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Articles> Children of the Moon
Children of the Moon
Reprinted from in The Twelfth
House, Sept 2003
by Jessica Murray
The recent black-out in New York City got me thinking
about how rarely we get to experience a pure, velvety black night sky,
studded with
Moon and stars,
shimmering with information. These days we city dwellers may even forget the
Moon is there, unless we catch a glimpse of her as she rises between
buildings, her magical luminosity not quite drowned out by the city’s
electric lights.
Though the Moon is a universal
icon, ubiquitous in our romantic language, in our psychology, literature and
popular song, millions of us never actually see her. But there was a time
when the Moon was humanity’s primary religious and temporal reference point,
as comforting as a child’s nightlight, mysterious as a sovereign goddess.
Here in the urbanized Western
world it is hard to imagine how intimately connected the ancients were with
the visual dome of the sky. For millions of years before the invention of
modern clocks, people simply tilted their heads back and looked up.
Astronomy and astrology (there was no distinction between the two until
relatively recently in human history) did not used to be the province of
specialists: everyday folks checked the sky as we check our wristwatches.
Familiar and visually
accessible, the Moon was the first celestial body to be the focus of an
astrological calendar. Waxing or waning -- approaching fullness or receding
into her hidden phase -- she informed the sky gazer whether the month was
building towards culmination or had already reached its crest. Nomads who
traveled after sunset needed to know how much moonlight they could count on
to see by, as did hunters following nocturnal prey. But the Moon’s phases
communicated to ancient peoples many layers of meaning beyond practical
utility.
Watching the Moon gave our
ancestors an immediate sense of cosmic connection. The Moon was seen
throughout the ancient world as a divine Mother: her regular changes were
expressions of the reliable growth/diminution cycles of an ordered and
benevolent universe. As predictable as the ocean tides, as inevitable as
birth and death, the Moon was not just a timing device or a light to see by.
She was a steadying. nurturing power in a chaotic world; her rhythms
providing early humans with a coherent symbolic logic with which to order
their lives.
These days students of
celestial cycles are less likely to sit in moonlight and take in the Moon’s
power directly; which is a shame, for we need that magic more than ever. But
the meanings of the Moon’s various phases have been retained, and are still
the best-known aspect of popular astrology. The fact that lunar phases are
often marked even on non-astrological calendars is evidence that the Moon’s
cycle is more than an esoteric theory of narrow interest: it is a natural
rhythm deeply imbedded in the human psyche, and it still works. Keeping
track of where the Moon is, on the page or in the sky, grounds us
emotionally, as it did our ancestors; and enables us to more fully join in
the dance of the universe.
The monthly cycle starts at
the New Moon, which therefore
symbolizes new beginnings in general. Circle it on your calendar: tradition
has it that this is the most auspicious time to initiate projects of any
kind -- a new job, a new relationship, a new way of looking at things. On or
just after the New Moon, the energy is ready and available to get something
going. This is the most hands-on part of the lunar cycle: now is the time to
pro-actively set an intention. Try to identify what it is that is being
inaugurated. That in itself is enough to honor the New Moon; but if you wish
to give the process a nudge, do what the ancients did: make up a ritual to
celebrate your intention to whole-heartedly welcome in the new beginning.
Write down your intention on a slip of paper and put it on your altar; light
a candle at dinner and pronounce aloud your wish for the month ahead. The
most ordinary acts become rituals when motivated by an understanding of the
symbolism involved. Straighten up your desktop; put a plant cutting into
soil; put air in your tires and get ready to roll. We are often intuitively
driven to undertake such activities on a New Moon anyway; we usually do them
without thinking about the timing. But when we add that extra ingredient of
awareness -- deliberately trying to match the moment with an apt
metaphorical gesture-- then we are working magic. To paraphrase Carolyn
Casey: You can sweep the floor and just have a clean floor; or you can do a
floor-sweeping ritual and thereby cast a spell.
The next major phase, a week
later, is the First Quarter. Whatever
you began at the New Moon comes to a kind of crossroads: your undertaking
meets its first obstacle. This may be an obvious event, such as a glitch
that arises with the software you installed a week earlier; or it may be a
more subtle development, such as getting a reality check about a new
infatuation. Whatever form it takes, at the First Quarter your initial
premise is tested. Again, the first thing you can do to honor this phase is
to notice it: your undertaking has turned a corner. The second thing you can
do is to make adjustments if necessary.
The Full Moon,
which follows a week after that, is the culmination of the cycle. Now things
come to a head, and you can clearly see what it is you set in motion two
weeks before. This may not be what you thought you were setting in motion.
The Full Moon exposes the soul meaning of the period you are in. It
is no wonder that this point in the cycle has always been associated with
great drama: the Full Moon is like a bright light turned on in a shadowy
room.
On the literal level, new
information may suddenly become available; on the psychic level, you may get
a revelation about the underlying point of the whole process. Full Moons are
expository, full of the potential for breakthroughs in understanding.
Sometimes what is revealed is welcome, sometimes it is not. Full Moons are a
markedly subjective experience, associated for millennia with both
enlightenment and madness. They are often accompanied by extreme events,
designed to make us see things we have not yet seen. The period a couple of
days on either side of the exact Full Moon may pulse with heightened energy.
The waning half of the cycle should be spent assimilating the vision
received when the Moon was full. These final two weeks of the lunar month
are a devolution, as natural as leaves turning color in the autumn. At the
Last Quarter, the process begun three weeks earlier runs into its final
wistful crossroads. Again we must regroup, and face the reality of bringing
the whole operation to a graceful close.
The last few days before the
next New Moon are a mysterious and
uncertain time, when the old process clearly has lost its vitality but a new
process is not yet ready to take its place. During this Dark of the Moon
period, we are meant to let go of something. It is not a time to try to make
things happen; attempts to initiate are not likely to work. It is a time to
release what has been happening. Now is the time to look back over our
recent projects, while gently putting our tools and equipment away.
It was when the Moon was dark
but not yet new that ancient peoples conducted their most sacred rites of
healing and meditation, with a spirit not of ambition but of acceptance.
They knew, better than we do, that all endings prepared the way for new
beginnings, like leaves that fall and decay in order to fertilize the soil
for the new growth yet to come.
There is a natural arc to the
timing of the month, a pattern that we are born in synch with, as surely as
other living things are who dwell upon the Earth. This is why watching the
Moon, either actually or astrologically, can make us feel more at home in
the cosmos. Tracking her inexorable changes, week after week and month after
month, we start to see the Moon not as an inanimate rock that unaccountably
looks different every time we look up; but as a living, numinous entity
whose various faces take on meaning only when seen as a pieces of a unified
whole.
This is the key to lunar
astrology, a science of analogies and parallels. By honoring each of her
phases with respect to its place in the overall cycle, we see ourselves in
the cosmic mirror. Instinctively, organically, like a duckling following its
mother into the water, we start to understand that our own unfolding
fluctuations match those of the Moon.
And everything starts to make more sense.
© Copyright 2003-2007 Jessica Murray. All
Rights reserved
Visit Jessica's site -
MotherSky for more articles.
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