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The Family Karmic Inheritance
" If we could read the secret
history of our enemies, we would find in each man's life a sorrow and a
suffering enough to disarm all hostility."
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
As an astrologer I am continually struck by the
potential for sorrow and suffering when first reviewing a client's chart.
However upon meeting them, I am usually astounded at how uniquely they
have coped, survived and even flourished in spite of the potential for
anguish. If we change the word "enemies" in the quote above to "families,"
the most important point of this article would be made. I often wish my
clients' families could see and hear their struggles and their intentions,
for these at least, would "disarm all hostility." The oracle that speaks
through the language of astrology, if nothing else, teaches compassion.
It has been said that the soul is ruthless in
seeking its own path home, and that the needs of the soul, not the desires
of the personality, orchestrate our lives. I have been finding that there
is a mystery and history to each of us that reaches back beyond our
present lives directly to our family lineage. We've inherited a karmic
legacy that reflects the victories, defeats, and hard won battles of our
ancestors, for they are indeed very much with us.
Within families there is a karmic inheritance
that is handed down the family line along with the genetic blueprint. We
inherit deeply entrenched emotional and mental perspectives. Musical and
mathematical talents can be inherited, as well as alcoholism, depression,
abuse and certain illnesses. We gladly accept the Mozart-like unearned
talents or propensities, but an idea such as the Kennedy family "curse" is
not pleasant thinking. It is more reassuring to think that our soul picked
our family and our karmic inheritance so that we could meet the precise
challenges needed for our highest soul growth.
These karmic patterns are not in themselves
innate curses or blessings, for our will, intention, and grace are always
operative. But anything can behave erratically if willfully suppressed for
generations. Talents, as well as troubles, are the gold in the
subconscious. Each time we summon our courage to try something new we
reach for that gold. And each time we step out of denial and choose to
make choices to heal rather than conceal, we change the pattern for the
next generation.
The nature of this family inheritance,
particularly with regard to problems, echoes back to the idea that the
"sins of the fathers shall be visited on the children for seven
generations." What about the "sins" of the mothers? And what about the
gold? I decided to look at this theory more closely, by examining my
maternal family line.
Actually I did not choose to do this, so much as
it chose me. One Sunday morning a while ago, I awoke with a vague
depression that seemed to come from nowhere. On that morning I decided to
use the tarot to see if it could shed light on the heaviness in my psyche.
I pulled the Ten of Swords. On a divinatory level the Ten of Swords marks
the ending of a difficult situation, and this particular deck told the
story of Orestes and the curse of the House of Atreus. It is a dark tale
full of conflict and bloodshed that is one of the most popular of Greek
myths.
As it reads: "A family curse such as Orestes has
to bear, is an image of inner conflicts passed down from one generation to
another, where the grandparents and parents have been unable to face
certain of life's conflicts honestly and the children must inevitably
suffer until insight is gained." It went on to say: "A deep seated and
ancient problem is now forced to the surface and something must ultimately
leave our lives."
What left my life that morning was some of the
ignorance of what I had inherited. And though the process continues still,
the depression and morning fog had lifted by the end of the reading.
A Synastry of Charts
It is often difficult to find the secret history
of our families when parents and grandparents so often choose to speak
only of their successes or the failings of others. Even asking probing
questions to grandparents often yields little. Such being the case with
me, I decided to do research using the charts of my grandmother, my mother
myself, and my daughter—four women linked by genes and an obscure karmic
history. I found there were significant astrological connections.
My grandmother's chart had a predominance of
planets in earth signs with the sun conjunct Pluto and Neptune in Taurus.
Born in 1880, she had been a talented artist as a young woman, then had
five children and never painted again. Her husband died in his late
fifties of alcoholism. With four planets in Taurus, issues around money,
security, and values were predominant here, and with Sun conjunct Pluto
she would have experienced many symbolic—if not real—deaths and rebirths
in her life. In fact, her mother and sister both died young from "heart
problems" and when her favorite son succumbed to alcoholism as well, she
retired to her room for the rest of her days. It seemed as if she never
felt the serenity and security that is the touchstone for Taurus. Its not
necessary to judge what can't be truly known, but like a good mystery
there are clues and connecting links.
One of these links was the North Node, the aspect
that expresses the direction the Soul longs to go toward. My grandmother's
North Node and my mother's Sun sign are conjunct--basically the
same--hinting that my mother may have partially acted out some of the deep
longings of her mother, which was to find financial and social security.
My mother married well and didn't have to work---however her ambitions
were thwarted in many ways, and she didn't achieve serenity in her life.
Her North Node was in independent Aries close to the Sun sign of her
grand-daughter. And to add to the connections, we see her South Node
(where the Soul has come from) at the same sign and degree as my Sun,
strongly suggesting a past life connection between us.
And most striking of all was to see that my
grandmother's Sun sign of Taurus is the same degree as my North Node,
hinting that part of my karmic growth is to find the serenity that alluded
both my mother and grandmother.
When I put all of our charts within concentric
circles to compare them. a procedure known as synastry, I found a
progression of planets aspecting each other in such a way as to suggest
that there has been a transmission of both blessings and wounds. Artistic
talent, strength of will, naïveté and pride are all there. Perhaps the
most poignant aspect is my mother's Scorpio moon conjuncting my Chiron
exactly, i.e. her emotional style strikes me at the place of my deepest
vulnerability. Our relationship has always been painfully enmeshed, and
codependency issues—sign of an afflicted Neptune—is prominent in both
charts.
Looking at my daughter's chart however, I see
signs of a healthier response; the trail of an afflicted Neptune is there,
but the problem appears to be much less severe. Neptune both confuses and
inspires, and links us to the spirit world. She is finding her way
spiritually, and doing it independent of family conditioning. Her Aries
Sun is teaching her about courage and inter-dependence with others. The
aspects to Venus in all the charts hint of an inherited gift and struggle
with creativity, echoing back to her great-grandmother who fought with the
competing demands of art and children. And finally, her North Node in
Virgo is conjunct her father's Sun sign, and she is learning attention to
detail from the paternal legacy as well.
The Family Curse
In a much more radical fashion, some charts, such
as the Kennedy's, show signs not only of great gifts but of a possible
family "curse." In 1969 when Senator Edward Kennedy saw the collapse of
his Presidential hopes after Chappaquiddick, he asked whether there was a
curse on his family. And indeed, if one examines this family there are
elements in the family story that suggest this possibility.
There are certain features which appear in every
myth about a family curse. It usually begins with an individual's abuse of
a God-given talent or advantage. Something positive gets misused or
distorted through arrogance and pride, what the Greeks call hubris. The
abuse of creative potential, which is sometimes linked with a subtle or
not so subtle abuse of children, is made worse by the denial, and hubris
is carried on within members of the family. Although each generation and
each person could expiate the curse by accepting a certain degree of
limitation in their life, they don't, and this refusal to make necessary
sacrifices can be seen as an act of putting personal desires before the
needs of the soul. The soul's needs are ruthless however, and require a
transformation of consciousness to change the family legacy. Anything
consistent in our lives and which shows up in the chart, can behave like a
curse.
Our behavior can change it, although the
attitudes that have very old entrenched roots are harder to change. In the
case of the Kennedy's, one could speculate that the arrogance, ambition,
and possible abuses of "Papa" Joe Kennedy (including the lobotomy of his
first daughter) exacerbated a karmic situation that had its roots in the
history and sufferings of the Irish people. The collective struggle of
Irish against English, Catholic against Protestant, and the tragedy of the
famine which drove so many of our grandparents out of Ireland could have
fueled his ambition. He may have groomed his children for political power
in order to redeem, in his mind, the shame and tragedies the Irish have
had to endure in the last few centuries. This powerful man set in motion a
set of inherited attitudes that produced both great goodness and
unforeseen tragedy. Who is the victim here and who is the victor? Was his
ambition (and therefore the curse), actually a necessary sacrifice for the
greater good of our country and the Irish?
Perhaps. Of course all this is just speculation
and hypothesis, but this is what astrologers do.
The opportunity to act on the unlived gifts of
our family legacy is a gift. And what a challenge it is to redeem what was
lost through ignorance, lack of courage, arrogance, or willful
unconsciousness. Through our clarity, humility and willingness to accept
limitation, we have the chance to bring forth the gifts that are longing
to be expressed through us. By looking at the patterns in the family line
one can't help but stand in awe of the patterns that say "this was my hope
and fear for myself and my children" and to sense that the soul's choices
are not always that of the conscious ego. The connection between soul and
ego always has this mystery, this uncharted territory, created by the
contract made pre-birth by our soul. Misfortune and sorrow is often the
soul's last resort in moving a person closer to the right path for them.
And whose to say what is truly misfortune? The soul's path is not easy to
describe, and rarely simple to resolve. But we try.
© Copyright 2005-2009 Elizabeth Spring All Rights Reserved.
Elizabeth Spring, MA has been an
astrologer and counselor since 1992.She has studied astrology and the work
of Carl Jung in England, Switzerland, and California, and has written
numerous articles for newspapers and magazines, which can be read on-line.
Elizabeth does readings by phone (401-294-5863) and in person (R.I.), and
can be contacted through her web site:
http://www.elizabethspring.com or
can be contacted by email at ElizabethSpring at aol dot com.
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