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The
Sprint to 2012
by Eric Francis Coppolino, January 28, 2008
Source:
http://www.chronogram.com
The astrology of 2008 puts us onto the final
approach to 2012. Turn on your radar, buckle
up, chuck the ginger ale, and drop your landing
gear: the Age
of Technology is approaching the runway.
The year 2012 has been tossed around as something
special since Jose Arguelles created the Harmonic
Convergence in 1987. With that event, he called
attention to the Mayan Long Count, a calendar
of approximately 1.87 million days used by the
Maya in what is now Mexico and Guatemala. Something
called the 13th baktun ends on December 21, 2012,
concluding a 5,125-year cycle. Notably, this
cycle predates the Maya, themselves, whose mathematicians
dealt in very long spans of time extending before
and after their own existence.
More recently, author John Major Jenkins proposed
an astronomical theory for why the Mayans chose
our particular era for the cycle to end. He suggests
that it involves the alignment of the position
of the winter solstice Sun with the dark band
that runs through the center of the Milky Way
galaxy (called the Road to Xibalba).
Due to the precession effect (that is, the very
slow wobble of the Earth on its axis), the winter
solstice point gets a little earlier every year
(advancing a bit more than a degree per century).
The same is true for the first day of all the
seasons. The precession effect is usually used
to measure the astrological/astronomical age.
We are familiar with the concept from the Age
of Aquarius theme, wherein the Aries Point (the
first degree of the Western zodiac or the first
day of spring), is moving into the constellation
Aquarius.
Jenkins asks a very good question. Maybe it’s
not the constellation that the Aries Point is
in that’s the true marker of our cosmic
alignment, as we usually think. Maybe it’s
the point 90 degrees away, where Capricorn begins.
Maybe that’s where we need to be looking
for information about an accurate calculation
of the cosmic epoch. Most Planet Waves readers
are familiar with the Aries Point and its astonishing
connections between personal and global events.
Jenkins proposes that we have one of the cardinal
points (the first degrees of the cardinal signs
Aries, Cancer, Libra, and Capricorn) aligning
with something tangible: the dark band running
through the Galactic Core. Notably, it is the
last of the four points, involving Capricorn—the
sign of corporations, government, and the structure
of society. All of the 2012 theories, whether
friendly, cataclysmic or both (most are not so
friendly, by the way), involve changes to the
structure of society, whatever else they may
touch upon.
This is a cool theory. It helps explain why
the Aries Point (which is shorthand for all four
of the cardinal points or the four directions)
is so hot these days. It actually (in his theory)
involves the Capricorn Point aligning with this
dark band in the center of the galaxy, which
then brings in the Aries Point. When events focus
on the Aries Point, we get an idea of why it’s
so dependably connected to events that ripple
through the lives of millions, and which we tend
to feel so personally (an example of an Aries
Point event was September 11, 2001). Jenkins’s
theory provides a comprehensible link between
Western and Mayan astrology, something that has
been lacking throughout this whole discussion.
Some astrologers have looked at that 2012 chart
and claimed it contains nothing special; hence,
2012 cannot be that important. (Just because
someone does not understand a chart does not
mean it does not have meaningful information.)
Enter: Pluto in Capricorn
What
has not been discussed so widely are outer planet
movements leading up to that date. The
first of them—and perhaps the most significant—is
Pluto entering Capricorn, a process that begins
in about two weeks. That is another way of saying
that Pluto is aligning with the position of the
winter solstice Sun; that is the first degree
of Capricorn. This places it on one of the cardinal
points, as well as in aspect to the other three.
Obviously, Pluto in Capricorn is going to have
a profound effect on the structure of society:
on all Capricorn institutions, from corporations
to the government to the banking system. True,
this will affect individuals, but individuals
tend to learn faster than groups and companies.
We will all go through a series of individual
initiations, but the key to some form of success
here will be awareness about group initiation.
There are some companies, institutions, and
governments that will do very well—the
ones that can loosen up their structures, both
physical and ideological, and flex with the changes.
These will surprise you—when you hear the
story of something that seemed stuffy and old
suddenly becoming a progressive leader of some
kind. Indeed, Pluto in Capricorn is all about
leadership. It is about building and acting on
the vision that has been developing during the
years of Pluto in Sagittarius (1995-present).
Pluto’s ingress to Capricorn is attended
by some interesting Mars transits. At the time
of the ingress in late January, Mars is in a
loose (but significant) opposition—in the
process of making three exact ones. The third
contact is March 7. So we get Mars and Pluto
working the solstice points (from Cancer and
Capricorn), which feels a little like flint on
a piece of iron.
Then, shortly after Pluto ingresses Capricorn
to stay (no more retrogrades into Sagittarius),
Mars makes an exact conjunction to Pluto around
the winter 2008 solstice. So we get a lot of
personal fire (of Mars) added to the cosmic and
hormonal fire (of Pluto) aspecting the 2012 region
of the sky
Lunar Nodes in the Middle Fixed
Signs
The Aries Point usually involves the cardinal
signs. But something called Uranian astrology
says that 135 degrees away from the cardinal
points, we have the middle of the fixed signs.
This is the sesquiquadrate aspect, which is described
as a trigger aspect. A 45-degree aspect works
in a similar way. The lunar nodes are now working
their way backwards through Leo and Aquarius.
The annular eclipse on February 7, 2008, falls
right in the middle of Aquarius, setting off
the Aries Point from 45 degrees away in Aquarius.
Saturn in Libra 2009-12
Here is an exciting one. Saturn has just entered
Virgo, so we’re not quite ready to be
thinking about Saturn arriving in Libra—but
it’s not so far away. Saturn arrives
there for the first time on Oct. 29, 2009;
that is, late next year. A planet entering
one of the cardinal signs puts it into direct
contact with the Aries Point and the Capricorn
solstice point—in this case, directly
opposite. Pluto is still in very early Capricorn
at that point, which means we have a Saturn-Pluto
square aspecting the Aries Point and the Cap
solstice point. This will be positively thrilling,
all the more so because Saturn is the ruler
of Capricorn and has extraordinary power in
Libra (it is said to be “exalted” in
this sign).
This is a turning point, one that will call
attention to the overall theme of the Pluto in
Capricorn era. It is a kind of catch-up point.
The Saturn-Pluto trine (involving the earthy
signs) does not necessarily mean that the two
energies are not going to combine in some volatile
or provocative ways—trines can be incredibly
influential. But the Saturn-Pluto square is a
dimension shift, one that will emphasize a major
shift in structure of some kind.
What we generally
fail to recognize when we look at changes in
society is that society is all
about the relationships that people have with
one another. We are good at pretending that our
relationships with our coworkers has nothing
to do with the relationships between companies
or nations, but these things are holographic
models of one another. With Saturn in Libra involved,
we need to consider how the structure of our
personal relationships relates to Capricorn—the
structure of society. Marriage, for example,
is primarily an economic structure, based in
law, not emotions. Saturn in Libra square Pluto in Capricorn is—among
other things—about feeling the connection
between our relationships and the structure of
society.
The Changes of 2010
In 2010, there are three changes that mark a
watershed. The first is that Saturn continues
its ingress to Libra, retrograding back to
Virgo and then making a final ingress in July.
This means that the Saturn-Pluto square unfolds
throughout this year.
Second, Chiron ingresses Pisces. The last time
Chiron ingressed Pisces was on the day past the
inauguration of John F. Kennedy, commencing the
`60s. Chiron will have spent about six years
in Aquarius, a very different energy. Chiron,
a potent focus of awareness, will be shifting
from the most airy air sign to the most watery
water sign—a difference we will be able
to feel.
Then for the most interesting change of the
year, Uranus begins its ingress to Aries, going
right over the Aries Point. Uranus is the planet
of revolution, invention, disruption, and forward-thinking.
Contact with the Aries Point strongly implies
some kind of cultural revolution. In other words,
the natives will be getting restless.
The Uranus-Pluto Square of 2012-15
All of this is just a warm up, believe it or
not. The grand finale is the Uranus-Pluto square
of 2012-15. That is to say, Pluto will be in
early Capricorn and Uranus will be in early
Aries. That is a 90-degree relationship, and
by mid-2012, it is exact. Most meetings between
the outer planets make three exact contacts
over about nine months. Somewhat incredibly,
the Uranus-Pluto square beginning in 2012 makes
seven exact contacts through 2015—something
that I have never seen or heard of before with
any outer-planet aspect.
In other words, the two planets will remain
in exact square for three years. Based on his
story of the history of the Western world, Richard
Tarnas in his book, Cosmos and Psyche, has demonstrated
that quadrature alignments of Uranus and Pluto—the
conjunction, squares and opposition—are
times of social upheaval, progress, and even
revolution. This is indeed one of the most predictable
combinations of planets, and one of the most
powerfully focused on actual progress. The `60s,
a time of artistic, social, and economic process,
is perhaps the best and fortunately most memorable
expressions of this aspect. Though there was
more to the `60s than this, the alchemy of that
time was typical of what happens nearly every
time these two planets align.
Based on the historical data he presents in
his book, Tarnas gives this aspect a window of
action that begins this year. So it is part of
that final approach to 2012. Yet based on this
highly unusual event of Uranus square Pluto,
2012 itself seems to be a beginning rather than
an ending—a time when we will finally see
something vaguely equivalent of power to the
people.
The only problem is, the people are going to
have a reason to revolt. The years immediately
ahead of us do not appear to be a time of equity
and harmony, but rather a time of corporations
and governments consolidating their power, even
as they collapse under their own weight
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