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Alive and Well with Neptune: Transits of Heart and Soul PDF

281 Pages·2000·11.488 MB·English
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r Transits of Heart and Soul Bil Tierney 1999 Llewellyn Publications St. Paul, MN 55164-0833 U.S.A. Alive and Well with Neptune: Transits ofH eart and Soul© 1999 by Bil Tierney. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever, including Internet usage, without written permission from Llewellyn Publications except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. FIRST EDITION First Printing 1999 Cover design by William Merlin Cannon Book design by Ken Schubert Editing by Marguerite Krause Project Management by Eila Savela Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Tierney, Bil. Alive & well with Neptune: transits of heart and soul/ Bil Tierney. - 1st ed. p. em. Includes bibliographical references (p. ). ISBN 1-56718-715-3 1. Astrology. 2. Neptune (Planet)-Miscellanea. I. Title. II. Title: Alive and well with Neptune. BF1724.2.N45T54 1999 133.5 '391-dc21 99-32704 CIP Llewellyn Worldwide does not participate in, endorse, or have any authority or responsibility concerning private business transactions between our authors and the public. All mail addressed to the author is forwarded but the publisher cannot, unless specifically instructed by the author, give out an address or phone number. Printed in the United States of America Llewellyn Publications A Division of Llewellyn Worldwide, Ltd. P.O. Box 64383, Dept. K715-3 St. Paul, MN 55164-0383, U.S.A. www.llewellyn.com DEDICATION I dedicate this book to Donna Van Toen, a devoted astrologer who has well-navigated Neptune's deeper waters in good faith. TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction ......................................... 1 PART ONE Chapter One SETTING THE STAGE ................................... 13 Chapter Two SWIMMING WITH NEPTUNE .............................. 23 Chapter Three A NEPTUNIAN ToUR OF OUR NATAL PLANETS ................ 35 Chapter Four A NEPTUNIAN TOUR OF OUR NATAL HOUSES ................ 57 Two PART Chapter Five DREAMS AND VISIONS OF ONENESS ........................ 83 NEPTUNE TRANSITING A NATAL HOUSE ..................... 90 NEPTUNE TRANSITING A NATAL PLANET .................... 92 Chapter Six NEPTUNE TRANSITING THE FIRST HOUSE ................... 97 NEPTUNE/MARS TRANSITS ............................. 104 Chapter Seven NEPTUNE TRANSITING THE SECOND HOUSE ................ 113 NEPTUNE/EARTH VENUS TRANSITS ....................... 121 X • CONTENTS Chapter Eight NEPTUNE TRANSITING THE THIRD HOUSE ................. 129 NEPTUNE/AIR MERCURY TRANSITS ....................... 137 Chapter Nine NEPTUNE TRANSITING THE FOURTH HOUSE ................ 145 NEPTUNE/MOON TRANSITS ............................. 153 Chapter Ten NEPTUNE TRANSITING THE FIFTH HOUSE .................. 161 NEPTUNE/SUN TRANSITS .............................. 170 Chapter Eleven NEPTUNE TRANSITING THE SIXTH HOUSE .................. 177 NEPTUNE/EARTH MERCURY TRANSITS .................... 185 Chapter Twelve NEPTUNE TRANSITING THE SEVENTH HOUSE ............... 191 NEPTUNE/AIR VENUS TRANSITS ......................... 200 Chapter Thirteen NEPTUNE TRANSITING THE EIGHTH HOUSE ................ 207 NEPTUNE/PLUTO TRANSITS ............................. 214 Chapter Fourteen NEPTUNE TRANSITING THE NINTH HOUSE ................. 223 NEPTUNE/JUPITER TRANSITS ........................... 231 Chapter Fifteen NEPTUNE TRANSITING THE TENTH HOUSE ................. 239 NEPTUNE/SATURN TRANSITS ............................ 246 CONTENTS • XI Chapter Sixteen NEPTUNE TRANSITING THE ELEVENTH HOUSE .............. 253 NEPTUNE/URANUS TRANSITS ........................... 260 Chapter Seventeen NEPTUNE TRANSITING THE TwELFTH HOUSE ............... 269 NEPTUNE/NEPTUNE TRANSITS .......................... 276 Bibliography ....................................... 283 INTRODUCTION THE OTHER SIDE NEPTUNE OF It's no wonder that astrological Neptune rules unsolved myster ies, because it's somewhat a mystery why we traditionally associ ate this planet with a tempermental sea god known for his stormy personality in Greek and Roman myths-the cultural source of all our planetary symbolism. Isn't Neptune supposed to be the most spiritually sensitive of all the planets-a universal pacifist who wouldn't step on a weed or hurt a fly? Don't we con sider it to be a planet that oozes empathy and seduces us to com pletely merge our consciousness with all else that lives, thereby dissolving the illusion that we possess separate identities? Neptune would rather feed unlimited divine energy to our souls and inspire us to nourish our bodies with a steady diet of fruits, seeds, nuts, and vegetables. Ideally, Neptune won't kill for meat or endure seeing blood being shed in the name of cruelty or violence. Yet mythological Neptune was no pacifist or peace maker. He personified the oceanic realm, which is rarely calm or predictable. Its powerful waves crash dramatically against the shoreline's rocks, and sudden storms at sea create turbulent and dangerous waters. 1 2 • INTRODUCTION The actual planet Neptune wasn't discovered until 1846-a milestone that signalled humanity's readiness to use this planet's energies with greater social awareness. Perhaps it has taken us several millennia to absorb the kinder, gentler side of this plane tary archetype. This aspect of Neptune probably got a boost dur ing the development of Piscean water imagery in the earliest stages of Christianity, with Jesus as a living symbol of all those illuminated traits 'we now expect from the spiritual-savior side of unity-conscious Neptune. This is the side of Neptune all astrologers are familiar with-the one wearing the halo. The Greeks focused on more "pagan," nature-connected quali ties of the Neptune principle with their portrayal of the "wild eyed" god Poseidon, who was fiery in disposition and driven by elemental instinct, making him temperamental to the point of being a rage-aholic! He certainly didn't have the airy detachment of a typical sky god, nor did he even look serene and mellow (that trendy Neptunian "bliss" look made popular in the late 1960s). Homer's nickname for Poseidon was the "Earth Shaker," which can also describe how we often tremble when we're enraged. So, how did Poseidon get like this? For one thing, he was trau matized shortly after his birth, as was his brother Hades (Pluto), accused by some of turning out a little twisted as a result. Their father was uptight, paranoid Cronus (better known to us from Roman mythology as Saturn). Cronus got into an obsessive state regarding a bothersome prophecy blurted out by his father Uranus just moments after Cronus castrated him (this was a hor rible father-son relationship worthy of any Greek tragedy). The dreaded prophecy warned that Cronus would someday be over thrown by one of his own rebellious kids. Was saying this just an act of viciousness on wounded Uranus' part, intended to psychologically undermine Cronus, or was this sky god actually foreseeing the future? Whatever the case, Saturnians today still get an anxious, uneasy feeling about the potential for an unknown fate to intervene and upset the status quo of their lives, which is why they make their moves hesitantly and carefully. What Cronus later did to make himself feel safer INTRODUCTION • 3 about his questionable future was to swallow up each of the first five children he fathered immediately after their birth. Poseidon entered the world only to be thrown into a confusing state of darkness and fear while trapped in the pit of his father's stomach-totally cut off from contact with the outer world and from the loving touch of his mother. This introduced haunting themes of isolation and alienation, a gnawing sense of not being a real part of the outer world, and even of not actually being wanted by one's parents. His other siblings-except for Zeus (Jupiter)-were in the same dire predicament but, for some rea son, Poseidon was more hypersensitive than the rest. Touchiness and hostility to rejection continued to plague him even as an adult-you could always count on Poseidon to have a totally sub jective and often infantile reaction to any rebuff. In astrology, Saturn and Neptune are still not on easy speak ing terms. Wary Neptune knows full well that Saturn's domineer ing influence can be stifling and suffocating, especially regarding the process of unfolding one's imagination. Neptune will permit itself only a certain degree of Saturnian structure before it has a panic attack and unravels at the seams. Nevertheless, astrologi cal Saturn is the best agent for the clear manifestation of Neptune's beautiful visions. Mter Cronus was forced to vomit forth his kids, releasing them from their prison, Poseidon assisted his brother Zeus-who luckily had never been swallowed-and his other siblings in a vic torious revolt against their control-freak father. Cronus was finally ousted from his seat of power, just as predicted. Poseidon had an ax to grind about the psychological abuse he endured. He was troubled by unresolved anger. Mter the ''War of the Titans" was over and it came time to decide who would rule what particular domain in the new order of gods, the brothers drew lots. Poseidon's realm became the seas and all the waterways of the earth (appropriate Neptunian sym bols of interconnectedness). However, although he dwelled with his wife in a splendid golden palace in the ocean's depths, Poseidon never felt he was dealt the best hand. He wanted some of the glory and the perks that came easily to brother Zeus. He felt

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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.