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Turning In The Widening
Gyre
by Sean Stubblefield
Quoting
Yeats: “The Second Coming! Hardly are those
words out When a vast image out of Spiritus Mundi
Troubles my sight.”
What happens when astrology merges with astronomy?
The Zodiac derives from the yearly path Sol (our
sun) seemingly takes across particular constellations,
which is why there are twelve astrological signs.
Or, at least, there were 12... when the Zodiac
was created a few thousand years ago. In the solar
cycle, there are 12 months, but the lunar cycle
has 13. The Mayans recognized 13 star signs. 13
was significant in ancient Celtic society, considered
sacred as they revered the feminine and therefore
the lunar cycle and Luna (our moon). The sun is
a masculine symbol; the moon, feminine. So our
male dominated society elevates and operates by
the sun. For habit and convenience, twelve signs
of the Zodiac (Western or Chinese) have been accepted
and perpetuated as constant and unchanging. But
since the impact of a 26,000 year long wobble
called “precession” has caused Earth’s
orientation to gradually shift slightly, Sol passes
over a thirteenth constellation between Scorpio
and Sagittarius-- from November 30 to December
17: Ophiuchus (The Serpent Bearer/Holder).
Technically, this makes Ophiuchus the twelfth
sign, and Sagittarius the thirteenth.
Consequently, this alteration of the cycle inevitably
skews astrological alignment and thus its influences
on and application to us; as well as variances
in the ebb and flow of cosmic energies, electromagnetic
and gravitational forces we are exposed to.
Metaphorically, could the appearance of snake
wielding Ophiuchus in our sky be an auspicious
omen, denoting an imminent and unfolding transitional
time of healing and enlightenment? Maybe this
represents the prophesied return of Christ?
Despite Christianity’s negative associations,
the snake or serpent has long been a symbol of
knowledge, wisdom and healing in the religious
and occult traditions of many cultures; especially
ancient societies. The Dragon, Ouroboros, Asclepius
and Caduceus iconography prominent among them.
But even the Biblical serpent can be interpreted
positively as a harbinger of awareness or consciousness.
Ophiuchus, an alias or equivalent of Aesclepius,
is the Greek god of healing. Supposedly based
on a real person, he was responsible for allegedly
resurrecting the dead with his medical skill through
a myth involving insight from a serpent. It is
said that Asclepius accomplished this feat with
an herb that he witnessed a serpent using to revive
another serpent that Asclepius had killed with
his staff.
Hence, the Asclepius icon (staff wrapped with
single snake) and then later Caduceus (staff entwined
with two snakes) becoming universal symbols of
medicine or hospitals.
The Caduceus also has connections with Hermes
in Greek myth, and Mercury in Roman myth, signifying
a messenger of the gods. It has been observed
that the image resembles a double helix. Quetzalcoatl,
the Meso-American inspiration god, appeared as
a feathered serpent. Ancient Egyptians also had
a version of Ophiuchus, whom they knew as Imhotep…
so perhaps, like Christ, this is an example of
a recurring mythic archetype… and like the
story of Saint Nick, was exaggerated and transfigured.
It is interesting to note that in the Norse depiction
of Armageddon-- called by them Ragnarok, a man-god--
Thor-- wrestles with a giant serpent named Jormungand
for the fate of the world. And in the TV show
Millennium, the logo of a group who sought to
control the end of the world was the Ouroboros.
Snake oil, familiar in pop-culture as a folk
tale image of miracle salve to cure any pain or
illness, is a euphemism for a product sold with
exaggerated or fraudulent claims; but is a real
Chinese remedy used to sooth joint pain.
So what we have here is a theme of apocalypse--
in both senses of the word, in conjunction with
rebirth or renewal.
December 21 is the winter solstice, an important
occasion for the Celts because it was a time of
rebirth, and the last chance to feast before a
hazardous winter set in.
The celebration is known as Yule, derived from
the Norse word for wheel-- which symbolized a
turning point from darkness into light as the
length of night begins to shorten and the length
of days increase.
December 21, 2012. In a leap year, and 13 years
after 1999. Astronomers tell us that the sun’s
path will visually intersect with the Galactic
equator-- a phenomenon I’m told is very
rare (once every 25,920 years) and that the Mayan
mythologically identify as The Sacred Tree. This
forms a kind of celestial crossroads where the
sun in Winter Solstice converges with the center
of our galaxy. Ophiuchus leads into Saggitarus,
a constellation which research reveals points
toward the galactic center around this time through
an area of a dark rift in the Milky Way. Which
sounds a lot like Road to Xibalba and the Tree
of Life mentioned in the movie The Fountain.
According to (translation of) The Mayan Mesoamerican
Long Count calendar-- which would mark its thirteenth
and final cycle before resetting to 0 (13.0.0.0),
in this age of Ophiuchus, this date may also signify
the impending end of the world. Because the Mayan
calendar ends then and there, many people are
wondering and anticipating-- as they did with
the year 2000 (and we all saw how that turned
out)-- about what this means. However, 2000 could
have been a miscalculation or approximation for
2012. Or a postponement.
A calendar that reportedly began at 3114 B.C,
approximately the same time period established
in the Egyptian Long Count Calendar…. under
6000 years ago--- the point when many contemporary
Christians claim the world began. So perhaps,
at least symbolically or conceptually, this was
the time of our Genesis, when the world as we
know it started.
How the Mayans and Egyptians determined such
things involves a math way beyond my pay grade,
and is another matter entirely. Clearly, the fact
that these allegedly less advanced peoples had
access to this kind of information shows they
knew something about the nature of the universe--
of life, death and time-- that we do not. Enough
so that they could predict or project metaphysical
and archetypal manifestations. They recognized
and accepted that history and nature repeat in
celestial cycles, which even Nietzsche noted in
his idea of Eternal Recurrence.
Could Atlantis have existed and been destroyed
26,000 years ago? Causing mankind to effectively
start over? Is this what we can expect from 2012?
If someone told you when you were going to die,
would you believe them? If so, what would you
do about it? Have the Mayans given us just such
a warning?
Why does the calendar stop, so conclusively?
Apparently, that Mayan calendar seems designed
to accommodate and usher in 2012. Some are speculating
a devastating and transformative pole shift with
drastic climate change, others expect instead
a more constructive shift in paradigm, or both
or neither. Perhaps destruction leads to construction.
Astronomers present a possibility that the effects
of precession will alter magnetic polarity of
the sun, combined with gravitational forces from
the simultaneous alignment of other planets, might
cause massive solar flares, and maybe could move
the axis of the Earth. Nevermind whatever energies
or transmissions are released upon us by aligning
also with galactic center. Mayan prophecy claims
that, in this period, we will experience a realignment
that synchronizes us with the cycles of nature,
mutating us and accelerating our evolution.
The Buddha is said to have initiated/predicted
the Wheel of Dharma to turn every 500 years, for
five turns… the fifth revolution having
supposedly occurred in 2000, in close enough proximity
to effect/initialize 2012, which also happens
to be the Year of the Dragon (of serpent imagery,
emblematic of wisdom, daring and change).
Something else I discovered is that the I Ching
is a type of calendar system; The Book of Changes,
with its 64 hexagrams, concerns the progression
of time. The Yin and Yang symbol reflects the
yearly cycle, with Yin/black as the female/lunar
and Yang/white as the male/solar. The trigrams
that compose the hexagrams are extensions of Yin
(broken line) and Yang (solid line), depicting
a process of balance and unification. 64 outcomes
times 6 lines each equals 384, indicating a 13
month lunar cycle.
Using a computer program assigning a date to
each of the 64 possibilities, starting with when
the I Ching was created, philosopher/ethno-botanist
Terrence McKenna realized that it corresponded
to a pattern he describes and illustrates as a
“time wave”, which ends-- independently
and ignorantly of the Mayans-- on 12.21.12.
There seems to be an almost binary nature and
mathematical symmetry to it.
Implications of all these “coincidences”
are stunning; the meme is too persistent, common
and substantial to ignore or dismiss as meaningless
or accidental.
Astrology and astronomy are not mutually exclusive,
and ancient “primitive” cultures more
in tune with nature understood this, as they monitored
the position of stars in relation to natural planetary
rhythms and cycles in order to plan their lives
within these patterns.
For them, there was no distinction-- astrology
was astronomy, and no separation between Man and
nature existed. Just as the location of the sun
and moon and other planets effect the status and
behavior of the planet, so they likewise effect
people in both direct and subtle ways. It isn’t
necessarily so much the stars that influence people,
but their relative placement in the sky at various
times of the year.
Over the last decade, a collective sense of anticipation,
anxiety and apprehension of some great cosmic
change approaching seems to infuse the psychology
of the general populace. We see it abundantly
in the New Age literature and Liberal sociology,
in the reactions to potential end times for 2000
and 2012. Like animals perceiving a climatic change
indicating rain or earthquake, we feel a subconscious
vibration suggesting something on the horizon.
Something is about to happen; we don’t know
exactly what, or how, but maybe we know when.
In the Samurai code of Hagakure, the end is important
in all things.
Although, we should keep in mind-- and would
be wise to, that endings are also beginnings.
When one door closes, another opens.
To the Mayan culture, life and death were intrinsically
and intimately connected. For them, as with Nietzsche,
Buddhists and the Samurai, to die well is to have
lived well. In other words, gracefully and gratefully.
A New World Order is perched on the horizon.
Change is an inevitable aspect in the natural
order of things, and to survive we must work with
it, not against it. |