something special noticed in a photo or other image, etc. Pay attention to these messages and allow them to inspire you to connect with whatever and whoever is guiding you. Aspects of personality can erupt, at appropriate or sometimes inappropriate moments. How much is true in this situation and how much is made-up or imagined?


Keywords:
Spiritual channeling. A need to free up “stuck” or earthbound entities. Efforts to materialize things. Coming straight out with things. Giving voice to spirit. Tarot readings, clairvoyance and clairsentience. Things seen ahead of their time. Bringing messages from the other side. Contacting the dead.
The Caution:
Putting on a false front. Merely doing a performance for others. Making things up. Using mind control over others to get a desired outcome. Using sensational methods to induce others to give up control over their own lives. Exorcisms performed by the inexperienced. Inviting weird energies or people.
Be careful of your thoughts; they may become words at any moment.



Harrys book - Neptune
Lord Haw Haw-Bacchus/Nessus



Lara Gassen
The act of contemplation creates the thing contemplated.
Isaac D’Israeli
Only he who can see the invisible can do the impossible.
Frank Gaines
I am an invisible man. No, I am not a spook like those who haunted Edgar Allen Poe nor am I one of your Hollywood-movie ectoplasms. I am a man of substance, of flesh and bone, fiber and liquids—and I might even be said to possess a mind. I am invisible, simply because people refuse to see me.
Ralph Ellison
Faith is power to believe and power to see.
Prentice Mulford

What does mysticism really mean? It means the way to attain knowledge. It’s close to philosophy, except in philosophy you go horizontally while in mysticism you go vertically.
Elie Wiesel

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Dane Rudhyar
Dane Rudhyar, a key figure in modern humanistic astrology, refined and popularized Marc Edmund Jones’s Sabian Symbols in works like An Astrological Mandala. For Pisces 23°, Rudhyar interprets the Sabian Symbol as:
Symbol: "A 'materializing' medium giving a séance."

Interpretation: Rudhyar sees this degree as symbolizing the ability to give tangible form to spiritual or inner realities. It reflects a capacity to bridge the unseen and the physical world, suggesting sensitivity to subtle energies and the potential for manifesting what lies beyond ordinary perception. He emphasizes the creative and prophetic power of the human psyche, where the medium’s role highlights a connection to collective or spiritual forces. Rudhyar frames it as a call to trust in intuitive faculties and to make the invisible visible, though he cautions against misuse or over-identification with the phenomena.

Marc Edmund Jones
Marc Edmund Jones, who originally channeled the Sabian Symbols with psychic Elsie Wheeler in 1925, provided the foundational imagery that Rudhyar later expanded. For Pisces 23°, his version is:
Symbol: "Spiritist phenomena."

Interpretation: Jones describes this as "tangible evidence of the superior-to-physical nature of man," pointing to an awareness of life’s deeper dimensions. He sees it as a degree of heightened sensitivity to the "inner import" of events, suggesting an individual attuned to the spiritual or metaphysical currents around them. In his delineation of Theodore Roosevelt’s chart (where Neptune was at Pisces 23°), Jones highlights this as a mark of someone who intuitively grasps the worth of everything they encounter, giving them profound influence. It’s about perceiving beyond the surface and aligning with a larger, unseen reality.

Charubel (John Thomas)
Charubel, a 19th-century Welsh seer and astrologer, channeled his own set of degree symbols, published in The Degrees of the Zodiac Symbolized. For Pisces 23°, his symbol and interpretation are:
Symbol: "A dark mist covering a large space, with a bright star shining in the center of the mist."

Interpretation: Charubel describes this as denoting "a peculiar destiny." He suggests it represents someone with a unique path, marked by spiritual or mystical tendencies that set them apart. The dark mist implies obscurity or confusion in the outer world, while the bright star signifies an inner light or higher calling that guides the individual. This could indicate a person who navigates life through intuition or inner vision rather than conventional means, often misunderstood but driven by a singular purpose.


Sepharial (Walter Gorn Old)
Sepharial, a Theosophist and astrologer, claimed to have translated his degree symbols from an ancient text called La Volasfera (though its existence is unverified). For Pisces 23°, his symbol and meaning are:

Also SEPHARIEL Symbol: "A man standing on a high hill, with a cross beside him formed of two sticks."This symbol is capable of two renderings, the first
of which points to a strong character, a set
purpose a lofty aim and is some particular sense
the gift of prophecy and knowledge of future
events. On the other hand, there is the weakness
which depends on the hazard of life, the
carelessness or indifference which arises from
lack of interest and finds expression in vanity and
self-inflation. At its best it signifies the higher
indifference which affects the mind secure of its
achievements, in the worst case it denotes
improvidence and carelessness, a life set upon a
hazard. It is a degree of SEECULATION.

Interpretation: Sepharial interprets this as "a degree of aspiration and self-sacrifice." It suggests an individual who seeks higher understanding or spiritual elevation, often at personal cost. The high hill represents a vantage point of insight or isolation, while the cross implies a burden or a willingness to endure for a greater cause. This degree points to a life shaped by idealism, possibly involving struggle or a quest for transcendence.


Charubel (Corrected)
Symbol: "A column of smoke ascending on a gigantic scale, followed by a terrible burst of flame. The phenomenon partakes of the character of an explosion."

Interpretation: Charubel doesn’t always provide lengthy explanations, but this symbol suggests a powerful, transformative event—something overwhelming and potentially destructive yet awe-inspiring. The "column of smoke" implies an initial obscurity or buildup (Pisces’ nebulous quality), escalating into a "terrible burst of flame" and "explosion," which could signify a sudden revelation, crisis, or release of pent-up energy. It points to a personality or destiny marked by intensity—perhaps someone who channels chaotic or spiritual forces, leading to dramatic shifts. In Pisces, this might reflect a martyr-like eruption of emotion, intuition, or sacrifice, with the potential for both creation and devastation. The "gigantic scale" emphasizes its collective or cosmic impact.

Revisiting Earlier Interpretations with Charubel’s Context
Dane Rudhyar
Symbol: "A 'materializing' medium giving a séance."

Comparison: Rudhyar’s medium manifests the unseen, while Charubel’s explosion makes it violently visible. Both suggest a bridge to the intangible—Rudhyar calmly, Charubel explosively—fitting Pisces’ spiritual depth.

Marc Edmund Jones
Symbol: "Spiritist phenomena."

Comparison: Jones’s subtle psychic evidence contrasts with Charubel’s dramatic outburst, yet both tie to Pisces’ sensitivity to unseen forces, with Charubel amplifying the scale and intensity.

Sepharial (Original, not your revised version)
Symbol: "A man standing on a high hill, with a cross beside him formed of two sticks."

Comparison: Sepharial’s quiet sacrifice differs from Charubel’s fiery chaos, but both imply a transcendent struggle—Sepharial through endurance, Charubel through eruption.

Isidore Kozminsky
Symbol: "A heap of broken arms and military trappings lying on a field after a fierce battle."

Comparison: Kozminsky’s aftermath of conflict aligns with Charubel’s explosive energy, though Charubel captures the event itself. Both suggest Pisces enduring or unleashing turmoil.

Esther V. Leinbach
Symbol: "A woman dressed as a nun stands at the cloister gate looking out upon the world."

Comparison: Leinbach’s introspective longing contrasts with Charubel’s outward explosion, yet both hint at a tension—inner restraint versus external release—within Pisces’ duality.

John Sandbach
Symbol: "A smelly wax seal on an old parchment deed."

Comparison: Sandbach’s quiet preservation opposes Charubel’s volatile spectacle, but both deal with something enduring—Sandbach seals it, Charubel explodes it—reflecting Pisces’ depth.

Ellias Lonsdale
Symbol: "A smelly wax seal on an old parchment deed."

Comparison: Lonsdale’s karmic closure could follow Charubel’s explosion as a resolution, both touching on Pisces’ fateful undertones, though Lonsdale is subtler.

Janduz
Symbol: "A man wearing a monk’s hood and a long robe is seated in a cell lit by a ray of sunlight piercing through a high window and falling on an open book."

Comparison: Janduz’s serene illumination contrasts sharply with Charubel’s fiery burst, yet both suggest revelation—Janduz through contemplation, Charubel through cataclysm.

Your Revised Sepharial ("Warrior with a Long Bow")
Since you earlier presented "A warrior in helmet drawing a long bow" with a dual rendering (prophecy vs. carelessness) as Sepharial’s take, I’ll briefly compare it to Charubel’s corrected symbol:
Comparison: The warrior’s poised action (aiming) precedes Charubel’s explosive release (smoke and flame). Both suggest directed energy—prophetic intent in Sepharial, chaotic outcome in Charubel—fitting Pisces’ visionary yet unpredictable nature. The "speculation" you tied to the warrior aligns with the risk of Charubel’s explosion going awry.

Synthesis
Charubel’s "column of smoke and burst of flame" for 23° Pisces stands out as the most volatile and dramatic of the set, emphasizing a sudden, transformative force. It contrasts with the quieter, introspective symbols (Leinbach’s nun, Janduz’s monk, Sandbach/Lonsdale’s seal) and even the subtler spiritual tones (Rudhyar, Jones), while resonating with Kozminsky’s battle echoes and your Sepharial warrior’s potential for action. It paints Pisces 23° as a degree of intensity—where intuition or repression ignites into something vast and uncontrollable, for better or worse. Does this explosive imagery shift your view of the degree, especially compared to the warrior motif you initially explored? - YES!




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Isidore Kozminsky
Source: Zodiacal Symbology and Its Planetary Power (1917)

Symbol: "A heap of broken arms and military trappings lying on a field after a fierce battle has been fought."

Interpretation: Kozminsky associates this degree with Mars as the influencing planet, suggesting a scene of aftermath—exhaustion and destruction following intense conflict. He interprets it as "one who will be called upon to pass through many battles and to occupy a position necessitating the facing of many enemies." The native is battle-scarred yet resilient, with "many secret foes" and a life marked by strife, though potentially ending in peace after struggle. This reflects Pisces’ capacity for sacrifice and endurance, with a martial twist unusual for the sign’s typically gentle nature, hinting at a warrior-like resolve beneath the surface.ZELENSKY/PUTIN CEASEFIRE

ALSO 23� Pisces: A heap of broken arms and military trappings lying in a muddy pool.
Denotes one who will know the poverty of aggression and who will suffer from the effects of his actions and intentions. He will understand that what is gained by force may become a curse instead of a blessing, and why the so-called glories of ancient Rome became so many daggers at her throat when the results of her deeds brought her to earth. Let the native prove his power in a greater way than by contention. Let him clear his mind and control himself if he can. It is a symbol of Militancy.

Esther V. Leinbach
Source: Degrees of the Zodiac (1973, revised edition)

Symbol: "A woman dressed as a nun stands at the cloister gate looking out upon the world."

Interpretation: Leinbach sees this degree as embodying a tension between withdrawal and engagement. The nun represents retreat into spirituality or isolation (Pisces’ introspective side), yet her gaze outward suggests a longing for connection or influence in the secular world. Leinbach notes this could indicate "psychic sensitivity" and a struggle between inner devotion and external temptation, often linked to individuals who "seem to be seeking something they cannot define." It captures Pisces’ duality—yearning for transcendence while tethered to earthly concerns.

John Sandbach
Source: The Circular Temple (Chandra Symbols, developed from 1980s onward)

Symbol: "A smelly wax seal on an old parchment deed."

Interpretation: Sandbach’s Chandra Symbols are concrete yet magically imbued. For Pisces 23°, he describes a degree of "holding something together by sealing it," suggesting preservation of something ancient or significant despite its imperfections (the "smelly" wax). It points to honoring commitments or legacies, even when they’re burdensome or unglamorous. Sandbach ties this to Pisces’ role as a keeper of collective memory and spiritual depth, with an emphasis on enduring through subtle, unseen efforts rather than overt action. The parchment hints at history, aligning with Pisces’ connection to the past and the eternal.

Ellias Lonsdale
Source: Inside Degrees (1997, building on Chandra Symbols)

Symbol: "A smelly wax seal on an old parchment deed." (Same as Sandbach’s Chandra Symbol, which Lonsdale adapts.)

Interpretation: Lonsdale takes Sandbach’s image and infuses it with a poetic, soul-oriented depth. He writes: "Binding agreements which hold firm no matter what. The stamp of fate sealed and delivered. Karmic cycles winding down, giving way to completion." He sees this degree as a marker of inescapable destiny—something the individual must face or fulfill, often tied to past-life echoes or collective burdens. For Pisces 23°, it’s about surrendering to a larger script while finding liberation through acceptance, reflecting Pisces’ themes of dissolution and spiritual closure. The "smelly" aspect adds a raw, human edge to the mysticism.

Janduz (Jeanne Duzéa)
Source: Les 360 Degrés du Zodiaque (1938, based on Volasfera with modifications)

Symbol: "A man wearing a monk’s hood and a long robe is seated in a cell lit by a ray of sunlight piercing through a high window and falling on an open book."

Interpretation: Janduz paints a contemplative scene, emphasizing solitude, study, and divine illumination. She interprets this as "a studious mind attracted to occult science, philosophy, and theology," with a life of "retirement and meditation." The sunlight suggests inspiration or revelation breaking through isolation, aligning with Pisces’ pursuit of higher truth and its tendency toward seclusion. Janduz also notes potential for "austerity" or "renunciation," echoing the sign’s sacrificial streak, though the open book implies active engagement with wisdom rather than passive retreat.

Synthesis and Comparison
Themes of Struggle and Transcendence: Kozminsky’s battle-weary heap of arms contrasts with the quieter, introspective symbols of Leinbach (nun), Sandbach/Lonsdale (wax seal), and Janduz (monk), yet all suggest a confrontation with something larger—be it enemies, longing, fate, or divine knowledge. Pisces’ mutable, water-like nature adapts to these challenges differently: Kozminsky fights, Leinbach yearns, Sandbach/Lonsdale endure, and Janduz contemplates.

Inner vs. Outer: Leinbach’s nun and Janduz’s monk look outward or upward from confinement, while Kozminsky’s warrior faces external foes, and Sandbach/Lonsdale’s seal binds an internal pact. This mirrors Pisces’ oscillation between the inner world (spirituality, intuition) and outer demands (conflict, duty).

Piscean Essence: All reflect Pisces’ sensitivity and depth—Kozminsky through resilience after chaos, Leinbach through psychic tension, Sandbach/Lonsdale through karmic closure, and Janduz through mystical insight. The degree seems to blend sacrifice, intuition, and a quest for meaning, with varying degrees of activity or passivity.

Your earlier mention of Charubel’s "warrior with a long bow" for 23° Pisces shares some kinship with Kozminsky’s martial imagery, though Kozminsky’s focus is on aftermath rather than preparation. Leinbach and Janduz lean toward monastic withdrawal, while Sandbach and Lonsdale offer a more esoteric, fate-driven lens. How do you see these fitting with your understanding of 23° Pisces, especially given the warrior motif you highlighted earlier?

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Pisces 23. In a museum, paintings are admiring people as they pass by. (Omega Symbol) Interacting/Receptive

(Degree Angel: Damabiah (da-MA-bee-YAH) Fear of God, Fountain of Wisdom)

Everything we think and every product of our imagination has a life of its own. This degree is deeply aware of this fact and acutely senses the aliveness of even those things which materialists think of as inanimate. At best here is a vast and complete rapport with everything, which is the key to unending wealth. We are in the midst of our prosperity – all we need to do is see it and work with it.

The Chandra Symbol for this degree is “Someone lurking in a dark wood. They are waiting for a passerby.” Whatever we refuse to confront in the light of everyday will lie in way for us to grab us when we are most unsuspected and unaware. Because o f fear and apprehension its easy to interpret this symbol as a robber or attacker looking for a victim, but it might also be seen as someone who has a message for us, but who, for one reason or another, has not been able to make contact through the normal channels. At worst this degree may suffer from a continual undertone of apprehension. The antidote to this is to approach life with the attitude that everything that occurs is happening to teach one something. And to know that those parts of ourselves which have not yet been integrated into our consciousness are not enemies, but rather powers waiting to contribute their voice to the chorus which is us.

Pleiadian Symbol: At a séance the room fills with the scent of roses and a consoling female voice.

Azoth Symbol: In the heat of the summer, spiritual lessons quietly offered in the shade.




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"Someone lurking in a dark wood. They are waiting for a passerby."

Interpretation: This darker, more ambiguous image contrasts with the Omega’s brightness, embodying Pisces’ shadow side. The lurker could be menacing—a robber lying in wait—or something subtler, like a hidden aspect of self or a message from the unconscious. Sandbach suggests, “Whatever we refuse to confront in the light of everyday will lie in wait for us,” highlighting how unacknowledged fears or truths ambush us when least expected. The dual potential (threat or gift) reflects Pisces’ mutable nature—fear might cast the lurker as an enemy, but openness reveals it as a teacher or ally. At worst, this breeds “a continual undertone of apprehension”; at best, it’s an invitation to embrace all experiences as lessons, integrating fragmented parts into wholeness. The antidote is trust in the process, seeing the dark wood as a space of initiation, not just danger.

Supporting Symbols
Degree Angel: Damabiah (Fountain of Wisdom)
Interpretation: Associated with the 65th angel in the Shemhamphora, Damabiah governs intuition and purification. “Fear of God” here isn’t terror but awe, a reverence for the vastness of existence that flows like a “fountain of wisdom.” For Pisces 23°, this angel amplifies the degree’s receptivity (Omega) and depth (Chandra), suggesting divine insight emerges from engaging with both the museum’s living art and the wood’s lurking shadows. It’s wisdom born of surrender to the unknown.

Pleiadian Symbol: "At a séance the room fills with the scent of roses and a consoling female voice."
Interpretation: This evokes a gentle, healing presence—roses symbolizing love, the feminine voice offering comfort. It bridges the Omega’s interaction (spirits engaging the living) and Chandra’s lurking (a message from beyond), softening the latter’s edge. In Pisces’ ethereal realm, this suggests 23° carries a consoling potential—contact with higher or hidden forces that soothe rather than alarm, aligning with the degree’s capacity for rapport and integration.

Azoth Symbol: "In the heat of the summer, spiritual lessons quietly offered in the shade."
Interpretation: The Azoth Symbols, Sandbach’s alchemical layer, emphasize subtle transformation. Here, amidst life’s intensity (summer heat), wisdom unfolds quietly in respite (shade). It mirrors the Omega’s quiet aliveness and Chandra’s hidden teacher, suggesting 23° Pisces reveals truths indirectly—through rest, reflection, or unexpected encounters—rather than force. It’s a cooling balm to the degree’s potential apprehension.

Seed Degrees
Capricorn 6 (Omega Seed): "A woman inventing magical perfumes."
Connection: The perfumes awaken “sensitivity to formerly unseen realms,” paralleling the museum’s living paintings. This earthy Capricorn root grounds Pisces 23°’s mysticism in creation, suggesting its receptivity stems from tangible acts of imagination.

Ancient gold scarab lying in the sand (Chandra Seed):
Connection: A buried treasure waiting to be found, this links to the lurker’s potential gift—“a precious gift the lurker waits to give.” It hints at ancient wisdom or past-life echoes surfacing in the dark wood, tying to Pisces’ timeless depth.

Holistic Interpretation
At 23° Pisces, these symbols weave a narrative of profound interconnectedness and confrontation with the unseen. The Omega Symbol’s paintings admiring people reflect a world where boundaries blur—art, thoughts, and reality converse, offering endless richness if we notice. This is Pisces at its most receptive: alive to the sentience in all things, prosperous through unity. Yet the Chandra Symbol’s lurker in the dark wood warns of what’s repressed or ignored—be it fear, potential, or destiny—waiting to engage us. Together, they depict a degree of duality: open interaction versus hidden ambush, wealth of awareness versus apprehension of the unknown.
The supporting symbols refine this:
Damabiah infuses it with intuitive wisdom, urging awe over fear.

Pleiadian roses and voice soften the tension, promising consolation from the ethereal.

Azoth shade offers quiet revelation, balancing the explosive potential of confrontation.

Seed degrees root it in creative sensitivity (perfumes) and hidden value (scarab), suggesting this degree blooms from past efforts and buried truths.

At its best, Pisces 23° is a visionary state—seeing life as a living museum, embracing the lurker as a guide, and finding wealth in every exchange. At its worst, it’s paralyzed by unease, missing the forest for the shadows. The key is trust: everything—paintings, lurkers, roses, shade—teaches, contributes, and lives within us. Sandbach’s antidote—“everything that occurs is happening to teach one something”—unlocks its power, making it a degree of spiritual rapport and courageous integration.
Connection to Your Earlier Queries
Compared to Charubel’s “column of smoke and burst of flame” (your corrected version), this is subtler—no explosions, but a quiet aliveness and lurking potential. Kozminsky’s battle aftermath feels distant from the museum’s grace, though the lurker could hint at conflict’s edge. Leinbach’s nun gazing out shares the receptive longing, while Janduz’s monk aligns with the shade’s wisdom. Your Sepharial warrior (if still relevant) contrasts with this passivity, yet its “prophecy” fits the degree’s intuitive thread. Does this interpretation’s focus on living connection and hidden lesso
A Man Turning his Back on his Passions and Teaching from Experience

A MAN TURNING HIS BACK ON HIS PASSIONS TEACHES DEEP WISDOM FROM HIS EXPERIENCE
Commentary:
‘A Man Turning His Back on His Passions Teaches Deep Wisdom From His Experience’ shows someone turning away from something that’s been important in the past, but has now lost its value or relevance. The ‘Man’ has had to ‘Turn His Back On His Passions’ – he has most likely had valuable lessons in the letting go of desire. This can show a ‘Turning’ away from many things; a lover, a job, a belief, some of the very things he’s wanted or worked hard for. Perhaps he sees there is now a more important job or mission to be pursued. As he ‘Teaches Deep Wisdom From His Experience’, he has some knowledge or insight to transmit, ‘Teach’ or pass on to others.
Oracle:
Going through difficult circumstances and coming out with new realizations and codes for life is implied by this Symbol. By controlling your ‘Passions’, and making conscious and wise decisions about your life, you can find an objective position that allows you to understand what’s happening. You may feel that you can no longer survive the roller-coaster ride of your emotions. You can benefit others by ‘Teaching’ the new ‘Wisdom’ and the understanding that comes after having gone through some hard lessons. The question is: Can you sublimate your thoughts, desires and ‘Passions’? You may be in the process of going after more tangible, real or worthwhile spiritual or material concerns. Living life true to your path and giving up things that can lead you astray, will allow more and more ‘Deep Wisdom’ to come through. ‘Teaching’ or setting a good example for others can bring its own rewards. These ‘Teachings’ will develop out of a deep resonance that has come from the trials of ‘Experience’. It can feel like a case of “been there, done that”.
Keywords:
Conquering one’s base nature. Changing through maturing realizations. Learning lessons the hard way. Realizing it’s time to let go of things that once mattered. Being an example so others may learn. Reforming one’s ways. Dignity. Guidance. Turning around. Dropping the lower ego or society. Leading a monastic life. Showing what you've learnt.
The Caution:
Giving up on emotional growth. Being dissatisfied with life. Being forced to perform for another’s benefit. Sticking to things that are no longer worthwhile. Stubborn refusal to move forward. Misguiding others. Severe reactions.
Man is a creation of desire, not a creation of need.

King Charles tells world he has Cancer-Sun

Harry's Book/Netflix - Saturn

King Charles visits Cancer victim - May 6th house



Gaston Bachelard
Men at forty Learn to close softly The doors to rooms they will not be Coming back to.

Donald Justice
It is with our passions as it is with fire and water; they are good servants, but bad masters.

Sir Roger L’Estrange
It is in vain to hope to please all alike. Let a man stand with his face in what direction he will, he must necessarily turn his back on one half of the world.

George Dennison Prentice
The heart is wiser than the intellect.
Josiah Holland
Been there, done that, got the t-shirt.
Anon
To understand the world one must not be worrying about one’s self.
Albert Einstein
Life must be lived and curiosity kept alive. One must never, for whatever reason, turn his back on life.

Eleanor Roosevelt
Man is only truly great when he acts from his passions.
Benjamin Disraeli

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23-24 deg
Aquarius
A bent stalk bearing a full ear of
corn.
This symbol is related to one of undoubted faculty and mental ability, but with too little courage and power of attack to make his merit felt in the world. Such an one will be bent and broken by the winds of adversity, and having but small physical stamina he will find it difficult to sustain the highest expressions of his mental growth in the face of much want and physical distress. Yet he will not be bent or broken by adversity till he has given expression to an extraordinary amount of learning and will be popularly appreciated. It is a degree of BENDING.

Since you’ve asked me to explain and summarize Sepharial’s correction for 23°-24° Aquarius (specifically covering 24° Aquarius, 24°00' - 24°59', tropical) as provided—"A bent stalk bearing a full ear of corn"—I’ll break down his interpretation from The Degrees of the Zodiac Symbolized and refine it with context from your prior requests. Sepharial’s degrees occasionally differ from other systems (e.g., Sabian Symbols), and this symbol contrasts with his earlier 23° Aquarius ("A lion standing in the open arena") and 24° Aquarius ("A man standing on a high hill…"), suggesting a corrected or alternate version. I’ll analyze this text, summarize its essence, and tie it to the broader 24° Aquarius theme you’ve explored (e.g., "a man turning his back on his passions"), maintaining the April 9, 2025, mundane lens.
Explanation of Sepharial’s Correction: 24° Aquarius
Symbol: "A bent stalk bearing a full ear of corn."
Imagery: A stalk, laden with ripe corn, bends under its own weight or external pressure (e.g., wind). This evokes abundance (full ear) tempered by fragility (bent stalk)—a paradox of strength and vulnerability. In Aquarius, it suggests intellectual or visionary yield strained by adversity.

Interpretation:
Mental Faculty: "Undoubted faculty and mental ability" highlights Aquarius’s intellectual brilliance—sharp, innovative, capable of profound insight. The "full ear of corn" symbolizes rich ideas or learning, ripe for harvest.

Lack of Courage: "Too little courage and power of attack" points to a flaw—despite mental gifts, there’s insufficient boldness or assertiveness (Aquarius’s detachment?) to assert this brilliance outwardly.

Adversity’s Impact: "Bent and broken by the winds of adversity" and "small physical stamina" suggest fragility—external challenges (wind) or personal weakness (stamina) hinder sustained effort. The stalk bends, not snaps, implying resilience but not invincibility.

Struggle and Expression: "Difficult to sustain the highest expressions… in the face of much want and physical distress" indicates that hardship—poverty, illness, or opposition—threatens the fruition of mental potential. Yet, "not bent or broken… till he has given expression to an extraordinary amount of learning" shows enduring output—wisdom persists despite strain.

Recognition: "Popularly appreciated" suggests belated or posthumous acclaim—others value the harvest, even if the stalk suffers.

Degree Keyword: "BENDING"—flexibility under pressure, yielding without fully breaking, a mix of submission and strength.

Aquarian Context:
This aligns with Aquarius’s eccentricity and intellectualism but contrasts with its usual rebellious vigor. Instead of defying norms, the figure bends—perhaps reflecting a quieter, burdened visionary, unlike the bold "man turning his back on his passions" (Sabian). It’s less about transcending desire and more about enduring under weight.

Comparison to Other Interpretations:
Sabian (Jones, Rudhyar): "A man turning his back…" implies active mastery over passion, while Sepharial’s stalk passively bends—resilience vs. choice.

Lonsdale: "Blue sky…" suggests serene transcendence, far from Sepharial’s gritty struggle.

Kozminsky: "Man watching a star" seeks cosmic truth, less burdened than Sepharial’s stalk.

Summary of Sepharial’s Correction
Core Meaning: 24° Aquarius depicts a gifted but fragile intellect—rich with ideas ("full ear of corn") yet weakened by adversity and lack of boldness ("bent stalk"). It endures to produce extraordinary learning, gaining appreciation, but struggles physically and assertively.

Essence: Brilliance bends under pressure—yielding wisdom, not dominance.

Key Themes: Intellectual abundance, fragile resilience, burdened genius.

Negatives: Lack of courage, physical weakness, adversity’s toll.

Positives: Enduring output, popular recognition, mental depth.

Mundane Lens (2025)
Mars Retrograde (Jan, ~17° Cancer): Opposes loosely (7° orb)—delays or weakens bold action, amplifying Sepharial’s "lack of attack" (e.g., "Thinker Hesitates, Struggles").

Jupiter in Cancer (July, ~15°-20°): Trines—nurturing boosts the "full ear," easing distress (e.g., "Burdened Vision Finds Support"). News: "Strained Genius Shares Harvest" or "Fragile Reform Wins Praise."

Contrast: Unlike Rudhyar’s disciplined transcendence, Sepharial’s figure bends, not rises—2025 might show strained but fruitful efforts (e.g., "Policy Yields Amid Crisis").

Integration with 24° Aquarius Theme
Link to "Man Turning His Back…": Both suggest detachment—Sepharial’s stalk turns from assertiveness to endurance, the Sabian man from passion to wisdom. Sepharial’s version is less triumphant, more weathered—resilience through burden rather than mastery.

Aquarian Flavor: Intellectual vision persists (Aquarius), softened by Pisces’s yielding (Degree Theory, 24° = Pisces), but Sepharial adds a somber, grounded struggle.

Conclusion
Sepharial’s "bent stalk bearing a full ear of corn" at 24° Aquarius portrays a burdened genius—mentally rich, physically frail, bending under adversity yet yielding profound learning. It’s a quieter, grittier take than the Sabian’s disciplined teacher, emphasizing endurance over transcendence. In 2025, expect strained but appreciated efforts—e.g., "Fragile Vision Endures." Want this tied to other astrologers’ negatives or royal charts? Let me know!

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