Steven and Jodie Forrest - Skymates 2 - The Composite Chart

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SKYMATES 2

The Composite Chart

by Steven Forrest and Jodie Forrest

Seven Paws Press, Inc.


Borrego Springs, CA
Praise for Skymates & Skymates 2
“The Forrests make their science and their art accessible to us all, and
provide avenues of growth far deeper than reflection or even psychotherapy
could provide . . . This book is a must-have for anyone doing the spiritual
work of relationships.”
—Tracy Gaudet, M.D., Director, Duke Integrative Medicine

“Steven and Jodie’s intuitive approach makes this a wonderful guide to personal relationships. Their
sound astrological principles are undeniably helpful, informative, and make good practical sense.”
—Danny Kee, Director of A&R, Warner Bros Records

“A simple step-by-step approach with lots of encouragement. An invaluable reference book, with
exciting new interpretations and guidelines to keep your analysis on track and innovative. I highly
recommend Skymates.”
—Marilyn Harquail, The Astrologers’ Newsletter

“Teachers will want to use Skymates as a basic text; anyone interested in astrology and relating will
find this book an intriguing and marvelous guide.”
—Chris Lorenz, Dell Horoscope

“Skymates can teach the complex art of synastry to beginners, although astrologers at all levels will
appreciate this book. The authors speak imaginatively and compassionately to the very sensitive
issues of love and intimacy.” —Mary Plumb, The Mountain Astrologer

“Skymates is a revolutionary signpost of wisdom for anyone who wants to uncover the secrets of
successful relationships in the horoscope. It also responsibly demonstrates how astrology can be used
with sensitivity and integrity. This book is invaluable to new students of astrology and to experienced
astrologers.” —Jan Angel, AstrologyOnline.info

“Like all of the Forrests’ work, Skymates is rich with wisdom and humor. Their well-documented
research is deftly folded into lyrical parables that reveal the mysteries of relationships and offer
equipment for living.”
—Linda Belans, host of the medical ethics radio show Do No Harm

“Properly practiced, astrology attempts to address the apparent consonance or dissonance between
our lives and the sky. Jodie and Steven Forrest bring us into that space, and into the spaces between
us, with grace, humor and informed awareness. In this book, astrology is the portal through which
you will examine relationships in a manner worthy of any of the world’s wisdom traditions. We
should also describe the book this way: ‘Astrology—Not Just for Astrologers Anymore.’”
—Scott Ainslie, musician

“Steven and Jodie take astrology to a whole new level by returning it to its original intent: to offer an
outline for our evolutionary paths so we can discover our own meaning in life. Their work infuses
you with wit, wisdom, and humor, and with a wealth of information found nowhere else.”
—Keith Cleversley, record producer

“A marvelous combination of good writing and good information. The deep insights authors Jodie
Forrest and Steven Forrest provide are a beacon that illuminates a path to success and joy from a
soulmate relationship!”
—Richard Fuller, Metaphysical Reviews

“I’m glad to see a book go beyond sun signs, stereotypes and platitudes. And this opus from Steve
and Jodie Forrest is nothing but a pleasure to read, while being comprehensive and clear.”
—Robert Griffin, keyboardist and solo pianist

“Skymates is an unforgettable literary journey that will enrich your personal consciousness while
ultimately leading to more fulfilling relationships.”
—Laure Redmond, author of Feel Good Naked
CONTENTS

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
PREFACE
INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER 1 - NUTS AND BOLTS
CHAPTER 2 - A FEW EXAMPLES
CHAPTER 3 - THE ETERNAL TRIANGLE
CHAPTER 4 - THE LUNAR NODES

THE COOKBOOK
CHAPTER 5 - THE COMPOSITE SUN
COMPOSITE SUN IN ARIES
COMPOSITE SUN IN TAURUS
COMPOSITE SUN IN GEMINI
COMPOSITE SUN IN CANCER
COMPOSITE SUN IN LEO
COMPOSITE SUN IN VIRGO
COMPOSITE SUN IN LIBRA
COMPOSITE SUN IN SCORPIO
COMPOSITE SUN IN SAGITTARIUS
COMPOSITE SUN IN CAPRICORN
COMPOSITE SUN IN AQUARIUS
COMPOSITE SUN IN PISCES
COMPOSITE SUN IN THE FIRST HOUSE
COMPOSITE SUN IN THE SECOND HOUSE
COMPOSITE SUN IN THE THIRD HOUSE
COMPOSITE SUN IN THE FOURTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE SUN IN THE FIFTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE SUN IN THE SIXTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE SUN IN THE SEVENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE SUN IN THE EIGHTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE SUN IN THE NINTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE SUN IN THE TENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE SUN IN THE ELEVENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE SUN IN THE TWELFTH HOUSE
CHAPTER 6 - THE COMPOSITE MOON
COMPOSITE MOON IN ARIES
COMPOSITE MOON IN TAURUS
COMPOSITE MOON IN GEMINI
COMPOSITE MOON IN CANCER
COMPOSITE MOON IN LEO
COMPOSITE MOON IN VIRGO
COMPOSITE MOON IN LIBRA
COMPOSITE MOON IN SCORPIO
COMPOSITE MOON IN SAGITTARIUS
COMPOSITE MOON IN CAPRICORN
COMPOSITE MOON IN AQUARIUS
COMPOSITE MOON IN PISCES
COMPOSITE MOON IN THE FIRST HOUSE
COMPOSITE MOON IN THE SECOND HOUSE
COMPOSITE MOON IN THE THIRD HOUSE
COMPOSITE MOON IN THE FOURTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE MOON IN THE FIFTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE MOON IN THE SIXTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE MOON IN THE SEVENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE MOON IN THE EIGHTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE MOON IN THE NINTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE MOON IN THE TENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE MOON IN THE ELEVENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE MOON IN THE TWELFTH HOUSE
CHAPTER 7 - THE COMPOSITE ASCENDANT
COMPOSITE ASCENDANT IN ARIES
COMPOSITE ASCENDANT IN TAURUS
COMPOSITE ASCENDANT IN GEMINI
COMPOSITE ASCENDANT IN CANCER
COMPOSITE ASCENDANT IN LEO
COMPOSITE ASCENDANT IN VIRGO
COMPOSITE ASCENDANT IN LIBRA
COMPOSITE ASCENDANT IN SCORPIO
COMPOSITE ASCENDANT IN SAGITTARIUS
COMPOSITE ASCENDANT IN CAPRICORN
COMPOSITE ASCENDANT IN AQUARIUS
COMPOSITE ASCENDANT IN PISCES
CHAPTER 8 - THE COMPOSITE MERCURY
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN ARIES
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN TAURUS
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN GEMINI
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN CANCER
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN LEO
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN VIRGO
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN LIBRA
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN SCORPIO
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN SAGITTARIUS
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN CAPRICORN
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN AQUARIUS
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN PISCES
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN THE FIRST HOUSE
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN THE SECOND HOUSE
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN THE THIRD HOUSE
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN THE FOURTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN THE FIFTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN THE SIXTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN THE SEVENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN THE EIGHTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN THE NINTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN THE TENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN THE ELEVENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN THE TWELFTH HOUSE
CHAPTER 9 - THE COMPOSITE VENUS
COMPOSITE VENUS IN ARIES
COMPOSITE VENUS IN TAURUS
COMPOSITE VENUS IN GEMINI
COMPOSITE VENUS IN CANCER
COMPOSITE VENUS IN LEO
COMPOSITE VENUS IN VIRGO
COMPOSITE VENUS IN LIBRA
COMPOSITE VENUS IN SCORPIO
COMPOSITE VENUS IN SAGITTARIUS
COMPOSITE VENUS IN CAPRICORN
COMPOSITE VENUS IN AQUARIUS
COMPOSITE VENUS IN PISCES
COMPOSITE VENUS IN THE FIRST HOUSE
COMPOSITE VENUS IN THE SECOND HOUSE
COMPOSITE VENUS IN THE THIRD HOUSE
COMPOSITE VENUS IN THE FOURTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE VENUS IN THE FIFTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE VENUS IN THE SIXTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE VENUS IN THE SEVENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE VENUS IN THE EIGHTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE VENUS IN THE NINTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE VENUS IN THE TENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE VENUS IN THE ELEVENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE VENUS IN THE TWELFTH HOUSE
CHAPTER 10 - THE COMPOSITE MARS
COMPOSITE MARS IN ARIES
COMPOSITE MARS IN TAURUS
COMPOSITE MARS IN GEMINI
COMPOSITE MARS IN CANCER
COMPOSITE MARS IN LEO
COMPOSITE MARS IN VIRGO
COMPOSITE MARS IN LIBRA
COMPOSITE MARS IN SCORPIO
COMPOSITE MARS IN SAGITTARIUS
COMPOSITE MARS IN CAPRICORN
COMPOSITE MARS IN AQUARIUS
COMPOSITE MARS IN PISCES
COMPOSITE MARS IN THE FIRST HOUSE
COMPOSITE MARS IN THE SECOND HOUSE
COMPOSITE MARS IN THE THIRD HOUSE
COMPOSITE MARS IN THE FOURTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE MARS IN THE FIFTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE MARS IN THE SIXTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE MARS IN THE SEVENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE MARS IN THE EIGHTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE MARS IN THE NINTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE MARS IN THE TENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE MARS IN THE ELEVENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE MARS IN THE TWELFTH HOUSE
CHAPTER 11 - THE COMPOSITE JUPITER
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN ARIES
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN TAURUS
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN GEMINI
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN CANCER
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN LEO
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN VIRGO
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN LIBRA
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN SCORPIO
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN SAGITTARIUS
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN CAPRICORN
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN AQUARIUS
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN PISCES
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN THE FIRST HOUSE
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN THE SECOND HOUSE
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN THE THIRD HOUSE
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN THE FOURTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN THE FIFTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN THE SIXTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN THE SEVENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN THE EIGHTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN THE NINTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN THE TENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN THE ELEVENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN THE TWELFTH HOUSE
CHAPTER 12 - THE COMPOSITE SATURN
COMPOSITE SATURN IN ARIES
COMPOSITE SATURN IN TAURUS
COMPOSITE SATURN IN GEMINI
COMPOSITE SATURN IN CANCER
COMPOSITE SATURN IN LEO
COMPOSITE SATURN IN VIRGO
COMPOSITE SATURN IN LIBRA
COMPOSITE SATURN IN SCORPIO
COMPOSITE SATURN IN SAGITTARIUS
COMPOSITE SATURN IN CAPRICORN
COMPOSITE SATURN IN AQUARIUS
COMPOSITE SATURN IN PISCES
COMPOSITE SATURN IN THE FIRST HOUSE
COMPOSITE SATURN IN THE SECOND HOUSE
COMPOSITE SATURN IN THE THIRD HOUSE
COMPOSITE SATURN IN THE FOURTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE SATURN IN THE FIFTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE SATURN IN THE SIXTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE SATURN IN THE SEVENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE SATURN IN THE EIGHTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE SATURN IN THE NINTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE SATURN IN THE TENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE SATURN IN THE ELEVENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE SATURN IN THE TWELFTH HOUSE
CHAPTER 13 - THE COMPOSITE URANUS
COMPOSITE URANUS IN ARIES
COMPOSITE URANUS IN TAURUS
COMPOSITE URANUS IN GEMINI
COMPOSITE URANUS IN CANCER
COMPOSITE URANUS IN LEO
COMPOSITE URANUS IN VIRGO
COMPOSITE URANUS IN LIBRA
COMPOSITE URANUS IN SCORPIO
COMPOSITE URANUS IN SAGITTARIUS
COMPOSITE URANUS IN CAPRICORN
COMPOSITE URANUS IN AQUARIUS
COMPOSITE URANUS IN PISCES
COMPOSITE URANUS IN THE FIRST HOUSE
COMPOSITE URANUS IN THE SECOND HOUSE
COMPOSITE URANUS IN THE THIRD HOUSE
COMPOSITE URANUS IN THE FOURTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE URANUS IN THE FIFTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE URANUS IN THE SIXTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE URANUS IN THE SEVENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE URANUS IN THE EIGHTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE URANUS IN THE NINTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE URANUS IN THE TENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE URANUS IN THE ELEVENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE URANUS IN THE TWELFTH HOUSE
CHAPTER 14 - THE COMPOSITE NEPTUNE
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN LEO
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN VIRGO
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN LIBRA
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN SCORPIO
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN SAGITTARIUS
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN CAPRICORN
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN AQUARIUS
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN PISCES
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN THE FIRST HOUSE
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN THE SECOND HOUSE
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN THE THIRD HOUSE
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN THE FOURTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN THE FIFTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN THE SIXTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN THE SEVENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN THE EIGHTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN THE NINTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN THE TENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN THE ELEVENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN THE TWELFTH HOUSE
CHAPTER 15 - THE COMPOSITE PLUTO
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN CANCER
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN LEO
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN VIRGO
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN LIBRA
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN SCORPIO
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN SAGITTARIUS
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN CAPRICORN
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN AQUARIUS
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN THE FIRST HOUSE
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN THE SECOND HOUSE
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN THE THIRD HOUSE
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN THE FOURTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN THE FIFTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN THE SIXTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN THE SEVENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN THE EIGHTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN THE NINTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN THE TENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN THE ELEVENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN THE TWELFTH HOUSE
CHAPTER 16 - THE COMPOSITE LUNAR NODES
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN ARIES
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN TAURUS
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN GEMINI
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN CANCER
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN LEO
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN VIRGO
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN LIBRA
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN SCORPIO
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN SAGITTARIUS
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN CAPRICORN
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN AQUARIUS
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN PISCES
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN THE FIRST HOUSE
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN THE SECOND HOUSE
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN THE THIRD HOUSE
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN THE FOURTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN THE FIFTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN THE SIXTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN THE SEVENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN THE EIGHTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN THE NINTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN THE TENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN THE ELEVENTH HOUSE
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN THE TWELFTH HOUSE
CHAPTER 17 - THE COMPOSITE CHART IN ACTION
CHAPTER 18 - CONCLUSION
More Books by Steven Forrest and Jodie Forrest
About the Authors
Study Astrology with Steven Forrest
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We would like to thank the following people for friendship, support,
insights, patience, practical assistance, and for opening their lives and
homes to us: first and too numerous to name are all of the Forrest
astrological apprenticeship program members, then Jane Alexander, Joyce
Allen, the Blue Sky Ranch community, Lynn Bell, Maridel Bowes, Linda
Carson, Ceci y Chella de La Casa del Astrólogo en México, Keith
Cleversley, Janette DeProsse, Basil Fearrington, Hadley Fitzgerald, Chris
Ford, Bunny Forrest, Karen Galey, Nan Geary, Martha Goenaga, Wells
Gordon, Mary Kay Hocking, Barbara Jensen, Cheryl Jones, Rhiannon
Jones, Dan Kee, Carl Kennison, Michelle Kondos, Steve Lautermilch, Rob
Lehmann, Eileen Lehn, Catherine Losano, Manda the Cat (four new paws),
Mark McDonough, Michael Mercury, Patricia Morales, the Nalbandian
family, Rafi Nasser, Vinessa Nevala, Barbara Niepelt, Dorothy Oja, Lina
Pratt, Keron Psillas, Pyanfar the Cat (four of the original Seven Paws),
Michael Rank, Jose Manuel Redondo, Evelyn Roberts, Mary Beth Rodin,
Savannah Scarborough, Phil Sedgwick, Tim Smith, Jane St. Clair, Brian
Trent, and the late Vincent the Cat (three of the original Seven Paws).
We’d like to thank the following couples, “Skymates” all: Scott Ainslie
and Barb Ackemann, Willard and Bobbie Aldrich, Cyril Beveridge and
Sinikka Laine, Maryska Bigos and Jeff Hamilton, Nick and Karen Callen,
Bob and Ingrid Coffin, John and Barbara Connor, Paul Cory and Laura
Haywood-Cory, Mike and Carol Czeczot, Sue and Tommy Field, Kelli and
David Fox, Ginger Gaffney and Glenda Fletcher, Tracy Gaudet and John
Grossenbacher, Wolf and Martina Green, Robert and Diana Griffin, Dave
and Donna Gulick, Dave Jaquish and Rhonda Schaller, Bill Janis and
Shannon Glass, Judy and John Johnston, Kittisaro and Thanissara, Alphee
and Carol Lavoie, Jim and Sharon Mullaney, Ray Palmerini and Cheryl
Carter, Starr and Mike Perry, Dag and Sharon Rossman, Trudie Styler and
Sting, Tem Tarriktar and Kate Sholly, Joyce Van Horn and Kathy Jacobson,
Jeff and Jan Ward, Kate and Joel Wechsler, James Weinberg and Mary Beth
Cysewski, Charles and Cindy Wyatt, Scotty Young and Diane Swan, and
Tom Young and Kristin Gooch.
Most of all we’d like to thank Ingrid Coffin, our fellow desert rat, for
everything and then some.
PREFACE
Perilously close to the beginning of our marriage, we tempted the Fates by
writing a book about the astrology of love, sex and intimacy. That was the
first edition of Skymates, which Bantam Books published in 1989. We were
happy enough with that book, but years of working astrologically with our
clients’ relationships taught us that there was a lot more to know. A couple
of decades of using astrology in our own intimate processes taught us even
more. We really felt that we were ready to update Skymates, but we quickly
realized that putting what we had learned into print was going to take us
two volumes, not one.
In 2002, our own Seven Paws Press published Skymates, Volume One:
Love, Sex, and Evolutionary Astrology. That book covered most of the
elemental tools of synastry: deciphering the relationship message of the
individual birthchart, working with interaspects and understanding house
transpositions.
Skymates II completes the picture with a consideration of the composite
chart. As with Volume One, those of you who have the old Bantam edition
of Skymates will occasionally encounter a familiar passage. But rest assured
that the book you are holding in your hands is a substantially new piece of
work. The material is deeper—and frankly, some of that depth comes from
the freedom of not writing to fit the “dumbed-down” strictures of a mass
market publisher. Furthermore, in response to popular demand, we’ve
included a very extensive “cookbook” section. To get a head start in
interpreting your own composite charts, you can simply look up the
meaning of any planet in any sign or any house. They are all there, plus the
Nodes of the Moon. Beware though: there are perils connected with
piecemeal interpretation! We are proudest of the parts of this book that
teach you how to think like an astrologer, pulling the messages of the
individual configurations together into a single ironical, ambivalent,
complicated whole—something that better resembles a modern relationship,
in other words!
The whole is, famously, greater than the sum of the parts. Two
birthcharts can tell us a lot about two people—how they see each other, how
they interact. But always, when two souls dare to love each other, when
they go through the doorway of romance and face the vexing, magnificent,
wild country that lies beyond it, they create something new. Something
bigger than themselves is born. And, together, they ride that beast through a
landscape of darkness and heavenly light.
Turn the page; meet the real beast with two backs.
Thanks for joining us for another journey.

—Steven Forrest and Jodie Forrest


May 27, 2004
INTRODUCTION
WHAT IT’S ALL ABOUT
“Hungry?”
“Oh, I guess I could eat . . .”
Anyone who has ever been in a relationship that lasted more than five or
six weekends knows about that tired, lackadaisical place all couples
sometimes go.
“Feel like making love?”
“It would be OK, if you really want to . . .”
Forget it, right?
Boredom is part of life. If we have what it takes to make a relationship
work, we’ll accept boredom, flatness, and ennui as part of the deal
sometimes. You had them before you were a couple and, if you break up,
you’ll have them still. They’re part of you, and they are part of your lover
too. You both bring them to the table. Being in a relationship won’t make
them go away. Falling in love briefly masks them, but when the hormonal
fog clears, those dull feelings are still on the landscape.
Still, if that’s all you feel together, your relationship is in trouble.
Skymates II: The Composite Chart, in a nutshell, is a book about how
couples get into that dismal place—and, merrily, how they can get out of it
again.
There is a bag of tricks involved with reading composite charts, and
we’ll be exploring it in great detail. But here is the whole idea in a few
words:
Couples, just like individuals, are free to make their own choices.
Astrology enforces very little on anyone. There is tremendous wiggle-room
in the symbolism. For any astrological question, there are right answers and
wrong answers—and many shades of gray in between.
If an individual, in his or her freedom, elects to spend life watching
television instead of living the life he or she was born to live, he or she will
become bored, flat, and dull. Exactly the same thing happens to couples.
Every couple, like every individual, is on the earth for an evolutionary
reason. And that path is a path of fire: travel it, and we feel alive. For each
individual and for every couple, there is a “right” way to live—and
“rightness” here is not so much a moralistic perspective as an existential
one. It’s more about how we live than about what we believe. A Sagittarian
individual, for example, needs plenty of opportunities for amazement and
wonder in life: passionate education, culture-shock, and a feeling that
tomorrow won’t be a rerun of yesterday. For a couple with a composite
Sagittarian Sun, it’s exactly the same: put them in a predictable suburban
life-style, run it for a few years, and they’ll be having conversations along
the lines of the one you read at the beginning of this chapter. They’ll be on
the road to divorce, in other words.
And the deepest tragedy is that they probably won’t even really know
why.
There’s Something You’re Not Dealing With
Faced with the erosion of passion and connectedness, a modern couple will
often seek help from psychotherapy and psychotherapeutic perspectives. In
many cases, this is a wise and effective move. Intimacy is elusive, and it
must be renewed daily. The parts of ourselves with which we are not
intimate can take a deep bite of the closeness in our relationships too. If, for
example, I am alienated from my own anger, I will surely have a difficult
time dealing with my mate’s anger as well. Furthermore, I’ll probably see
anger in my mate that isn’t really there at all—it’s actually just my own
swallowed anger mirrored back to me. That’s what shrinks call projection.
If, because of childhood trauma or bad religion, my sexuality is
damaged, that issue will cast a long shadow over the bedroom.
If I am depressed, our relationship will be susceptible to depression too.
In all of these real-world situations, it is very possible that the arsenal of
therapies a modern psychological counselor brings to the table might be
very helpful. Psychological astrology can be deeply relevant here as well—
that’s a big part of what Skymates One was about. Make no mistake: this is
not a book about denying personal responsibility for what happens in our
relationships. There’s probably nothing else in the world that so effectively
brings our “inner work” to the surface as staying in a committed bond.
We’re all imperfect beings, and those imperfections rise up to challenge and
guide us forward when we dare to love as humble adults. That material is
revealed in the analysis and comparison of the two birthcharts, not in the
composite chart.
With all that said, let’s recognize that not all problems that a couple faces
can be understood quite so psychologically. Psychological theory can be so
penetrating and so effective that we run the risk of believing in it too
uncritically. With the composite chart, we enter a third dimension: you, me,
and what we are together. You might be the fundamental source of some
challenge we’re facing together. Or the problem might originate with me.
But, just possibly, it has nothing directly to do with either one of us.
Perhaps its origins lie in the mysterious space between us.
This “space between” is the natural domain of the composite, and we
need to understand it precisely. Here, for starters, is what it is not: it is not
my reaction to your “stuff,” or your reaction to my “stuff.” Those
dimensions can be understood through birthchart comparison: interaspects,
house transpositions, and so on—the techniques covered in the first
Skymates volume. The “space between” really transcends each of us as
individuals. It is like a third person in the relationship, with its own nature,
intentions, and idiosyncratic needs. As the birthchart sketches the soul-
intentions of an individual, the composite chart sketches the soul-intentions
of the couple. As the birthchart maps the energy-body of an individual, the
composite chart maps the energy-body of the couple.
A few paragraphs back we imagined a couple with their composite Sun
in Sagittarius, with its implicit need for adventure and change. If an
individual Sagittarian fails to “feed the Sun,” that person will descend into
pettiness, anxiety, and a feeling of being lost. It’s the same for the couple.
They need to be stretched too. Like the individual, they need to get out of
their box.
Now let’s complicate the picture. Maybe this composite Sagittarian
couple, as individuals, are both cautious, conventional, stay-at-home types
with 401K plans, smoke detectors, and a burglar alarm. The idea of quitting
their jobs and spending six months serving as volunteer teachers in an
Ecuadoran village wouldn’t cross their minds in a thousand years. And yet
that might be exactly what they need to survive as a couple. As an entity,
they need more adventure and cross-cultural experience than they need as
separate individuals. If they don’t get it, the Sun they share begins to die—
the relationship loses its zest. Their appetite for life is replaced by a
soporific appetite for food or television.
And they wonder where their love went.
Conventional psychology could not help them find the answer. Worse, it
would be inclined to seek an answer where none existed: in the domain of
something they’re not dealing with. They could be shoehorned into
imagining “deep psychological issues” in a way that reflected their
psychologist’s belief-system far more vividly than it reflected their actual
realities. As we saw a little while ago, that psychological domain can be
very productive in intimate counseling! But now, with the composite chart,
we recognize that there is a vast area in the mystery of human love to which
conventional psychological thinking is utterly blind. The whole is,
famously, greater than the sum of the parts. For this couple, the problems—
and their solutions—might exist in that wholeness they create together, and
only be visible there. It might, in other words, not be visible through
interaspects or other birthchart technicalities—but leap out when we
contrast their boundary-busting composite chart with the staid life they have
created.
Spirits at the Table; Spirits in the Bed
Just about all of us fantasize about hitting the lottery and spending the
rest of our lives sipping piña coladas in some tropical paradise. But most of
us know that given a little while, we’d be miserable there. A happy life
requires more evolutionary grit. We need challenges; we need something to
sink our teeth into. That’s true of individuals, and it’s true of couples as
well. “And they lived happily ever after” is not only a transparent fiction,
given the demanding realities of human love; it is also a monumentally bad
idea. There’s not much evolutionary momentum in being a bliss ninny—
and, paradoxically, without evolutionary momentum we’re not even very
happy . . . once the piña colada wears off.
A birthchart and a composite chart both describe the same things: an
optimal evolutionary path, the tools we have for the job, and what it looks
like if we blow it. As couples or as individuals, knowledge of that path is
astrology’s precious gift to us. In terms of understanding, all we really have
to add to the stew is an expanded, post-patriarchal view of human
spirituality: we are not here to “transcend the flesh.” We are not here to
“avoid worldly temptation.” The spiritual life—and the spiritual
relationship—don’t just mean sitting in a yoga position thinking pure
thoughts with a belly full of organic bean sprouts. The “path” is wildly,
delightfully more diverse than that. Each couple, like each individual, has
its own way of fulfilling the soul contract. Two people might succeed in
doing deeply spiritual work together—and both think they are atheists. Or
fail, and both be devoutly religious—but never have spent that year in the
Ecuadoran village.
We fall in love. We hear the proverbial violins. Mother Nature, ever
smarter than we are, tricks us into forming a bond that can only break if our
hearts break too. Little do we know what we have signed up for! Love will
push us to our edges and beyond. But underlying the daily conversation, the
spiderweb of mundane details, the bills, the dreams, the cats and the kids,
there is a divine plan—a contract the souls made long ago, in another world.
To fulfill it is joy. To abrogate it is folly—loneliness, lostness, anger and
sorrow. And, woven into the astrological symbols of the composite chart, is
the text of the contract and some advice from the angels about how to get it
right.
In the pages that follow, we’ll learn how to read that precious message.
Chapter 1
Nuts and Bolts
T he whole is greater than the sum of the parts, or so goes the old
proverb. And it’s true, especially in affairs of the heart. When two
people commit themselves to loving each other, the whole of that couple is
something new, something distinct from either of the individuals.
Two shy little mice get married and quickly begin throwing elaborate
dinner parties. Two aggressive extroverts get together and move to the
backwoods of Alaska. The changes are not always so shocking, but the
point is that the “meta-personality” of a couple does not always derive
logically from the personalities of the individuals. Sometimes that meta-
personality appears to have a mind of its own.
Every couple, then, is a threesome: you, me, and what we are together.
Unraveling the sometimes Byzantine politics of this “eternal triangle” is the
third and final step in the synastry pyramid we began exploring in our first
volume of this series, Skymates: Love, Sex and Evolutionary Astrology. In
that book, we explored the first step in that pyramid: dissecting each of the
individuals separately, as if each existed in a vacuum. We also presented the
second step: analyzing the interactions of the two birthcharts. Now, in this
volume, we complete the picture by recognizing that, in love, there is
always an invisible third party, casting its votes, throwing its tantrums,
offering its insights, just like the two visible lovers. That ghostly but
powerful presence is symbolized by the composite chart.
The invisible third party in every partnership may be impossible to see,
but it reveals its nature and its hidden agenda very clearly in the composite.
Arbiter, deadlock-breaker, wild card, it moves behind the scenes to establish
the framework of energy, attitude, and synchronicity within which the two
lovers navigate for as long as they remain together.
What does a composite chart look like? Exactly the same as an ordinary
birthchart. How do you interpret one? Basically, by exactly the same rules
you use with individual birthcharts—except that you need to remember that
now you’re talking about the personality of the couple, an entity separate
and distinct from either of the flesh-and-blood human beings who compose
it. (For a quick refresher on the basic meanings of signs, planets and houses
as they relate to birthcharts, please see the first volume of Skymates, or The
Inner Sky.)
Constructing the Composite Chart
How is the composite chart constructed? In essence, it is an averaging of
the two birthcharts. The point precisely midway between your Sun and
mine is our composite Sun. The midpoint of your Moon and mine is our
composite Moon. If your Mercury lies toward the end of Scorpio and mine
lies toward the end of Capricorn, the point exactly halfway between them—
late Sagittarius—is the location of our composite Mercury.
The Houses are a little more complicated, and there is more than one
theory about how to create them. In the approach that we favor, we find the
composite Midheaven—the point halfway between the two Midheavens—
and we use that, along with the place where the couple first met, as the basis
for calculating the rest of the Houses. The pages that follow contain more
details about this approach. If you’re fainthearted when it comes to
arithmetic and don’t have a computerized calculation program, you’ll find
websites and an address at the end of this book where you can order
computerized composite charts, or the software to set them up yourself.
As always in astrology, setting up the charts is merely a mechanical
process, interesting for some, daunting for others, boring for most. The
challenge—and the reward—lies in learning to cajole insight and
understanding out of those primordial symbols of earth and sky. That’s what
this book is really about.
Origins
Whoever first came up with the idea of composite charts is one of
astrology’s unsung heroes. We have no idea who it was. The technique
became popular in the early 1970s with the publication of John Townley’s
groundbreaking book, The Composite Chart and, shortly thereafter, Robert
Hand’s book, Planets in Composite. Neither man claims to have invented
the basic idea, only to have refined it. Townley, in his book Composite
Charts: The Astrology of Relationships, traced the technique back to
Germany in the 1920s. Dr. Walter Koch, who originated the popular Koch
system of House division, apparently knew of it, but we have no particular
reason to believe he created the idea.
The exploration of the importance of planetary midpoints seems to have
been a special province of German astrologers, and so it’s a reasonable
guess to think we have them to thank for the technique. Reinhold Ebertin,
especially, is associated with the midpoint theory, known generally as
Cosmobiology. His most widely read book is The Combination of Stellar
Influences, which came out in 1949. It is not about the composite chart per
se, but it contains the germs of the techniques upon which it is based—it’s a
short step from noticing the sensitivity of a point midway between your
natal Venus and your natal Mars to wondering if there might be some
intimate significance to the point midway between your Venus and mine, or
your Mars and mine.
Baldur Ebertin, Reinhold’s son, has continued the work. Elsbeth Ebertin,
the mother of Reinhold and grandmother of Baldur was also a serious
professional astrologer. She edited the astrological magazine Blick in die
Zukunft (A Glance into the Future) for over twenty years, starting in 1917,
and wrote several books herself. It’s plausible to hypothesize that the
intellectual foundations of the composite chart lie in Germany between the
two World Wars.
Two points are definite: the core of the technique lies in understanding
the significance of midpoints; and everything else about composite charts is
currently a muddle of competing approaches! In the rest of this chapter
we’ll first learn to think precisely about midpoints, then we’ll explore some
of the fuzzy areas, making some recommendations about the technical
choices that have proven themselves most reliable in our own counseling
practice.
So What’s a Midpoint?
Have a look at Figure 1, following. In this natal chart, Mars lies at 10
degrees of Virgo and Venus lies at 10 degrees of Libra. Halfway between
them is their midpoint: 25 degrees of Virgo.
If you go around the chart “the long way,” you could create another
midpoint opposite the first, at 25 degrees of Pisces. But don’t do that.
Always use the shorter angle.
If my Moon lies in 15 degrees 59 minutes of Capricorn, and your Moon
lies in 15 degrees 58 minutes of Cancer, that’s obviously a very precise
opposition. But their midpoint would be in 15 degrees 58.5 minutes of
Aries. It wouldn’t be in Libra, because that angle is slightly wider.
For most astrologers nowadays, the computer will do the arithmetic. But
it still helps you achieve a more visceral feeling for the workings of the
composite chart if you visualize how those midpoint positions are derived.

Fig. 1: The Midpoint of Venus and Mars


So what does a midpoint mean? The answer is about what you would
think—it is a kind of “averaging” of the two planetary energies. Working
with midpoints within the context of a natal chart is a big subject, and our
friend Basil Fearrington has written and self-published an excellent and
very concise booklet about it called The Midpoint Manual. With that text,
and perhaps Ebertin’s classic, The Combination of Stellar Influences, you
can enter a fascinating and still rather cutting-edge realm of astrological
theory. We won’t go into it all in detail here, since much of it ranges beyond
what we need to know in terms of composite charts, but here’s a taste from
The Midpoint Manual, about natal midpoints:
Let’s use the Venus/Mars midpoint . . . What does Mars do when it
contacts another planet or position? It energizes, heats, and stirs up
what it touches. Here Mars is stirring up Venus. Think about it: what
happens when romance (Venus) gets stirred up and becomes heated
and energized (Mars)? It becomes passion, doesn’t it? The
Venus/Mars midpoint symbolizes many things that all fall under the
umbrella of sexual passion and desire.
—Basil Fearrington
With the composite chart, we would never combine Venus and Mars,
however. It would only involve combining my Venus with your Venus, or my
Mars with your Mars. So, in a sense, the planetary energies stay very pure
and one-dimensional. But we need to be careful about going too far with
that idea. Unless your Mars and mine are both in the same house and sign,
making the same aspects in the chart, they are rather different creatures.And
our composite Mars is yet a third creature, different from yours and
different from mine, alien to both of us, but ever-present in our relationship.
Once we’ve gone through the process of finding the midpoints between
your planets and mine, we’ve got a list of planetary positions. We can learn
quite a lot from it from it, but really to get to the heart of the matter, we
need to place those planets in the context of a chart. We need an Ascendant
and a Midheaven. We need houses. And that’s where a variety of
viewpoints enter the picture.
Systems of House Division
One of the first headaches faced by a student of astrology lies in choosing
which of several systems of house division to use. Most systems, but not
all, agree on the location of the Ascendant and the Midheaven—Meridian
houses will give you a funny Ascendant, and the Equal House system,
which comes in two versions, gives you a choice between a Midheaven that
floats like a loose cannon somewhere up near the top of the chart, or an
Ascendant that does the same thing somewhere over on the chart’s left hand
side. All the varying systems place the cusps of houses two, three, five, six,
eight, nine, eleven and twelve in different places, leading to much
contention among astrologers.
To us, one point is evident: the very existence of all this controversy
suggests that there is really no ultimate right answer to the question of
which house system is “correct.” Perhaps all or most of them work in
slightly different ways, or perhaps there is a “right” one that is simply
awaiting the right genius to discover it.
The majority of astrological teachers tend to solve this dilemma via
“papal bull.” We won’t do that to you! Try several systems, working with
the charts of more than a few people you know very well. Let the
experience speak to you. Pick the house system that works best for you with
those charts. We’ve done that, and we’ve chosen the Placidus system, which
we’ll be using throughout the rest of this book. In our hands, it seems to be
the system that is most consistently resonant with the sorts of questions we
ask, in terms of both the birthchart and the composite chart.
Where are the cusps?
Intuitively, we might think that the most logically consistent way to proceed
with the creation of the houses in a composite chart would be to take the
midpoint of your Ascendant and mine, the midpoint of your second house
cusp and mine, the midpoint of your third house cusp and mine, and so on.
This system has many adherents, but there are some problems with it.
A few paragraphs back, we looked at an example where two people’s
Moons were in a nearly exact opposition. One was in 15 degrees 59 minutes
of Capricorn and the other in 15 degrees 58 minutes of Cancer. We noted
that their composite Moon would be in 15 degrees 58.5 minutes of Aries. It
would be there, rather than in Libra, because that’s the slightly shorter angle
between those two Moon placements. But if you are imagining a tossed
coin balancing momentarily on its edge and ready to fall either way, you are
on the right page!
Without getting too deeply into the spherical trigonometry that underlies
house systems, it suffices to say that for two people born at different
latitudes, this can get very messy. We might find that the midpoint of their
Ascendants gives a composite Ascendant at 15 degrees Pisces—but the
midpoint of their second house cusp falls at 15 Libra (when common sense
about the natural order of the signs suggests it should be Aries). The reason
is that with near-oppositions, the coin could fall either way, depending on
even slight differences of birth-latitude.
Many astrologers use this system anyway. They get around the problem
of the zodiac sometimes getting out of whack through the simple device of
just arbitrarily putting it back in order! They find the composite Ascendant
in the usual way, and they let it “rationalize” the rest of the houses. In the
example above, they would put that second house cusp at 15 Aries, even
though the pure mathematics would say 15 Libra.
This is not the method we favor, but it works pretty well. Typically, the
differences between it and the way we do it are small. That makes it easier
to live with the problem, but harder to resolve it. A slight variation on this
system is to begin with the Midheaven rather than the Ascendant, and let
the Midheaven rationalize the other houses.
With a computer program doing your calculations, know this: if you’re
not prompted to enter a location (city and state or country) for the
composite chart, you have opted for some variation of the system described
above. A few harrowing minutes with the dreaded manual of your computer
program at least ought to let you know what the program is doing, and
probably allow you to toggle between an Ascendant-based calculation and
one based on the Midheaven. Again, this system is not the one we favor, but
as with house systems, we encourage you to let your own experience be
your guide. We’ll tell you what we think, but we won’t tell you what to
think!
Location, Location, Location!
Here’s how the system we use works: You calculate the composite
Midheaven, which is simply the midpoint of the two natal Midheavens.
Then you set up the rest of the houses based on that Midheaven, but for the
place where the couple first met.
A variation on this approach is to use the composite Ascendant as the
base instead of the Midheaven. Again, a little time with the manual should
reveal how your computer is “thinking.” If your composite chart
calculation requires you to enter a place, know that it’s one of these two
systems in play.
The Midheaven-based and location-based system we employ with our
clients, and which we will use throughout this book, is simply the one that
has proven most consistently relevant to the realities people are actually
experiencing—at least as we observe those realities!
Enough of This Open-Mindedness!
There is one techie piece about which we are adamant. We encourage you
never to use the place where the couple is currently living as the basis of
their composite chart. Always use the place where they first met. Often the
two places are the same, of course, and the question becomes moot. But in
the modern world, it is not unusual for a couple to have met in college in
Miami, but then moved to Los Angeles. In such a case, use the Miami
chart!
Astrology is absolutely consistent in its focus on beginnings. That is
perhaps the keystone of the entire system: that the planetary patterns at the
beginning of something describe the nature and intentions of the entity, be it
a person, a business or an idea. We do speak of transitory forces affecting
that initial chart, but they would have no meaning in a vacuum. They
always need the chart of the “first breath” as something upon which they
can act. There is no reason to make an exception for the composite chart.
There are some truly profound issues at stake behind this seemingly
rather picky issue. A birthchart—and, as we will be seeing on the following
pages, the composite chart—gives us perspective on the soul’s history and
its present evolutionary intentions. It describes karmic wounds from long
ago, patterns of strength and weakness that might be repeated, and much
about the actual underlying purpose of the life. It is a sacred document,
reflecting the effects on the present of a long past which, by definition,
cannot be changed, and which gives meaning to the present. To us, it is
ludicrous—and, frankly, it is tempting to say almost blasphemous—to
imagine a couple could change all that by moving to Los Angeles!
So, for the really deep perspective, stick with the chart based on the place
of the partners’ first meeting.
With all that said, let’s add that re-doing the composite chart for the place
the couple is currently located is not a taboo, so long as you understand
what you are seeing. Most astrologers, ourselves included, routinely
“relocate” birthcharts in order to get a fix on what kinds of energies will be
emphasized in a new place. That’s an effective and helpful technique, but it
doesn’t erase the birthchart. It works more like “permanent transits” in the
new place. Ditto for the relocated composite chart.
But We Met on the Internet!
But We Met on the Internet! You’ll run into that theme a lot nowadays. Two
people living hundreds of miles apart have actually developed quite a
complex relationship long before they actually set eyes on each other.
Frankly, unlike most of the rest of what we write about in these pages, we
haven’t had very wide experience with this issue. Currently, we are torn
between three techniques:
Number One: Sooner or later, those two people will meet in person. Go
ahead and treat everything in the conventional way, setting up the chart for
the point of their first meeting.
Number Two: If I’m in New York and you are in Maryland, then
somewhere in the wilds of New Jersey there is a physical point precisely
halfway between us. You can set up a chart for that point, as if the couple
had met there. Theoretically, the idea is that this is exactly what we really
do anyway—except that in a conventional composite chart, the “midpoint
of our locations” probably lies about a foot from my heart and a foot from
yours, right between us.
Finding this location-midpoint is actually very easy if you have access to
modern astrological computer programs. In the synastry section, you’ll see
an option for another kind of joint chart called either a “relationship chart”
or a “Davison chart.” It’s a simple, intuitive technique, which in our
experience simply isn’t as powerful as the composite chart. Such a chart is
set up for the physical place midway between our two birth places, and for
the moment in time precisely halfway between your birth-moment and my
own. Enter the data, set up the Davison chart—then jot down the latitude
and longitude it has calculated. Start over, using that as “the place where the
couple met.”
Number Three: Go ahead and try the midpoint-based type of composite
chart, despite its logical problems.
What About Other Kinds of Relationships?
You have a composite chart with the person who happens to sit next to you
on the flight to Chicago. You have one with the check-out girl at the
grocery, and one with your uncle who comes from the planet of bow ties
and bourbon whiskey. You have one with your dog. Your cat has one with
you.
If we know these charts, we will see them in action—maybe you and that
person on the flight to Chicago are a Gemini with five planets in the third
house. If so, you’ll talk all the way to the Windy City. And then of course
never see each other again.
The rule of thumb is fairly obvious: the more significant the relationship,
the more important the composite chart, and the more nuanced will be its
material and psychological expression.
Naturally, our significant sexual relationships tend to be among our most
spiritually and psychologically evocative human connections. The
principles we describe in these pages tend to work most vividly there,
although with a bit of commonsensical translation, they’ll work with other
forms of relationship as well.
Multiple Composites
What about relationships among three or more people? That is a very
complex subject. The entire basis of composite theory lies in the simple
process of finding the midpoint between two points on the zodiac.
But what is the “midpoint” between three such points? What, in other
words, is the sound of one hand clapping?
Try to visualize it. Intuition can do it—approximately. But not really
rigorously. That creates a big problem in terms of trying to come up with
composite charts for families, multiple-partner relationships or multiple-
person friendships.
Here’s a technique worth exploring. Define Aries as 0 degrees through
30 degrees, Taurus as 30 degrees through 60 degrees, and so on. That way a
planet in, say, 19 degrees of Cancer would be located “109 degrees” along
the ecliptic. (The beginning of Cancer would be 90 degrees. Add the 19
degrees to arrive at the 109 degrees.) That way, you convert all the
planetary positions to a 360 degree system, based on the start of the zodiac
in Aries.
To find, for example, the composite Mercury of three people, convert all
their Mercury positions into this 360 degree notation. Add up those three
numbers. Divide the result by three. Take that number and convert it back
into a degree of the zodiac. If your answer were 277 degrees, that would
mean that their composite Mercury was in 7 degrees of Capricorn.
Similarly, establish the composite Midheaven, and use the place where
the group first came together for determining the house cusps. This is called
a “group chart” in many of the current computer calculation programs.
We’ve had pretty good luck with it, but there are some logical issues around
it, as we’ve described. Taste and see!
Other Kinds of Joint Charts
There are many other ways to join two or more charts. In this volume, we
concentrate on the composite chart for the simple reason that, in our
opinion, it is the most evocative, relevant and powerful of all these
techniques. Among the other possibilities, the most intuitively obvious
choice is probably also the composite chart’s chief rival. That one is simple
event chart set up for the birth of the relationship.
The First Meeting Chart. Jodie and Steve met a little before 2:00 p.m.
on December 16, 1981. The chart is Venus-ruled (Taurus rising) and has an
eighth house Sagittarian Sun conjunct Neptune and Mercury, with Jupiter
almost exactly on the cusp of the “House of Marriage.” It’s very clearly a
chart that speaks of serious intimacy and commitment, and it even makes
that rather obvious Mercury/Neptune reference to “mystical” writing and
publishing!
This technique works quite well, in other words, and most of the
approaches to reading the composite chart could also be translated into the
context of interpreting event charts such as these. They have one tragic
flaw, however: it is exceedingly rare that two people are looking at their
watches when they first meet. Total strangers have little motivation to note
the time they meet—and even if we’re hearing the proverbial violins,
looking at our watches is usually the furthest thing from our minds! Thus,
very typically, this promising technique founders on the lack of accurate
data.
The Davison or “Relationship” Chart. We mentioned this technique
above. It’s another “real-time” chart, except that it’s set up for a place
exactly midway between the two birth places, and for a moment of time
exactly midway between the two birth dates. It has relevance and power.
We simply don’t find its message quite as trenchant as that of the composite
chart. We encourage you to explore it anyway if you find its logic
compelling.
By the way, even though it’s common to hear the Davison chart and the
relationship chart described as synonymous, there is a slight technical
distinction between them. In the true Davison chart, the space-and-time
midpoints are calculated based on a strict mathematical “mean” of the data,
whereas in the relationship chart, the spherical trigonometry of “Great
Circles” is used for establishing the place that lies midway between the two
birth places. The results are typically very close, so knowing which
technique is right is difficult. Our experience with these charts is too limited
to warrant a comment about which method is preferable.
The Coalescent Chart. Again, we have no experience here. What is a
coalescent chart? According to Matrix Software’s Winstar II program’s help
file, “Each planet in the coalescent chart is calculated from a different
harmonic, which is a result of the angular difference of the two positions of
that planet in the two charts being compared. The resultant harmonic
number is multiplied by the degree number of either person’s planet (the
result will be the same) to arrive at the degree of the coalescent planet.” If
you can figure out what that means, go ahead and give it a try! As usual,
our aim is to write about what we do know, and refrain from commenting
on the rest.
Chapter 2
A Few Examples
L et’s look at some composite charts, just so you can see what we’re
talking about. A picture is worth a thousand words.
First, we’d like to tell you about our sources. Couples’ meeting places
were researched on the Internet and come from official websites, bios or
interviews. All the birth data for the charts we use in this book have a
Rodden Rating of “A” or higher, with the exception of Duke Ellington’s
chart, which has a Rodden Rating of “C.”
What are Rodden Ratings? The late astrologer Lois Rodden spent the last
40 years of her life collecting birth data for other astrologers. Mark
McDonough, president of AstroDataBank Company, worked with Lois for
six years to organize her data into a vast CD-ROM database, distributed as a
software product, “Lois Rodden’s Astro-Databank” We love it for both
reference and research, not to mention those late night dinners with our
astro-buddies when we get a sudden urge to look up someone’s birth chart.
Here’s what Astro-Databank says about the Rodden Ratings:
“AA, A, and B data are the only data that should be used in
astrological studies. Data rated ‘AA’ (from birth certificate or birth
record) are the most accurate obtainable. Data rated ‘A’ (from
memory) are usually accurate, but there are exceptions. Politicians and
entertainers are notorious for giving misleading birth dates and times,
except when consulting their astrologer. ‘B’ data (from biographies)
are similarly accurate because authors who give times are likely to
have obtained the data from the subject, the subject’s immediate
family, or from a birth record.
Data rated ‘C’ (caution) are not reliable, since they have no direct
link to their source. In all cases where there is no source or data
classification, the data can only be considered hypothetical. Similarly,
data that is quoted ‘from The Mountain Astrologer magazine’ or ‘from
Rodden’ is a quote from a reference and not a direct source. Where
did these reference sources get the data? If that is not known, these
data must be given a data source of ‘original source not known’ and a
Rodden Rating of ‘C.’ All rectified data are also rated ‘C.’ Some
astrologers consider rectified times more accurate than birth times.
Unfortunately, there is no consensus on how to rectify birth times.
Thus, one astrologer’s ultra-accurate rectified time may contradict
another astrologer’s ultra-accurate rectified time. Until there is a
standard and proven rectification method, you should treat all rectified
data with caution.”
Other Rodden Ratings are: DD, “dirty data,” with two conflicting
sources; X, data with no time of birth; and XX, data without a known or
confirmed date. But again, everything we’re using is rated “AA” or “A,”
except for Duke Ellington’s birthchart’s Rodden rating of “C.” Ellington’s
chart was rectified from an approximate time by the late well-known
astrologer and author Ronald Davison (inventor of the Davison chart), and
we would tend to trust his work.
Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn
Duke Ellington was born to middle-class African-American parents on
April 29, 1899 at 1:25 a.m. in Washington, DC. Please see his birthchart,
following. His official website (www.dukeellington.com) says: “By the
time of his passing, he was considered amongst the world’s greatest
composers and musicians. The French government honored him with their
highest award, the Legion of Honor, while the government of the United
States bestowed upon him the highest civil honor, the Presidential Medal of
Freedom. He played for the royalty and for the common people and by the
end of his 50-year career, he had played over 20,000 performances
worldwide.”
That description hardly captures the grace and presence of Ellington’s
Venus-ruled Taurean Sun, nor the cool, enigmatic, urbane demeanor of his
Aquarian Ascendant and Moon-Saturn conjunction in Sagittarius. He all but
epitomized the style and elegance of the Big Band era. In his teens he began
to dress with such precocious flare that he was nicknamed “Duke,” and the
name stuck. His middle school taught flawless manners as a point of pride,
and that manners could help carry the students past prejudice.
Duke Ellington, April 29, 1899, 1:25 am, Washington, DC
Later, that style and those manners would help Ellington move at ease
among all walks of life, social classes, types of musicians—and help land
him numerous gigs. We do well to learn to use our second house planets as
resources, and Ellington had both Venus and Mercury in Aries in the second
house.
He soaked up influences and inspiration from anywhere and everywhere,
wrote incessantly and composed over 900 songs—third house Sun, and a
Moon-Saturn conjunction’s need for achievement. He was a team leader—
eleventh house Moon-Saturn conjunction—whose band produced polished
performances, even when some of them were subject to various forms of
anti-social behavior and bickering. With each individual player in mind, he
wrote parts that made all their solos shine (Aquarian Ascendant and
eleventh house Moon). His band played all over the world—eleventh house
Sagittarian Moon again—and with such jazz luminaries as Miles Davis,
Cab Calloway, Dizzy Gillespie, Ella Fitzgerald, Tony Bennett and Louis
Armstrong.
Yet Ellington was very much his own person. His mother, Daisy
Ellington, told him he was blessed and special. Many mothers feel that way
about their children. Yet Daisy also told Duke that he must allow nothing to
stop him, that he must ignore all the supposed barriers and naysayers
around him, and that he could do anything anyone else could do—heady
and daring advice for an African-American child born in the Washington,
D.C. of 1899, and perfect for Ellington’s Aquarian ascendant. His
granddaughter, Mercedes Ellington, has said that the highest compliment
Duke paid was to call someone was “beyond categories,” because he hated
labels and categories of any sort (Aquarian Ascendant). He wrote some
groundbreaking work, including “Black, Brown and Beige: A Tone Parallel
to the History of the Negro in America,” an orchestral piece in three
movements. That work may sound tame by today’s standards, but its first
performance was a smashing success in the very different climate of
January, 1943 (Aquarian ascendant ruled by a tenth house Uranus).
His granddaughter Mercedes also said that, musically, Duke’s genius
must have led him to feel lonely and isolated, and that meeting Billy
Strayhorn must have been a great joy for them both. Strayhorn’s chart
follows.
Strayhorn and Ellington were very different. When the confident
Ellington was still a teenager, he dropped out of school, formed his own
band, and used to send a friend ahead to his gigs to announce “Make way
for the Duke!” But the conservatory-trained Strayhorn was shy as a young
man, later becoming warm and gregarious, but remaining very modest and
unassuming. We suspect that his humility may have come from his Sun and
Venus in his second house, the house where we’re learning about self-
esteem, as well as from his Virgo Moon. Yet his Moon’s tenth house
placement and conjunction to his Scorpio Ascendant’s co-ruler, Mars in
Leo, must have made him yearn to excel at his work, despite his self-
effacement. He probably loved to perform, too, with a fifth house Piscean
Jupiter, yet Strayhorn didn’t cut anything like Ellington’s imposing figure;
he was short, slight and bespectacled.

Billy Strayhorn, November 29, 1915, 4:15am, Dayton, OH

When he met Ellington at one of his performances in Pittsburgh in


December 1938, the twenty-three-year-old Strayhorn had been playing the
local music scene for years, but still had a day job as a drugstore clerk. The
fortyish Ellington was so impressed with Strayhorn’s rendition of Duke’s
“Sophisticated Lady,” as well as with Strayhorn’s own compositions, that
he asked the young man to visit him in New York City. Strayhorn composed
a piece inspired by Ellington’s directions to his apartment: “Take the A
Train.” It would become world famous as Ellington’s band’s theme song.
Although neither man was certain exactly what Strayhorn’s role would
be, he joined Ellington’s band, and within a year had made himself
indispensable arranging, composing, and covering the piano chair if
Ellington needed it done. They were collaborators for almost 30 years,
devoted to one another, their music, and Ellington’s band. Strayhorn learned
so fast—first house Mercury—and their musical styles had melded so
seamlessly that today’s scholars say that Strayhorn’s role has been
underestimated, and that it’s hard to tell who actually wrote what.
That’s what scholars think. What did the poised and self-contained
Ellington think? He said, “Billy Strayhorn was my right arm, my left arm,
and all the eyes in the back of my head. My brainwaves are in his head and
his in mine.” Volume Seven of Ken Burns’s Jazz documentary has some
remarkable footage of Ellington talking about Strayhorn. To paraphrase that
footage, Ellington said that he might be on the road in Los Angeles and get
stuck on something he was composing, and rather than tough it out, he’d
phone “Strays.” Ellington would say that he was doing something in E flat,
and he had a guy walking up a road and didn’t know if the guy should turn
right or left or do a U turn. First, Strayhorn would say, “Oh yes, I know
what you mean” (empathic Scorpio Ascendant), and then “I’m sure that you
could do that better than I” (the humility of the Virgo Moon and the second
house Sun and Venus). But, added Ellington, looking both amused and
respectful, all the while Strayhorn was thinking how he could outdo
Ellington (Strayhorn’s Moon-Mars conjunction, and Mars in Leo in the
tenth house square his first house Scorpio Mercury). Then the two of them
would discuss the piece for a while and come up with virtually the same
solution, simultaneously.
You’ll find their composite chart on the following page. The entity
formed by their relationship was a second house Aquarian with a Sun-
Venus conjunction and with Venus also conjunct Mercury, the Sun trine a
tenth house Libra Moon, and Sagittarius rising with Uranus and Jupiter
conjunct in Capricorn in the first house. First, their composite Sun is in
Aquarius, whose archetypes are the Exile, the Truth-sayer, the Non-
conformist, and the Genius. Given the phenomenal quality and quantity of
their music, the archetype of the Genius makes a lot of sense here, and
that’s certainly how Ellington is regarded.

Composite: Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn, Pittsburgh, PA

The natural expression of this relationship breaks the rules and thinks
outside of the box. What rules did they break? That’s hard to say from a
distance, but one comes to mind: “relationships should always be totally
equal in every possible way.” Strayhorn, a virtually equal collaborator,
seemed quite content to let Ellington be the star. Ellington had the big
name. Ellington was “the guy.” That inequality in their relative fame must
have come in part from the difference in their ages, and from the fact that
Ellington was already well-known when he met Strayhorn. For all we know,
they had bitter disagreements over calling the band “The Duke Ellington
Orchestra.” But we doubt that was the case. Feuding musicians generally
don’t collaborate as well and as seamlessly and for as long as these two did,
nor take such pleasure in their work together. And here’s a strong response
to that second house Sun: they had confidence in their work together,
confidence in the relationship, confidence in one another. Mutual affection
was there too; their composite Sun was conjunct Venus in Aquarius, the
goddess of love and the creative arts in the sign of the Genius. Shared
creativity fed their relationship. Their communication must have helped
facilitate the composing process, with Mercury also conjunct Venus. And
what a Mercury in Aquarius way Ellington used to describe that process: he
had “a guy walking down the road and didn’t know if the guy should turn
right or left or do a U turn. ”
What about their composite Libran Moon? Libra is a Venus-ruled sign,
and the heart of their relationship was in the arts, in their music. The music
of that period was quintessentially Libran, too: stylish, polished, elegant and
balanced. Bands wore suits; singers wore sequined gowns. Sophistication
mattered. Their composite Moon was in the tenth house, and they shared a
Libran public identity through performing their music with their orchestra.
Here’s a classic good response to the composite tenth house Moon: finding
the right work for each person and supporting one another in that work. The
acclaim that their music earned must have been profoundly gratifying to
them, too.
All that performing involved a lot of traveling, which must have
nourished their composite Sagittarian Ascendant, the mask of the gypsy. A
couple with this composite Ascendant needs to take risks, to take leaps of
faith, to engage fully and heartily with life and not be Sister Prudence—all
the more so with the chart ruler Jupiter in the first house and conjunct
Uranus. Ellington took a risk inviting Strayhorn to visit him in New York
City on the strength of one meeting, and Strayhorn took a risk in going, and
in writing “Take the A Train” to take with him. In the light of their
composite Sagittarian Ascendant, that tune takes on a whole new meaning!
Arnold and Maria
Let’s look at another composite chart, that of Arnold Schwarzenegger and
Maria Shriver. Schwarzenegger was born on July 30, 1947 at 4:10 a.m. in
Graz, Austria. Shriver was born on November 6, 1955 at 5:12 p.m. in
Chicago, IL. They met at a tennis match in Forest Hills, NY. Please see their
birthcharts and composite chart on pages 30, 31 and 32.
Schwarzenegger is a second house Leo with a Sun-Saturn-Pluto
conjunction, a sixth house Capricorn Moon, and Cancer rising with
Mercury conjunct the Ascendant and Venus in Cancer in the first house. A
weaker response to his Sun-Saturn-Pluto second house stellium could have
left him insecure and lacking in confidence, and a weaker response to his
sixth house Capricorn Moon could have him feeling underemployed,
subservient and somehow lesser than his colleagues. He’s said to have been
a rather shy boy—Cancer Ascendant. However, whatever one may think of
Schwarzenegger’s politics or personality, he’s now a strong-willed, self-
made man, who’s used Saturnian shrewdness and persistence and Plutonian
insight, as well as Leonine presence and Venusian charm, to get where he is
today.
Arnold Schwartzenegger, June 30, 1947, 4:10 am, Graz, Austria
Longtime friends have said that his childhood goals were to move to
America, become an actor and marry a Kennedy. To those ends, he trained
as a bodybuilder despite his parents’ opposition. When his father said he
could go to the gym only three times a week, Arnold built a gym at home.
Here’s his sixth house Capricorn Moon finding a way around the obstacle:
if he couldn’t go to the tools, he’d bring the tools to him. After a string of
victorious European bodybuilding competitions, in 1968 he moved to
America, as he’d planned, with a duffel bag of clothes and about twenty
dollars. He could barely speak English. Placing second in his first American
Mr. Universe competition in 1968 galled him, despite his various
international wins (Leo Sun), so he trained harder (Sun-Saturn conjunction
and sixth house Capricorn Moon) and won Mr. Universe in 1970 for the
first of seven times, defeating one of his boyhood idols, Reg Park.
Schwarzenegger has said: “It is one thing to idolize heroes. It is quite
another to visualize yourself in their place. When I saw great people, I said
to myself, ‘I can be there.’ (sixth house Capricorn Moon)
In 1970, he got his first movie role. Although it got off to a rocky start
from his accent and his last name, his acting career continued. In 1977, his
autobiography, Arnold Schwarzenegger: The Education of a Bodybuilder
was a big success, probably helped by his role as himself in 1974’s
Pumping Iron. Note that first house Mercury and publication—although
becoming an author hadn’t been on his list of goals, it certainly helped him
accomplish them. In 1978 he met Maria Shriver, the niece of John F.
Kennedy, Robert Kennedy and Teddy Kennedy. The attraction was
immediate. He’s supposed to have told her mother, Eunice Kennedy
Shriver, “Your daughter has a great body.” That Sun-Pluto conjunction is
not hesitant about potentially charged statements!
Maria Shriver is a sixth house Scorpio with a Sun-Saturn conjunction, a
fourth house Leo Moon and Taurus rising. With five planets in the sixth
house, a Sun-Saturn conjunction, and her primal triad all in fixed signs, she
was extremely serious and focused about her work, and she’d set goals of
her own. She wanted to become a network news anchor by the time she was
thirty, and she wasn’t in a big hurry to get married. Moreover, she admired
her parents’ marriage and wanted a strong marriage of her own: fourth
house Leo Moon.
Maria has said that she was pretty sure when she met Arnold that she
would marry him. On the day they met, she asked him to spend a weekend
with her family at the Kennedy Family Compound in Cape Cod (fourth
house Leo Moon—she introduced him to the clan right away). She liked
Arnold and so did her family; they all thought he was funny and unaffected,
and she admired his drive—that much fixity can recognize a person of
equal resolve.
Maria Shriver, November 06, 1955, 5:12 pm, Chicago, IL

Arnold liked her intelligence and willingness to speak her mind. But she
was on a career track, moving up in her profession. In 1985, she got the
anchor job on the CBS Morning News. She and Arnold married in 1986
after an eight-year courtship, long by today’s standards, but quite natural for
two goal-oriented and careful Saturn types. She kept working in high-
profile jobs for CBS and NBC until Arnold’s victory in the California
gubernatorial election.
Composite: Maria Shriver and Arnold Schwartzenegger,
Forest Hills, NY
Their composite chart is a fourth house Virgo with a Sun-Venus
conjunction, a fifth house Moon-Neptune conjunction in Libra, and Gemini
rising. The composite Sun in Virgo isn’t surprising for two such hard-
working people. This couple needs to grow, both as individuals and as a
couple. They’ll relish and should support anything that promotes their
personal or professional growth. Even so, they need to avoid too much
critical nit-picking. To that end, even if they don’t work together, it would
be wise for them to have some ways in which they can serve their larger
community. Shriver comes from a political family, and Schwarzenegger’s
been elected to office. They have both worked extensively in front of
cameras. Arnold’s been the honorary weight-lifting coach for the Special
Olympics, founded by Maria’s mother, since shortly after they met.
Moreover, their composite Sun is in the fourth house. They need a home, a
hearth, a fastness where they can retreat from all the details of their busy
lives, a sense of being rooted in one place. They also need a sense of
extended family. The couple has four children, and Schwarzenegger
married into the close-knit Kennedy family. We don’t know how the couple
feels about living in Sacramento versus Los Angeles, but we’re sure that
they’d do well to have some land where they felt profoundly at home and
where they and their relatives can “nest.” They have a Sun-Venus
conjunction, often seen in the composite charts of couples who are either in
love, engaged in creative work together, or both. Remember their
immediate mutual attraction, despite their natal Sun-Saturn caution? This
conjunction is also often seen in the charts of people who are close friends.
A couple with a Sun-Venus conjunction simply likes, as well as loves, one
another, and the balm of that Venusian fondness can be applied to many a
rough spot.
Meanwhile, their Moon-Neptune conjunction in Libra reflects not only
the glamour that surrounds them, but also their ability to work through their
differences. Arnold’s a Republican and Maria is a Democrat, from what
amounts to a Democratic dynasty. Each needs to feel reciprocated in what
he or she gives to the other and to the relationship. Shriver wasn’t enthralled
with the idea of Schwarzenegger’s running for governor, but she has said
that when she realized how much he believed in it and wanted to do it, she
wanted to be as supportive of him as he’d always been supportive of her
and her career.
Their children are natural teachers for one of the needs of their fifth
house Moon: the ability to play. Hard-working though their composite
Virgo Sun is, they need some time for inspired silliness, and relaxation or
creativity as its own reward. With their composite Moon in the house of
romance, they also need to remain wonderfully attentive to each other.
Their composite Ascendant in Gemini indicates a need for a lively,
interesting life together, not just busy-ness for its own sake. Their high
comfort level with the media is a big plus here, as are Arnold’s focus on
education and Maria’s news programs. In a joint TV appearance on Oprah,
they were poised and articulate. Shriver has said that when they met, she
thought she would have a challenging life with him, and an interesting one.
That’s grist for the mill for a composite Ascendant in Gemini.
Nicolas and Patricia
The third composite chart we’ll examine here is that of actors Nicolas Cage
and Patricia Arquette. They met in the late 1980s and dated briefly, then
met again in 1995 and married shortly thereafter. They divorced amicably
in 2001, have remained friends, and speak respectfully of one another.
Please see their birthcharts and composite charts on pages 36, 37 and 38.
Born January 7, 1964 at 5:30 a.m. in Harbor City, CA, Nicolas Cage is a
first house Capricorn with a wide Mercury-Sun-Mars conjunction, a tenth
house Libra Moon, and Sagittarius rising.
Nicolas Cage, January 7, 1964, 5:30 am, Harbor City, CA
Cage is the nephew of Francis Ford Coppola, but wanted to prove he
could succeed without the famous name, so he changed his last name to
Cage in 1983 (a self-willed first house Capricorn Sun-Mars: accomplishing
the Capricorn “great work” alone). We were amused to read that his first
successful role was in childhood, when he pretended to be his own “Cousin
Roy” in order to menace a bully who’d been taking his snacks (first house
Capricorn Sun-Mars again).
Cage studied acting as a teenager and dropped out of high school for
acting work; there’s the Sagittarian Ascendant’s taste for experience, as well
as the first house Capricorn Sun’s drive and focus. He’s been drawn to
“Method” acting, which involves the actor’s creating as complete a
biography of his character as possible, to help him identify with the
character (tenth house Libra Moon) and therefore more fully embody the
role. He’s taken some unusual parts as eccentric characters in quirkish
films, rather than parts that would seem to make the most sense for his
career track—that’s a tenth house Moon decision, to take a part because you
feel like doing it. He’s quite willing to experiment (Sagittarian Ascendant,
and Venus in Aquarius). He likes to improvise; director David Lynch calls
him the “jazz musician of acting” (Sagittarian Ascendant, first house
Mercury, and Venus in Aquarius). Cage likes classic sports cars (Sagittarian
Ascendant and Sun-Mars conjunction) and comic books, which he says are
modern mythology (Sagittarius Ascendant again).
Patricia Arquette was born on April 8, 1968, at 11:55 a.m. in New York
City. She’s a tenth house Aries with a first house Leo Moon and Leo rising.
Saturn conjuncts her Sun from her ninth house.
Also from a family of actors or those in acting-related professions, she
grew up in a commune in northern Virginia (tenth house Aries Sun; she
probably had a public identity in the community through her family’s
commune, even at that age). At age fifteen she ran away from home (a
gutsy triple Fire primal triad) to move in with her older sister, fellow actress
Rosanna Arquette (the first house Moon tends to stay connected to family).
By age 18 she was getting acting roles (tenth house Aries Sun and Mars).
She has great range as an actress, able to move easily from comedy to
drama to terror (first house Leo Moon, and Venus in Pisces). She’s also
truthful and direct (Aries Sun, first house Moon) and says her acting goal is
to work on movies that she really likes. She’s also said that she wants to be
the sort of artist who takes risky projects—Mars in Taurus in the tenth
house. She has a nurturing side, too (first house Moon), handing out poison
ivy remedies on the set, and being involved in the search for a cure for
breast cancer since she lost her mother to it in 1997.
Nicolas Cage, January 7, 1964, 5:30 am, Harbor City, CA
The couple’s composite chart is a fifth house Pisces with a Sun-Venus
conjunction, and Mars and Saturn (in the sixth house) widely conjunct
Venus, Libra rising and a twelfth house Moon-Uranus-Pluto conjunction in
Virgo. With that Piscean fifth house stellium and a Libran Ascendant, we
can expect these two to have a highly romantic story (and one that perhaps
would be hard to live up to, given the inevitable Saturnian realities of day-
to-day living . . . ) With their composite Moon-Uranus contact, we can also
expect that story to be an unconventional one, and with Mars’s involvement
in the composite fifth house Piscean stellium, perhaps an impulsive one.
When they met in a Los Angeles deli, Cage was so smitten with Arquette
that he told her he loved her and was going to marry her. She turned him
down. Undaunted, he asked her for a quest, for things he could do to prove
his love for her—composite fifth house Sun-Venus-Mars in Pisces! She
thought he was a little strange, but took a napkin and made a list of dragons
he would have to slay, including getting her J.D. Salinger’s autograph and a
black orchid. He began working his way through the list, buying a Salinger
letter and spray-painting an orchid black (there are no black ones in nature).
At that point she agreed to go on a trip with him, but not to marry him. Still,
she got unnerved and broke it off within a few weeks. They dated other
people, and Nicolas had a son, Weston, with actress Christina Fulton.
Composite: Nicolas Cage and Patricia Arquette, Los Angeles, CA

Cage and Arquette ran into each other in 1995, eight years after their first
meeting, and in the same deli where they’d first met (fifth house Piscean
stellium goose-bump material!). Not long afterwards, she called him and
proposed, and they got married on her twenty-seventh birthday.
They lived in a fake castle with Gothic decor—composite Moon-Uranus-
Pluto conjunction in Virgo. Again, although they divorced in 2001, they
refer to each other respectfully and affectionately and have remained
friends.
Chapter 3
The Eternal Triangle
I t’s the year 2100. National defense claims larger and larger portions of
every country’s budget. Communication exists but could be improved.
Arms talks and peace talks accomplish little. The deadlock frustrates the
politicians as much as the populace, but no one knows how to get out of the
impasse. Then one day, astronomers pick up signals from approaching
extraterrestrials, ordering us to surrender . . .
If we didn’t panic in such a situation, it would be hard to imagine
something more likely to unite us, force us to work out our differences and
introduce change and growth into our relationship.
Couples operate the same way. A dyad, a system with two parts, can
easily become locked into polarization. “You say yes; I’ll say no. You want
a schedule; I want to be spontaneous. You want to sleep with the window
shut; I want to sleep with it open.” The tendency for partners to drift into
that combat zone is powerful, and damaging if allowed to continue
unchecked.
No need to wait for the spaceships to arrive. In synastry, the third force is
the dynamics of the relationship itself, represented by the composite chart.
Ideally the composite chart helps cast a tie-breaking vote, assisting in the
resolution of conflicts between two people. It functions as a mediating
entity.
Sometimes the nature of that composite chart aligns itself with one or the
other person, and sometimes with neither of them. A variety of different
“political” situations can arise, depending on the inclination of the
composite chart. Maybe the “extraterrestrial force” backs one side. Perhaps
it terrorizes both parties, inciting a stampede out of the partnership, much as
Orson Welles’s radio broadcast of H. G. Wells’s War of the Worlds
provoked a panic-stricken exodus of listeners who believed that Martians
really were invading the Earth.
Let’s examine a few of those political balances of power formed between
two birthcharts and their composite chart. We’ll take some imaginary,
constructed examples, and some real ones. Please remember, however, that
few composite charts fall precisely into the following categories. They are
intended only as general guidelines to help you organize your analysis.
Culture Shock
Vickie is a fourth-house Cancer with a Cancer Moon and Pisces rising.
She’s a reserved, gentle young woman who raises award-winning orchids.
Much of her time is tranquilly spent in a fragrant greenhouse, coaxing
incredible blooms from her plants. At an orchid show, Vickie meets Nathan
when their flowers tie for first prize. Nathan owns a greenhouse fifty miles
away; he’s a twelfth-house Capricorn with Pisces rising and a first-house
Pisces Moon. These dreamy, introverted people are surprised and pleased
when they strike up a friendship that quickly deepens into love. But their
friends are flabbergasted when Vickie and Nathan take a safari down the
Amazon together in search of rare orchid specimens. Six months ago, the
prospect of even getting the shots needed for such a journey would have
traumatized them. What happened?
Vickie and Nathan’s composite chart shows the Sun and Moon both in
Aries and the first house, with Aries rising. The logic of their relationship
itself demands that they as a couple share adventurous experiences, face
challenges, and enthusiastically engage themselves with life. Fourth-house
Cancer or twelfth-house Capricorn experiential food, which would sustain
them as individuals, will starve them as a steady diet if they stay together.
But if Vickie forces herself to live in a gung-ho world that is completely
alien to her, she will feel crazy, cut off from her fourth-house Cancer center
—just as crazy as Nathan will feel if he bends over backward to live a
lifestyle equally foreign to his twelfth-house Capricorn energy.
Their composite chart, wildly at odds with their birthcharts, shows that
Vickie and Nathan are in Culture Shock. To maintain that kind of bond
requires incredible adjustments from both partners. Can such a couple stay
together? Certainly, if each person is willing to make those compromises,
and if their lives are structured so that each person has enough time alone to
be able to recharge. It’s difficult to stay sane when cut off for too long from
the experiences symbolized by one’s birthchart.
Couples in Culture Shock need three kinds of experiences, one kind for
each partner and one for the couple itself. In our example, Vickie might take
time alone in her greenhouse, Nathan on the road to orchid shows, and the
two of them together on those Arian safaris. Each type of experience—his,
hers, and that of the couple—should be granted equal importance for the
happiness of Vickie, Nathan, and their relationship.
If you and your mate are in Culture Shock, recognize that too much
togetherness is not what you need. Be generous about allotting one another
“space,” autonomy, separate friends, hobbies, vacations, or apartments. But
be sure to create an area in your lives where you participate together in the
experiences indicated by the composite chart, or your bond will not be fed.
Value the gift of Culture Shock: it can keep you from becoming too set in
your ways.
The Nicolas Cage-Patricia Arquette composite chart, discussed in the
previous chapter, is an example of Culture Shock. Cage has a first house
Capricorn Sun conjunct Mars and Mercury, a tenth house Libra Moon and
Sagittarius rising. He needs to accomplish Capricornian Great Works that
will involve courage, will-power, following his own choices without being
swayed by a need for approval, and possibly leadership (Sun-Mars
conjunction in Capricorn in the first house—this must be a bit like living in
the head of a hammer!). He has an emotional need for a career where he can
express himself subjectively and artistically, quite possibly while working
with others (tenth house Libra Moon). He has a big appetite for new
experiences and adventures (Sagittarius rising and a first house Mercury).
Meanwhile, Arquette is a tenth house Aries with a first house Leo Moon
and Leo rising. She needs to develop courage and spirit and take risks in the
area of life we call career and public identity, where her vocation,
astrologically, is Warrior, Heroine, Pioneer and Daredevil. All of the above
is also supported by her Sun’s ruler, her tenth house Mars. She has the
emotional needs of the Performer—all the creativity and the need for
positive feedback—and needs to learn to act on her feelings (first house
Moon) and follow her gut. Her initial presentation (Ascendant) should be
warm, demonstrative, soulful and heart-centered, whereas Cage’s should be
gypsy-ish, articulate, strong, daring and willful.
Are you sensing some similarities? Here are two self-willed, gutsy,
accomplishment-oriented, creative people.
Yet their composite chart has a fifth house Pisces Sun-Venus conjunction,
with Venus also conjunct Mars and Saturn in the sixth house, Libra rising,
and a twelfth house Moon-Uranus-Pluto conjunction. With the Piscean Sun
and twelfth house Moon, their relationship needs a basis in mysticism, in
silent, shared meditative space, in time spent perceiving the Divinity in one
another. Time to free-float in inner space. Time “touching souls,” as Joni
Mitchell would say. Certainly there’s romantic, knight-in-shining-armor
energy here, with Venus and Mars in the stellium, and with Libra rising.
Their fifth house composite Sun needs to maintain that romantic energy, to
maintain a sense of cherishing and wonder. It needs as much of a fairy-tale
romance as possible. Yet even with their fairy tale-ish beginning, and with
their composite Virgo Moon’s need to express competence echoing their
individual charts, and with all the best intentions in the world, their
relationship may have been difficult for them to maintain, even without the
fishbowl of Hollywood added to the mix. Why? Because this is Culture
Shock. Simply put: how long can a first house Capricorn Sun-Mercury-
Mars, and a tenth house Aries Sun, inhabit a fifth house Pisces Sun and
twelfth house Moon composite “space” together without each person’s
feeling depleted and needing a time out?
Their bond must have been very strong. They’ve remained friends, and
Arquette has said, “He is (a man) I have . . . really, really respected . . . I
believe in him in this greater sort of forever, dignity and nobility way.”
The Feudal System
Will is a fifth-house Gemini with a Leo Moon and Aquarius rising. Linda is
a Taurus with a Cancer Moon and Sagittarius rising. Their composite chart
shows a fifth-house Gemini Sun, a Leo Moon, and an Aquarian Ascendant.
In other words, their composite chart looks much like Will’s birthchart.
Since they’ve been together, Linda has become uneasy about how Will
“always gets what he wants.” Linda wants to move to the West Coast; Will
wants to stay in the East. Will lands a great job in the town where they live;
his mother in the next county contracts a chronic disease, and Linda’s job
offer out west falls through. They abandon all thoughts of moving west.
Then Linda wants to rent an old house in a quiet residential neighborhood
north of town. Will promotes moving into a luxury condominium now and
selling it in a few years. The house that Linda wants to rent is partially
destroyed by a freak tornado, then Will wins a condo in a radio contest.
Beginning to appreciate that Linda might feel uneasy? That can happen
when the composite chart resembles one partner’s chart much more than the
other’s. When does that occur? There are no hard and fast rules, but keep
the following guidelines in mind. When two or more signs in the
composite’s primal triad are the same as those in one person’s chart,
regardless of whether the Sun, the Moon or the Ascendant occupy those
signs, that configuration constitutes a strong resemblance between the
composite and that one person’s chart. If a stellium in a particular house in
one person’s birthchart reappears in the same house in the composite chart,
the two charts also resemble each other, although not so much as in the first
case. If an individual_s chart and the composite chart both lack any planets
in one of the elements, there is a certain, fainter correspondence between
them. In general, the more astrological configurations that the composite
chart has in common with one of the couple’s charts, and the more that the
composite chart gives you the same feeling as one of the partner’s charts,
then the greater the resemblance between the two.
Such a partnership works like the Feudal System. There is a
concentration of power in favor of the individual whose chart the composite
resembles, as if life unfairly, arbitrarily gives one person every right and
privilege, leaving nothing for the other person. The experiences that one
person needs are precisely those that the relationship requires, and events
tend to occur in such a way that what happens in the couple is what the
“sovereign” wants, and the “serf” feels powerless.
A relationship with a Feudal System composite can be very touchy. The
serf can accuse the sovereign of deliberately tyrannical behavior. Sadly,
there may be truth in that accusation. Feudal System sovereigns rarely start
out with the intention of controlling the partnership. However, the
composite chart, the logic of the entity itself, favors the sovereign, and it
takes a very conscious person not to abuse that power.
If you’re the sovereign in such a couple, strive to become that conscious!
Make every effort to consider your mate’s point of view, to yield. Share
your power. Such compromise creates positive outcomes: trust, openness,
willing commitment and participation. Sovereigns can be benevolent when
they recognize where their bread is buttered.
“Power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely,” according to
the proverb. But in the Feudal System composite, the sovereign does not
have absolute power. The serf can always walk out. If you’re the serf,
remember that, but don’t threaten it constantly, and don’t give way to
paranoia, subversion, and passive aggression. Assert yourself reasonably.
Distinguish between the flow of events and your mate’s premeditated
actions. Aim for a democracy. And if you’re positive that your mate will
persist in taking advantage of the composite, claiming a mile when
circumstances give him or her an inch, recognize that you are not trapped in
the Feudal System. You can always leave.
We think that Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn’s composite chart is an
example of the Feudal System, and that Ellington and Strayhorn dealt with
it well. Ellington was a third house Taurus with an eleventh house Moon-
Saturn conjunction in Sagittarius, and Aquarius rising. Strayhorn was a
second house Sagittarian with a tenth house Virgo Moon, and Scorpio
rising. Ellington was poised, sophisticated, independent, curious, extremely
observant, hard-working, a leader and a genius. Strayhorn was friendly,
convivial, communicative, ambitious and devoted to excellence at his craft,
but unassuming, and probably prey to some insecurities. His Scorpio
Ascendant probably made him more direct and intense than Ellington’s
cooler Aquarian surface.
Their composite was a second house Aquarian with a Sun-Venus
conjunction, Mercury conjunct that Venus, a tenth house Libra Moon, and
Sagittarius rising. Therefore, two signs out of the three in Ellington’s natal
chart, with its Sagittarian Moon and Aquarian Ascendant. were the same as
in the composite chart, with its Aquarian Sun and Sagittarian Ascendant.
That configuration indicates the Feudal System, with the composite
resembling Ellington more than Strayhorn.
This makes sense given the dynamics of their relationship. They
confidently and prolifically (second house Sun) wrote (Sun-Mercury) and
performed (Sun-Venus, and tenth house Libra Moon) works of musical
genius together (Sun-Venus in Aquarius), often traveling to do so
(Sagittarian Ascendant). Strayhorn held his own musically, yet blended in;
Ellington was the band leader and the household word. However, Strayhorn
is represented in their composite too, since he has a Sagittarian Sun, in the
second house like the composite’s Sun. Moreover, the interaspects between
the two men would encourage Ellington to be a “good King:” his Moon-
Saturn conjunction conjuncts Strayhorn’s Venus, and his Sun conjuncts
Strayhorn’s seventh house cusp and opposes Strayhorn’s Ascendant.
Democracy
Christine has a fourth house Scorpio Sun, a tenth house Aries Moon, and
Cancer rising. Sam has an eighth house Taurus Sun, a ninth house Gemini
Moon, and Libra rising. Their composite shows an eleventh house Cancer
Sun, a ninth house Taurus Moon, and Virgo rising. Christine’s Cancer
Ascendant is represented in the composite chart by the composite Sun in
Cancer. Sam’s Taurus Sun is represented by the composite’s Taurus Moon,
and the composite’s ninth house Moon echoes Sam’s ninth house Moon.
The composite’s Virgo Ascendant is reminiscent of Christine’s tenth house
Moon—that is, both positions have something to do with meaningful work.
Neither Christine’s chart nor Sam’s dominate this composite, and they both
find common ground in it. We call this situation Democracy.
Democracy is easier to live with than either Culture Shock or the Feudal
System. Its dangers, however, are identical to those of the other two
patterns: components of each person’s nature that are not supported in the
composite chart may find that they have to struggle for recognition in the
relationship. If that happens, Democracy can turn into the tyranny of the
majority over the minority.
In our previous example, a composite chart with a peaceful
Cancer/Taurus/Virgo blend doesn’t contain much room for the expression of
Christine’s fiery Aries Moon, or Sam’s Gemini Moon with its need for
experience and stimulation. The couple must depend on their composite
ninth-house Moon to pull them out of any rut that starts to form. The
composite’s Cancer Sun also has to carry the intensity of Christine’s
Scorpio Sun and Sam’s eighth house Sun, without becoming hypersensitive
and shutting down risky but essential lines of communication.
If you’re in a Democracy, enjoy and make good use of the points of
harmony revealed by your composite chart, without disenfranchising parts
of you not directly represented by the composite. If those qualities still find
room for expression somewhere in your lives and in the relationship, they
are less likely to behave like anarchists sniping at the government.
Maria Shriver and Arnold Schwarzenegger’s composite chart is a fair
example of Democracy. He’s a second house Leo with a Sun-Saturn-Pluto
conjunction, a sixth house Capricorn Moon, and Cancer rising with
Mercury and Venus in the first house. Schwarzenegger is a strong, self-
willed, shrewd, charismatic, work-oriented, very determined and ambitious
man with a lot of charm in that gentler Cancer Ascendant. She’s a sixth
house Scorpio with a Sun-Saturn conjunction, a fourth house Leo Moon,
and Taurus rising. Shriver is intense, service-oriented, ambitious, persistent
and proud, with deep connections to her roots, home and family. Their
composite Sun-Venus conjunction, so often present in the charts of couples
and close friends, is in hardworking Virgo and in the family-oriented fourth
house.
They say they are both disciplinarians who want to raise their four
children to be kind, loving and appreciative, and to give something back to
society. Schwarzenegger and Shriver have been great supporters of one
another’s work. Some of that work has been media-oriented and some of it
educationally-oriented, with composite Gemini rising. And some of it’s
been creative, with their fifth house composite Libra Moon-Neptune
conjunction. Their composite fourth house Sun resonates with his Cancer
Ascendant and her fourth house Moon. Their composite Virgo Sun
resonates with their natal sixth house Moons and Sun-Saturn conjunctions.
Their strong composite fifth house finds a parallel in his Leo Sun and her
Leo Moon. Part of the challenge for them will be making enough time for
fifth house courtship behavior and “down” time, given their busy lives.
These three composite chart patterns—Culture Shock, the Feudal
System, and Democracy—are meant as guidelines to start you thinking
about the possible patterns of relationship among individual birthcharts and
the composites they form. Most situations probably resemble one pattern
more than another, but few pure examples of any type exist. As you work
with composites, you may well discover other patterns, too.
Regardless of what category the composite chart represents, we need to
add one more dimension to our thinking in order to complete the picture.
We must consider what aspects the composite_s planets make to each
individual_s charts.
Aspects Between the Composite and the Birthcharts
The composite chart describes the entity of the relationship itself. “Entity”
is a synonym for “ghost.” Ghosts typically haunt people; people seldom
haunt ghosts. When you consider the aspects between the composite chart
and the birthcharts, concentrate on the effect that the entity of the couple,
symbolized by their composite chart, has on the individual birthcharts.
Aspects made by the composite to the birthcharts describe that effect.
Aspects made by the birthcharts to the composite are not dismissable, but
greater weight should be assigned to the composite chart_s connections to
the birthcharts. The composite “entity” haunts the couple more than they
haunt it.
Rule One: When analyzing aspects between the composite and the two
birthcharts, pay more attention to the composite’s effect on the birthcharts
than vice versa.
Once you’ve absorbed Rule One, you can understand these interaspects
as you would any other. The difference is that the entity of the couple
solarizes Joe’s Moon or Jan’s Sun, rather than an individual’s doing so. If
Joe stays with Jan, he can expect that their life together will bring the lunar
side of his character into prominence (solarization). Meanwhile, Jan will
experience the core of her identity (Sun) as flooded with feelings and
images (lunarization) by her association with Joe.
Should you draw an interaspect diagram for all of the composite chart’s
planets and their impact on each birthchart? That’s up to you. The human
brain can only handle so much data without turning into spaghetti. If the
thought of laboring to calculate all those interaspects makes you wish you
had never heard of astrology, don_t do it. We suggest running your eyes
over all three charts, keeping alert for interaspects made by the composite’s
primal triad (Sun, Moon, and Ascendant), and Venus and Mars, at a
minimum. The primal triad is the heart of the composite chart, while Venus
and Mars say much about the couple’s relating style as a couple. If you can
deal with more information, take a look at interaspects made by the
composite’s Mercury and Saturn, which give clues about how each person
experiences the level of communication in their partnership (composite
Mercury), and the blockages they share or in which they collude (composite
Saturn). Add more planets as you feel capable of understanding them
without blowing your circuits.
Let’s look at some examples. The Changing Sky describes Gauguin and
Van Gogh’s turbulent friendship, which did not improve Van Gogh’s
precarious mental state. Their composite Sun conjuncts Van Gogh’s Saturn-
Uranus conjunction, enhancing his sense of struggling against limits or
being stymied in attempts at independence. Their composite Moon opposes
Van Gogh’sPluto-Uranus conjunction, adding a lunar, emotional, irrational
quality to Van Gogh’sexpression of these two outer planets. Among other
things, Pluto can feel like a voice saying “Your life is a joke,” and Uranus
can feel like a voice saying “To hell with everything; break away.” Van
Gogh had other responses available than those he made, but his friendship
with Gauguin made those voices louder.
Simone de Beauvoir and Jean-Paul Sartre both have Scorpio rising; so
does their composite chart. Their style (Ascendant) as a couple is much the
same as their individual self-presentations (Ascendants). Their lifelong
association required no adjustment of their masks (Ascendant). Comparison
of these three charts yields many aspects made by the composite to each
birthchart, indicating a great impact made by the relationship on both of
their lives.
Rosalynn Carter didn’t think she’d be able to make political speeches but
rose to the occasion while campaigning with her husband Jimmy. Their
composite Sun conjuncts Rosalynn’s Ascendant and her first-house Mars-
Venus conjunction, bringing out the charming (Venus) warrior (Mars) in her
mask (Ascendant). Their composite Mars falls on Rosalynn’s third house
Saturn, challenging (Mars) the communicative (third house) blockage
(Saturn) that she felt.
Pete Townshend and Roger Daltrey’scomposite Sun falls on
Townshend’s Venus-Mars conjunction, stimulating Townshend’s creative
(Venus) drive (Mars). Their composite Venus falls on Daltrey’s Sun; the
music they created together Venusified Daltrey’s retiring fourth house
Piscean nature, made it more attractive and noticeable. It also opposes
Townshend’s twelfth house Moon, drawing on his lunar depths for their art.
We’ve defined what a composite chart is, and looked at some examples.
Our next step is to discuss something vaster and more mysterious: the
souls’ history together.
Want to learn more about The Eternal Triangle? You may enjoy this
recorded lecture with Steven: The Composite Chart - The Eternal Triangle.
Chapter 4
The Lunar Nodes
H aven’t we all said the following words at some point:“I feel as if I’ve
known you before.” There’s a formal feeling we typically get around
total strangers, even congenial ones. And there is a loose and wide-open
feeling we get with people we’ve loved for a long time. The feelings are
easier to tell apart than night and day.
But sometimes that logic breaks down. Sometimes we meet someone and
immediately bypass five years of polite diplomatic negotiation. We are
friends, instantly. A bizarre, inexplicable familiarity arises. If our
orientation is metaphysical, we might say, “Lisbon, in 1492—right?”
Literally having known each other in a prior lifetime seems the most
obvious and compelling explanation.
Even if we’re not sure about reincarnation, the phenomenon itself
remains and begs for understanding. However we choose to explain it, there
it is. In both volumes of Skymates, we use reincarnational language, but if
you prefer to think in terms of some mysterious resonance between the
strands of two people’s DNA, that will work too, with a little translation.
All we really need to acknowledge is the common truth of human
experience: we all meet people whom we already seem to know better than
logic can explain.
This strange familiarity that exists between souls takes a lot of forms. It’s
not always a warm feeling. We take instant dislikes to people who’ve given
us no offense. We can feel threatened—or arrogantly superior. We can feel
dismissive of someone, or that we would give them the shirts off our backs.
We experience sexual attractions in circumstances ranging from
inappropriate to truly peculiar. Some people scare us—and we have no idea
why.
Clearly, these enigmatic attitudes do not always arise. But when they do,
we recognize them. It is a common human experience, shared by almost
everyone, but lying just across the border between our socially contracted
consensual reality, and the actual truth of life as we truly encounter it.
That feeling, when we do experience it between ourselves and a stranger,
is invariably reflected in one astrological symbol: the composite South
Node of the Moon.
The Dragon’s Tail
Halfway between your South Node and mine lies our composite South
Node—it is calculated by midpoints, exactly as we would calculate the
composite Mercury or Neptune. Like a planet, it falls in a house; it makes
aspects, and it has a planetary ruler according to the sign in which it falls.
Historically, it was given the poetic name, the Dragon’s Tail. And it is
always opposite the North Node, or the Dragon’s Head.
Now, you and Napoleon have a composite South Node. It’s a
mathematical construction, so it exists between any two charts. This does
not mean that you and Napoleon were kissing on the porch swing in a prior
lifetime! This leads to our first fundamental principle: Only take the South
Node seriously if the relationship itself is serious.
If two people become sexually or romantically attracted to each other,
even that is not a green light for reading the South Node. Maybe they
remind each other of mom or dad, and something psychological is
happening between them that doesn’t really have anything to do with
karma. Maybe their hormones are spiking that day. Maybe they’re just
lonely. Maybe convenience is colliding with opportunity. But if they stay
together for a few consecutive weekends, if the shock of sexual intimacy
doesn’t boot them out of each other’s orbits, it’s a good bet that they have
some kind of prior life link.
What kind of connection? Human relationships come in a lot of flavors.
Lovers tend to assume that they’ve been lovers before, and often they are
right—the exchange of sexual energy definitely sets karmic wheels turning.
But, as we will see, many other kinds of connections may have existed
previously between souls who share a bed in this lifetime—and, similarly,
souls manifesting as parents and children, or as friends, in this lifetime may
well have been Abelard and Heloise in a prior lifetime.
If we are sleeping together in this lifetime, learning that we were
brothers, for example, in a prior life can feel quite weird, but it’s all there in
the South Node. Ditto for learning that we may have killed each other.
What Reincarnates?
All the planets have South Nodes, and they all make reference to the past.
But it’s the Moon’s South Node we generally read. Why? There is actually
a simple answer. What survives the trauma of death and rebirth is not our
factual memory—not our “Mercury” memory, so to speak. It is our
emotional memory: the Moon memory. We carry an underlying mood or
attitude forward from the past, and only fragmentary knowledge at best of
names, details, history. You can see and feel that underlying mood in the
South Node of an individual birthchart, and you can see and feel it in the
underlying spirit of a relationship.
Imagine a child grievously abused. She grows up with the trauma
repressed—at a conscious level, she has no idea it happened. But
everywhere she goes she carries an attitude of shame, fear, suspicion, and
insecurity. It taints her relationships, her attitude toward her body, and her
self-image. You can feel the mood surrounding her like a cloud. And yet in
the Mercury sense, she “remembers nothing.” But the Moon carries the
memory intact, as perfect as a butterfly encased in glass. The heart’s
memory is stronger than death; the mind’s memory is not. That is precisely
how the Moon’s South Node works.
In all counseling work, there is an obvious case to be made for an upbeat,
supportive, positive approach. But with the South Node, a negative bias
permeates everything, and that’s completely appropriate. This can be a bit
of a stretch for astrologers with warm hearts, but here’s the reasoning
behind it: what we carry forward from the past—or at least what manifests
through the symbols of the composite chart—is material which we, as a
couple, need to work on resolving. The happier material probably does get
through the after-death pipeline, but it doesn’t seem to be reflected in the
astrological symbolism. There is an efficiency here: the composite chart
seems to tell us only what we need to know.
The composite South Node primarily represents unresolved wounds,
tragedies, limitations and failures from the past which potentially
interfere with our ability to fulfill our soul-contract together in this
lifetime.
The South Node is always history. By definition, since evolution carries
us forward, we were less evolved then. The couple is haunted by this part of
their past, and vulnerable to repeating it. Even the South Node’s “good
stuff” feels tired and overly familiar. We already know it, so there’s not a
compelling need to learn it again.
Remember that the Moon’s South Node is emotional and attitudinal.
Ever tried to reason with a depressed friend? Every suggestion we make is
greeted with a sense of foredoomed impossibility. Such a person believes
what he or she says. They think they are being logical. What they don’t see
is that they aren’t seeing “reality;” they are only seeing their own
consciousness. It is, of course, that way with all of us: wherever we go, we
meet our own minds. Thus, the emotions and attitudes implicit in the South
Node tend to define a couple’s reality, and to be mistaken for it.
Finding the Karmic Story
Any novel worth reading is full of made-up facts that come together to tell
some great truth about life. Our aim in prising the karmic story out of the
nodal structure is very similar. We do not expect to unearth specific,
verifiable past-life facts: for that, go to a good psychic or hypnotic
regressionist. What surfaces through nodal analysis is a parable that
parallels the actual past-life realities. It tells the essential truth—Moon-
fashion. It tells the emotional, psychological story. We take that information
and flesh it out in a concrete, material tale that makes it come alive.
In our experience, because of the way the astrological symbols trigger
intuition, often this “story” we create proves to be more than just a parable.
Often it is echoed, in psychic readings, in prior-life dreams and in
regressions, not to mention in real-life experience in this present lifetime.
That’s just part of the magic of astrology. But the core point is simply this:
the story doesn’t have to be “factual” for it to be “true.” Even with no
particular intuition, the technical procedures we explore in this chapter will
produce powerful, evocative, and psychologically relevant results.
Maybe, for example, a couple were pioneers in the American West in a
prior lifetime and were killed by beleaguered, desperate Navajo warriors.
Maybe in our analysis of the composite South Node, we come up with a
story describing them as immigrants crossing the Atlantic on a ship taken
by hungry pirates. The facts are completely incorrect—but the story is still
“true.” Emotionally, it boils down to the same dynamics.
The South Node’s Sign and House
The sign the South Node occupies tells us about the prior life nature of the
couple and what their soul-contract was in the past. Just remember to tilt
your interpretation a bit negatively, then think of the South Node’s sign
almost as you would a conventional Sun sign.
South Node in Aries? Together, they had a warrior’s nature and energy—
but you’ll be looking at issue of stress and fear, along with the impact of
violence received or violence offered.
South Node in Libra? Probably we’re seeing a partnership between
equals, a fair bet for a past-life marriage—but watch out for too much
“politeness,” indecision or concern with appearances: the Libran shadow.
The house that the South Node occupies tells us about the physical scene
of the couple’s life together in the karmic past—what they were actually
doing, and also some insight into the circumstances which compelled or
constrained them. South Node in the ninth house? Think about institutions
of learning or religion. Consider travel or immigration. Eleventh house?
Movements. Tribes. Large groups of people. The nearly irresistible force of
mob psychology. Second house? Issues around money or the material basis
of survival.
Next, put the house and the sign together. South Node in Libra and in the
eleventh house? They were partners, but crippled by indecision and too
much concern with what others thought of them (Libra)—probably in the
context of a compelling, but stultifyingly proper society (eleventh house,
modified in the Libran direction.)
Try switching to the South Node in Aries, while keeping it in the
eleventh. They still knew each other, but now in a more belligerent, angry
or adventurous (Arian) way. They were still operating in the context of a
group, but now that group is not so polite. It takes on an edge of
explosiveness and destructiveness—that’s the eleventh house, now tilted in
the Arian direction. It sounds like an army—that would, at least, be a great
metaphor. For purposes of our parable, we can say that these two were
comrades-in-arms, whatever the form of their present relationship.
Let the symbols of house and sign speak to each other, in other words.
Let each one flavor and deepen the other one. That’s how we build the
foundation of the nodal analysis.
Run It Through The Filter
Linking the South Node’s sign and house, as we just saw, begins to narrow
the field where the karmic story will unfold, but it is still unsatisfyingly
vague. We can bring all that to a much sharper focus. There are 144
possible combinations of sign and house, but a lot more than 144 possible
human stories! Still, we’ve already made progress worth celebrating. We’ve
winnowed the list down to less than one percent of all human archetypal
possibilities—0.69% of them, to be precise.
But we can go much further toward precision. What follows is a series of
technical procedures. They may seem a bit overwhelming—and yes, to
succeed here, you do have to juggle a lot of balls at the same time. But there
is one principle that overshadows everything and if you understand it, you
will stay on top of the details. Every new “ball” we juggle actually makes
the work of finding the story easier. Every technical dimension of the
composite South Node—its sign, house, aspects, and planetary ruler—
serves to narrow our focus. It adds information, of course—but more
importantly, it eliminates possibilities. It filters the information.
We start with the infinite field of all possible stories. With each step, we
winnow. In the end, what we have left is the essence of the karmic tale—the
thematic story-line, not necessarily the facts—that links the two souls and
brings them together again in this life.
We seek, through our twin processes of discovery and elimination, a
story that is consistent with all the nodal information and assumes
nothing else.
Planets Conjunct the South Node
When a planet is conjunct the South Node, it further defines the nature of
the energy and circumstances of the couple in the past. Again, think of the
South Node like the Sun. Work with this configuration as you would work
with a planet conjunct a person’s Sun—except continue to tilt the
interpretation toward suboptimal expressions.
Remember that this negative bias, while it might feel counter-intuitive, is
ultimately the most helpful tack to take. We humans are creatures of habit;
we tend to repeat patterns of behavior, even when they are not helpful or
when we’ve already “gotten the message.” One very significant dimension
of karma is really a fancy word for “habit.” Couples are affected by it as
much as or even more than individuals—and, given the soul’s innate
timelessness, that can be a habit from last year or from the last century.
Jupiter conjunct a composite South Node? Add elements of
expansiveness and victory to the mix. Add a dollop of what the world
would call “luck.” And be alert to Jupiter’s eternal shadows: all that glitters
is not gold; pride goeth before a fall; be careful what you pray for, you
might get it.
A little while ago, we considered an Arian South Node in the eleventh
house, and brought up the metaphorical image of an army as a context for
prior life experience. Armies have privates and cooks and latrine-cleaners.
They have sergeants and generals. They have heroes and cowards. Half of
the armies win and half of them lose—at least among the ones who actually
fight. Many armies just sit there and don’t do much at all. In other words,
our “0.69% of human possibilities” still contains a vast array of options.
Add Jupiter to that Node though a conjunction, and the focus gets a lot
crisper. These two souls were likely in positions of authority, glory and
power. Very probably, they “won the war.” Pin some medals on them. Quite
certainly, life offered them the chance to become inflated and overextended,
to overplay their hands, to play God. They got lucky. We can eliminate
latrine-duty.
The Planetary Ruler of the South Node
If the composite South Node lies in Gemini, Mercury is its ruler. Wherever
Mercury lies in the chart, we find another set of clues about the karmic
story. If the South Node is in Taurus, we need to look for Venus. In Cancer,
we pay closer attention to the Moon.
In essence, the planetary ruler of the South Node is an extension of the
Node itself. It describes another dimension of the karmic story. It provides
another angle on the tale. Often, it seems to correlate with a pivotal chapter
in the karmic story.
If, for example, we see the South Node in the ninth house, but its ruler is
in the twelfth, we might reason this way: in a prior life, this couple took a
voyage (ninth house), but the ship sank (twelfth house: loss, trouble). There
are many other possibilities, but that is certainly one of them!
In the example we are developing with the Arian South Node in the
eleventh house conjunct Jupiter, let’s now place Mars—the nodal ruler—in
the eighth house, the traditional “house of death.” Warriors kill and are
killed; they see a lot of death. They are face to face, in general, with the
taboo and the extreme. What impact does it have on two people to have
faced death together? Or to have killed together? Answer that, and you’ve
added another pivotal psychological dimension to your emerging nodal
story.
Now, instead of the eighth house, try putting Mars in the fifth (play;
creativity; pleasure). That’s harder, simply because the connections between
those happy subjects and war aren’t so obvious. But warriors are under a lot
of stress. Their level of tension demands release. What does a soldier do on
leave? One answer is that he raises hell! The pent-up fires demand release,
and they do so with pressing urgency and a vulnerability to extremes. How
might a solider carrying that kind of inner pressure respond to victory?
After arduous battle, how are the citizens of the “liberated” town treated?
There’s more than a single possible answer to that question, but since we’re
dealing with the South Node, let your mind range toward the darker
possibilities.
Because of the nature of rulership, the planet that rules the South Node
will always have the same basic tone as the sign of the Node. That means
that the planet itself doesn’t actually tell us much that we didn’t already
know. Where the Node ruler’s usefulness comes in is through its placement
in the chart. Thus, the planetary ruler of the South Node essentially
functions as a marker for another sign and house that have relevance to the
karmic story. Any aspects the South Node’s ruler makes to other planets,
especially conjunctions, also add detail and texture.
There is one specific case we’d like to highlight. With the South Node in
Leo, the Sun is the ruler—and the very essence of the couple today is
deeply imprinted with the mark of the past. All couples have karma, but for
those two, it is particularly essential that we understand it. For the sake of
their basic vitality, they need to be true to their composite Sun sign. Yet, in
so doing, they run the danger of slipping into a lower, less conscious
version of that sign because of the downward pull of ingrained karmic
patterning. They are like dried-out alcoholics who need to sit soberly in a
bar night after night.
The Nodes are like planets in that they can be prominent or obscure in
a composite chart. As with planets, this prominence or obscurity
corresponds to the relative gravity or modesty of impact of the underlying
karmic issues upon the life of the couple.
One more point about the ruler of the South Node. What do we do with a
Pisces South Node? The majority of modern astrologers would say that
Neptune is its ruler. But traditionally, the answer was Jupiter. It’s the same
with Aquarius—Uranus and Saturn are both its ruler, depending on whom
you ask. And Scorpio is shared—or fought over—by Pluto and Mars.
Our feeling is that in each case both planets have an obvious affinity for
the sign in question. The word “rulership” is probably the real culprit, in
that it sets us up to think that one planet should be “king.” But it doesn’t
have to be that way: think of affinity, rather than hierarchy.
We suggest that with a South Node in Scorpio, Aquarius or Pisces, you
recognize both rulerships. What’s produced the best results for us is to start
with Uranus, Neptune or Pluto, then let the traditional ruler add more detail.
Planets in Aspects to the South Node
All aspects to the South Node, other than the conjunction, refer to forces
that acted upon the couple in the prior-life drama. They point to external
realities, although they often have inward and subjective correlates as well.
Very typically, these planets refer to other people—relationships that played
some kind of shaping role on the main pair.
Squares and oppositions correspond with people or situations which were
experienced as challenges, resistance or negativity. Trines and sextiles are
linked to people and circumstances which were experienced as supportive
—but given our suspicious bias in all nodal analysis, we need to be careful
about being too glowing in our appraisal of the sextiles and trines. They
might simply represent unambivalently good things: safe havens and “tea
and sympathy” in otherwise difficult scenarios, but just as easily they can
indicate ways in which we were supported in folly.
In our unfolding military karma example, let’s imagine Venus in Leo in
the second house, making a trine to the Aries South Node. Maybe our
heroes had money (second house). Maybe they were good-looking (Venus
in Leo). Good news? Historically, how many children of wealthy, ruling
class families have been bamboozled by their tribe into accepting military
rank? Has that always worked out well for them? And remember that fifth
house Mars—how does “too much” money interact with a compulsive,
tension-driven need to raise hell? The answer is, “supportively!”
With trines and sextiles, always be alert to ways in which the dyad
could have been “supported” in folly or self-sabotage.
As we will soon learn, the most evocative aspects to the South Node,
other than the conjunction, are squares and oppositions. These are powerful
—and sufficiently distinct for us to treat them separately.
The so-called “minor aspects” can play a role in this kind of analysis too,
but we tend to shy away from them, favoring a deeper look at the
foundation above spreading ourselves too thinly over details. Very briefly:
Quincunxes suggest tensions, wild cards, situations or people that came
in out of the blue and changed everything or required a lot of adjustment.
Sesquiquadrates suggest situations and relationships that tied us in
knots, were intellectually confusing, and which smacked of “damned if we
do, damned if we don’t.”
Semi-squares suggest chronic but tolerable vexations that took their toll
by attrition. Think of mosquitos.
Quintiles suggest breaks in the action, temporary reprieves, “divine
visitations,” and creative interludes.
Planets in Opposition to the South Node
Any planet in this position would be more conventionally described as
being “conjunct the North Node.” We’ll get to that! For our purposes here,
we are concentrating on the South Node of the Moon, and so it’s the
opposition that draws our attention and focuses our understanding.
A planet opposing the South Node represents something or someone
who blocked, repressed, defeated or tantalized the couple in the past.
It either represents something insurmountable and irresolvable, or
something unattainable. It symbolizes the brick wall of reality.
Jupiter opposing the South Node could indicate all the good things of
life, just out of reach. Picture two Dickensian orphans, their bellies empty—
and their noses pressed against the steamy glass of the elegant restaurant
two nights before Christmas. Or imagine the King (Jupiter) has declared
war, and the lovers are parted, never to see each other again, as one of them
is conscripted into the army. They hate it. They didn’t choose it. But how
can you argue with the overwhelming might and authority of the King? His
call-to-arms is the “brick wall of reality.” You have no choice but to deal
with it.
Those are two very different stories! Both are consistent with Jupiter
opposing the South Node. How can we know which story to tell? We
couldn’t—if we blundered by starting our analysis with this aspect, or by
interpreting it in a vacuum.
By the time we consider the South Node’s aspects, we should have
understood the framework of the story. We find places for the message of
those aspects in the context of the basic elements already established.
Any tenth house planet opposite the South Node will correlate with
figures or structures of social authority existing in tension with the needs or
desires of the couple. A ninth house planet suggests conflict with religion or
law, or perhaps enforced migration: refugee status. A fourth house planet
links to the inescapable demands of family or clan; a fifth house one can
aim our attention at the pressing, morally-unavoidable demands of children
—or the labyrinth created by addictive or compulsive pleasure-seeking.
Always, with planets opposite the South Node, one reality is central:
whatever the problem was, there was no way around it.
Planets Square the South Node
Any planet square the South Node is naturally square the North Node too.
As with the opposition aspect just discussed, the aspectual link to the North
Node is best treated as a separate issue. At this point, we’re only concerned
with the South Node—which is to say, with uncovering the karmic story.
A planet square the South Node represents a person, circumstance
or issue that crossed, vexed, afflicted or otherwise undercut the
couple’s intentions or needs in the karmic past. It is therefore a past
issue left unresolved, which presses for resolution in the present life.
Neptune square the South Node? Explore a feeling of life slowly being
leached from the couple. Perhaps Neptune was in the fourth, and correlated
with an endlessly needy, insatiably demanding, ever-dependent family.
“Mom moved in and began dying when she was sixty. Now she’s ninety,
still going strong and still dying—and if she doesn’t die soon, it’ll kill me.”
Perhaps Neptune was in the fifth house or the twelfth, either one of
which can correlate with escapist behavior. With Neptune square the Node
from either of those houses, we could imagine a couple drinking themselves
into oblivion, turning themselves into ghosts of what they might have been.
In these two Neptunian examples, recognize that other options existed.
That manipulative mother could have been be told to stand on her own two
feet. Boundaries could have been set. People can break addictions. Neither
of these better answers are easy ones, and it is possible that the higher
possibility was simply not recognized at the time. But the key point is that
squares (as distinct from oppositions) to the South Node often correlate
with vexatious situations in which our own blindness or error plays a large
role.
Blindness and error are part of life, and we all succumb to them. And
always remember one of the cardinal insights into spiritual evolution: you
were even dumber in the past! These lapses should not be greeted with guilt
or shame, only with the recognition that we’re wounded, that we run the
risk of repeating the old pattern, and that now there are better choices.
Not all nodal squares represent our own errors—that’s just a useful
possibility to explore when framing the story. Some squares simply
represent our frailty before the enormity of life. Squares tend to “blindside”
us—thus, they often link to circumstances which we never saw coming.
That’s especially true with the edgier planets—Mars, Uranus or Pluto—
squaring the Node. These all tend to leave the mark of trauma on the
couple. Perhaps the Node is squared by an eighth house Uranus: a couple is
in the middle of their process together when one of them is taken
unexpectedly by death. Terrorists crash a jet into a building, and last night’s
fight is the last conversation we’ll ever have in these bodies. How can we
imagine the impact of such a sudden Uranian trauma? How long does it
take to “get over” something like that—and what does that phrase even
mean? From a metaphysical perspective, we would surely have some
“unfinished business” with a soul ripped from our lives that way. There’s
one human story behind having composite Uranus square the South Node—
and a glimpse at a composite chart some astrologer will face in a generation
or two.
Projection
Those hungry orphan children we met a while ago, the ones with their noses
against the glass of the fancy restaurant—what do they think of the rich
people eating those fine lavish meals? The lover whose true love is forced
by the King to leave her and fight a war—what is her attitude toward law
and authority?
When we are hurt, taunted or blocked by another person, we tend to
think ill of them. We put our noses in the air. We say, “I would never in a
million years be like that.” And God writes it down in a little black book.
We reject the things that harm us. We put them out of our hearts. In the
language of the shrinks, we project negatively onto such entities. These
projections are in fact rejections of part of what we ourselves are. Sooner or
later in the journey, such projections must be withdrawn. And we hate that!
Planets square or opposed to the South Node often represent people
we must learn to stop hating, judging and rejecting, or we’ll reject
parts of ourselves which we need if we’re to continue our journey
together.
Please note that this isn’t a generic reference to the sweet virtues of
forgiveness and acceptance. It’s more concretely relevant than that. For
example, with Jupiter on their composite North Node, perhaps a couple
(those starving orphans in a prior life) needs to experience wealth and status
in this lifetime. Perhaps they need to lose their adaptation to poverty,
anonymity, or to just “getting by.” Why? As we’ll discover in a few pages,
the Moon’s North Node clarifies the answer, but maybe they have
something important to do for their community in this lifetime—and they
can’t do it without being in a position to hobnob with the ruling class.
Maybe they have a soul-contract to play Chopin duets together in this
lifetime. Have you priced a grand piano lately?
For them to go forward, they must stop judging those whom they judged
so vehemently in the past. It’s not only about virtue; it is about the fierce
logic of soul evolution.
As usual in spiritual matters, this withdrawal of projection actually has
almost nothing to do with the people our previously orphaned partners are
judging. It’s really about themselves, and about a part of their own interior
spectrum of possibilities which they are judging and rejecting.
If a hungry person steals our food, we don’t reject the part of ourselves
that wants to eat.
Pulling the Karmic Story Together
By the time you’ve considered all the pieces of the puzzle, you’ve got quite
a lot of information, especially if there happen to be many planets aspecting
the South Node. All the juggling can be overwhelming, but we encourage
you to proceed anyway. Remember that every piece of the puzzle, while it
adds details, also simplifies the picture. Just knowing the sign of the South
Node gets the story down to about eight percent (one in twelve) of all
human possibilities. Adding the South Node’s house gets it under one
percent. Progress! A planet conjunct that Node? Hooray! You’ve cut out
ninety percent of the remaining possibilities. Every South Node has a
planetary ruler—another ninety percent of your possible confusion
evaporates! This is really the right way to think about the process, and not
just because it’s a little more encouraging. It’s also sound methodology.
What we are aiming to find, as we said earlier, is a story that is consistent
with all the nodal information and assumes nothing else. Half of that is a
process of discovery, but the other half is process of strategic elimination.
Every astrological symbol represents a very broad field of archetypal
possibilities. The sixth house, for example, represents your health and your
responsibilities—and your mentors, your daily routines, and your humility.
And that’s just the psychological material! The sixth also refers to your
pets, your aunts, uncles, nieces and nephews, the tools in your toolbox, your
sister’s home, your children’s finances . . . the list is overwhelming. And it
should be, since we are dividing the universe into twelve huge boxes!
Visualize this archetypal field as a gigantic pizza pan full of icons or
figures or characters or props, representing each of its elements. Warriors:
high-ranking generals or lowly grunts? Orphans: hungry or adopted by
loving parents? Kings: tyrannical or benevolent or dethroned? Lovers:
blissfully fulfilled, or separated by overpowering circumstances?
Do the same with all the other archetypal fields pertinent to the nodal
analysis. Now see where the pizza pans overlap. See where they have
common ground. See which icons, figures, characters or props they either
hold in common, or which ones daisy-chain together into a natural
storyline, like a gun might suggest a murder, or a ship a voyage.
You’ve found it.
That’s the chart within the chart.
That’s your karmic story.
The Dragon’s Head
The composite North Node of the Moon is opposite the South Node. Much
of its meaning follows from that simple geometrical observation:

 It puts maximum tension on the South Node—it represents an


unexplored, unknown possibility for the couple.
 It answers South Node questions and resolves South Node
dilemmas.
 It represents the couple’s evolutionary intention and soul-contract.

However:
 Due to the couple’s inexperience with the North Node, they will
likely be tentative, awkward and confused in that part of life, inclined
toward “interesting and constructive errors.”
 It has no intrinsic energy at all; it’s nothing but an excellent
suggestion.

Earlier, we looked at an invented example of a couple with their South


Node in Aries and the eleventh house, conjunct Jupiter and ruled by a fifth
house Mars. We posited a comradely background where they shared
military experience, probably as officers selected from among the “good
families.”
Their North Node must lie in Libra and in the fifth house, since those
placements lie opposite Aries and the eleventh. Thus, their soul-intentions
are Libran: to deepen their partnership, but also to experience peace, grace,
and serenity together. Libra is opposite Aries, as peace is opposite war and
accord is opposite discord. We can easily see the evolutionary direction of
their soul-contract. Serenity is opposite tension—and, after the stress of
war, there is a profound need to find some tranquility.
Libra represents our aesthetic functions—our ability to respond to beauty
and to appreciate the arts: these emerge as useful “yogas” for these two to
practice together. In general, there is a feeling of moving out of the inherent
roughness and rawness of war, and into a more civilized framework
reflecting gentler aspects of the human tradition.
In this North Node, we see that these two have made an agreement to
calm down together; to heal from war.
With the North Node in the fifth house, there is a hunger for shared
creative self-expression—and we hit paydirt! Libra carries the archetype of
the Artist. The fifth house urge to express oneself creatively links very
directly to that archetype. Thus we recognize an elemental clause in their
soul-contract: to support each other in all creative work, and ideally to
share that work.
The fifth house is about joy and pleasure. After war, we need some!
Something hardens in us under constant stress. Something grows stony
when faced with chronic violence, ugliness, and fear. With the North Node
in the fifth house, there is a soul-contract to soften in each other’s arms.
How? Art is one method, as we’ve already seen—a couple thrilling to a live
performance of Beethoven’s ninth symphony, tears in their eyes at the final
choruses, reaching for each other’s hands. Feel the opening of their shared
heart? There’s Libran fifth house energy.
Speaking of pleasure, remember that we learned that the South Node
ruler, Mars, also lay in the fifth house, where it suggested a karmic
vulnerability to potentially destructive hell-raising. As we guide this couple
toward the higher ground, we have a tightrope to walk here: affirming their
evolutionary need for pleasure, while cautioning them about damaging
levels of dissipation. The key is to emphasize the healthiest fifth house
expressions, rather than setting strictures on the less healthy ones.
The courtship dimensions of the fifth house suggest further methods for
achieving this “post-traumatic” softening: how pleasant it is to bring each
other roses! To light candles with dinner! To take time for a cup of tea and a
conversation! Lovers do it. Why do we ever need to stop?
Children are another correlate of the fifth house. With a composite North
Node there, especially in Libra, the traditional sign of marriage, it’s easy to
imagine that having children would be part of this couple’s soul-contract.
That’s of course a very personal choice, and it’s not the astrologer’s
business to advise anyone to make it. Having kids is consistent with that
North Node, but it isn’t the only possibility. It would be fair to say that part
of their work together is finding the place in their relationship that’s
sufficiently calm, settled, safe and stable that they could choose to have
kids.
And who would want to bring a child into a war-zone? In a nutshell,
these two are learning that the war is over.
Planets Conjunct the North Node
If there is a planet on the North Node, we’ve already met it. That planet is
the same one opposing the South Node in the earlier stage of our analysis.
There, it represented something troublesome, insurmountable or
unattainable. Now we see it linked positively to the couple’s present
evolutionary intentions. They are trying to integrate the higher elements of
that planetary energy into themselves.
Working with a planet on the North Node is a good exercise in learning
to see both the high and the low sides of all the planets. Saturn opposing the
South Node? In the karmic past, there was some basic, insurmountable lack
—a poverty in some sense—that stood between you and what you wanted.
It was probably embodied in some person who represented laws and
limitations—someone saying “thou shalt not” or “impossible!” Now, as a
couple, you need to embrace that same Saturn energy, but move it into its
higher manifestations. Together, you need to internalize the kinds of
present-tense self-denial that allow you to build a future which you can
respect. Saving for a house together. Putting each other through medical
school. Raising healthy, sane kids. Staying together. And you thereby
overcome an internalized karmic attitude of “coping” in a spirit of gloomy
fatalism and acceptance of defeat.
Keep the South and North Nodes clearly distinguished in your thinking:
A planet opposing the South Node hurt you or stalled you in the
past. Read it negatively. That same planet, conjunct the North Node,
shows you the way forward. Read it positively.
The Planetary Ruler of the North Node
The planet that rules the sign of the Moon’s North Node helps us get where
we need to go. It supports the realization of the evolutionary intention
implicit in that Node.
The planetary ruler of the North Node represents a useful tactic for
fulfilling the soul-contract, or an important piece of the puzzle, or a
helpful clue about how to get it right, or just the icing on the cake—
a way to “make an A” in the North Node work.
The critical theoretical point here is that the North Node’s ruler derives
its meaning from the North Node itself. We have to understand the two of
them in that order or we’ll lose our focus.
Say that a sixth house Venus is the North Node ruler. The soul contract
has to do with responsible (sixth house) relationships (Venus)—but that’s
not a very helpful observation, since all composite charts are about
relationships in some form, and most of them benefit from responsibility.
Let the North Node itself bring clarity and focus to that interpretation.
Maybe the composite North Node lies in the tenth house. This couple has a
soul-contract to make a mark in their community. To succeed, they’ll
probably need to hire (sixth house) artistic, creative, socially skilled people
whom they love (Venus) personally.
Now leave the North Node in Libra, but put it in the fifth house. To
fulfill those evolutionary intentions (now having to do with shared creative
expression), these two must find artistic (Venus) mentors (the sixth house).
The thinking behind this process can seem confusing until you remember
the fundamental principle. Start with a thorough understanding of the North
Node, then apply common sense in trying to imagine how its planetary ruler
might help the cause. The context of the basic sign/house nodal structure
determines the specific meaning of the nodal rulers.
Planets Square the North Node
A few pages back we saw that planets square the South Node represented
something the couple left unresolved in the karmic past. Half the meaning
of that same planet’s squaring the North Node is implicit in that statement.
To go forward, this leftover issue must be resolved.
In the words of Steven’s partner in the two volumes of Measuring the
Night, Jeffrey Wolf Green, such a planet represents a “skipped step.” It
haunts us, and the only way for us to advance is to go back and get it right.
It’s like driving in a strange city: miss a critical turn on the highway, and the
only thing you can do is turn around and go back.
Maybe someone “solves” the problems in one relationship by escaping
into another one—and we all know that isn’t likely to work. Very probably,
whatever you’re not facing in the first relationship will emerge as a problem
in the new relationship too.
We use the term “skipped steps,” but the irony is that no one can really
skip any steps at all. We can only defer them.
The energy of a planet square the nodal axis hangs in the balance
between the past and the future. Easily, it can fall backwards and recreate
the old South Node dilemma, but ideally it needs to move to a higher level
and “serve the North Node.”
A few pages back, we looked at Neptune squaring the South Node. One
possibility we considered was that in the karmic past, the couple lost their
evolutionary focus in an alcoholic haze. Another was that they allowed the
life to be sucked out of them by a parasitic mother. Different stories—but in
both cases we see the dark Neptune signature: the uncreative, unproductive,
unintentional loss of self. Because of the square to the Nodes, that
Neptunian energy is hanging in the balance. The couple needs to move it
forward and higher. It won’t go away! If they don’t get it right, they’ll get it
wrong—again. This time, Neptune wants to flower as an avid, shared
spiritual life, or as a deep engagement with the image-making processes we
call art.
To look at the Nodes in an integrative manner, if this couple’s North
Node lies in the tenth house, this developing spiritual or artistic life needs to
be reflected in their public, outward circumstances, perhaps in their
professions. If, on the other hand, the Node lies in their fifth house, it
suggests “art for art’s sake.” In the ninth or the twelfth houses, it would tilt
more toward the spiritual and mystical dimensions of Neptune, and less
toward the imaginative ones.
As always, our aim is to find the points of overlap, and let each symbol
speak to all the others.
It is critical to remember that resolving the issues connected with the
planet square the nodal axis is the price of admission for going forward.
Until those issues are addressed, we are blocked—stuck, whether or not we
know it, in the past.
The blockages and distortions implicit in the planet squaring the
nodal axis must be released and clarified before the soul-contract
can be fulfilled. Otherwise, the North Node is inaccessible
A Common Dilemma—and its Resolution
The key to everything we’ve seen in this chapter lies in understanding the
natural tension of the opposition aspect between the North and South
Nodes. Since opposite signs and opposite houses always represent different
sides of the same coin, the Nodes partake of the same polarity.
Libran peace “cures” Arian stress—as Arian courage and forthrightness
“cure” Libran mealy-mouthed indecision. Third house curiosity and open-
mindedness cure ninth house dogmatism—as ninth house faith cures third
house doubt and uncertainty. This “oppositional” thinking underlies all of
nodal theory, not to mention much of the rest of astrology, Jungian
psychology and Hermetic philosophy.
But sometimes the North Node and South Node seem to resemble each
other, and confusion can arise. There are several examples of this
phenomenon, and all of them are resolved in much the same way.
We might, for example, see a Gemini South Node in the ninth house.
That puts the North Node in Sagittarius (the ninth sign), but in the third
house—which has a natural resonance with the third sign, Gemini. So
which way are we going?
We might see a Gemini South Node—but Mercury (which rules Gemini)
is conjunct the North Node. The future looks a lot like the past!
We might see a Sagittarian North Node—with Jupiter ruling it from a
conjunction with the Gemini South Node. The past looks too much like the
future!
In all these cases, the answer is the same: keep a very clear distinction
between the higher and lower expressions of the symbols. Always, the soul-
contract is to go from lower to higher. Where past and future bear symbolic
resemblance to each other, sort it out through the high-low distinction.
Gemini South Node? Too much thinking or running around in circles,
frantically but pointlessly, in the prior life. Mercury on that Sagittarian
North Node? They are on a philosophical quest for a meaningful existential
framework (Sagittarius) in this life—but to succeed, they’ll have to think,
study, maintain intellectual openness, and be willing to discover surprising,
even shocking, truths together—that’s the higher expression of Mercury
energy (or of Gemini energy, for that matter).
When the ruler of the North Node is conjunct the South Node, think
along the lines we have just laid out: in the past, this couple “mastered” that
planet’s lower expression. Now they are trying to get to the higher ground,
so they can go back and re-do the past, getting it right this time.
Conclusion
Coaxing the prior life story out of a composite chart (or a birthchart, for that
matter) at this level of detail is a relatively new technique in astrology. It
has its own emerging advocates, detractors, principles and procedures, but
most of the basic brain-programs that allow us to do conventional
astrological interpretation work well here too, once we’ve made a few
translations.
Past lives can seem to be a vague area, one in which an astrologer could
really “say anything” and no one would ever be the wiser. People ignorant
of the actual techniques and values underlying this approach have
sometimes leveled that charge. The key here is that karmic patterns tend to
repeat. We may not be able to see the past, but we typically see the
relevance of the prior-life story to the couple’s present issues, often right
down to details. We invite the couple to evaluate what we are saying—and
to doubt it, if they so choose! It is in the present tense that evolutionary
astrology can defend its claims and perspectives. We have never claimed
otherwise.
In Part Three, you’ll find a complete “cookbook” analysis of both the
North and South Nodes in every sign and every house. It’s a good launching
pad to help you get down to that 0.69% level of precision we described
earlier. Beyond that level, the possibilities become so multitudinous that no
book could cover all conceivable combinations of symbols. That’s where
you need to think astrologically. If you are systematic about it, and if you
remember to stop and think humanly about what the symbols are telling
you, you’ll find the story often leaps out of the chart.
In Chapter Seventeen, we present a complete, integrated analysis of the
composite chart of a specific couple—F. Scott Fitzgerald and Zelda
Fitzgerald. In those pages we spend quite a lot of time on their composite
Nodes. Reading through that section a few times will help you know where
to put your own feet when the time comes to find your own path through
another couple’s story.
Below, we’ve condensed the theoretical material of this chapter into
outline form for you, before we move on to Part Three.
Strategies in the Synastric Analysis of the Composite
South Node of The Moon
The most elemental information regarding the unresolved prior-life
situation of the dyad derives from the sign and the house of the Moon’s
South Node.

• The sign describes the prior personality and energy of the dyad, and its
evolutionary agenda at the time.
• The house describes the actual, existential circumstances in which the
dyad encountered its experiences.

Almost equally revealing is the planetary ruler of the Moon’s South


Node. According to its sign and house, we discover:
• Another active, tactical, specific dimension of the dyad’s larger
agenda, nature, and circumstances.
• A crucial crisis or pivotal chapter in the novel of the dyad’s prior-life
story.

Hint: pay close attention to the darker, Shadow-side of the sign, house,
and planetary ruler for clues about any challenging impacts on the present
life.
A planet conjunct the Moon’s South Node or its ruler significantly
modifies, deepens, and develops what we’ve learned from the sign/house
dynamic. It expands upon the intentions, nature, and evolutionary or
existential strategies of the dyad. It refers to the dyad itself, in its own
nature.
All other planetary aspects to the South Node tend to refer primarily to
external realities: to circumstances and specific people existing in relation
to the dyad in the prior life. (What follows can also be applied with some
caution to planetary aspects to the ruler of the South Node.)
A planet opposing the South Node represents something or someone
who blocked or repressed the fulfillment of the dyad’s evolutionary
intention. It symbolizes the brick wall of reality. It also represents something
that felt far away or unattainable, and thus longed for.
A planet square the South Node has four dimensions:

1. People or issues that crossed, vexed, or undercut the dyad’s


evolutionary intent.
2. It is therefore issues left unresolved from the past, which press again in
the present life.
3. Simultaneously, it is a skipped step, which must be faced and resolved
in order for evolutionary progress to continue.
4. The planet now hangs in the balance between past and future—thus, we
look for ways it can serve the North Node’s intentions; or be swept into
supporting the repetition of the South Node’s patterning.

A planet trine or sextile the South Node represents people or


circumstances which supported the dyad in a prior life.
Hint: always be alert to ways in which the dyad could have been
“supported” in folly or self-sabotage.
The Lunar Nodes are a huge topic. Want to learn more? Here are some
links to a few great audio lectures on the subject: When Nothing Works but
the Nodes, The Moon's Nodes, and Planets Conjunct the South Node.
The Cookbook
Chapter 5
The Composite Sun
S ome couples are radiant, and their radiance is magnetic. They may not
be theatrical or charismatic. As individuals, they may even be shy. Yet
something draws us toward them: a certain warmth, a sense of the life-force
shining from them, a sunny quality in the aura that emanates from them.
They go through interpersonal complexities just like any other pair of
human beings, and yet watching them one simply knows they will pull
through. Their relationship is robust and resilient; its recuperative powers
are self-evident. We naturally have faith in them. Their breaking up would
surprise us, even in this age of epidemic instability in human commitments.
In their communities, their love is like a lighthouse in the storm. Without
planning it or intending it, they have come to be role models for other
lovers, glowing with confidence, mutual support, and natural authority. We
prize them. And, like circling planets, we orbit them like a solar hub.
One look, and we know that they have responded well and wisely to the
logic of their composite Sun. The sheer vitality of their bond declares it.
Two sane, mature souls come together. Their values are sound. They’ve
done their share of inner work. On paper, the relationship seems blessed and
natural. And yet they simply run out of gas. Their bond unravels. Every
relationship has its challenges—the “viruses” and “bacteria” of our
unresolved psychological and karmic baggage as individuals, the natural
friction between the natures of any two individuated adults. But in this case,
it seems as if the immune response of the couple to those infestations has
collapsed. Pettiness reigns. Both people are diminished. Their conflicts
embarrass them, at least in the cold light of morning. Their erotic response
to each other goes flat. A mood of grayness suffuses any room they occupy
together. If we were to let the inner poet conjure images, they would be of
wintry skies and bare trees, with a tepid sun sinking into a cold, dull sea.
Such is the result of a starving composite Sun. In this second, sadder
example, let’s emphasize that each of these people may remain sane, strong
and vital as individuals. It’s the relationship itself that’s experiencing an
energy crisis, not necessarily the two people who compose it.
COMPOSITE SUN IN ARIES
Deep in the core of this relationship is a fire. It is fierce, hot, and
unforgiving—and the one offense it can never forgive is to be starved for
the fuel that keeps it alive. That fuel is the soul-food of Warriors: adventure,
intensity, a sense of living passionately and close to the edge. To be true to
themselves, a couple with the composite Sun in Aries must be fearless—or,
more accurately, they must never let fear make a decision for them.
When in doubt, buy a sloop and set out for the Antipodes. That’s the
spirit, if not the letter, of the Aries soul-contract. Two people alone on a
small vessel in the middle of the sea, a storm raging around them—it blows
out the emotional cobwebs! There’s a kind of purity and simplicity in the
love between Warriors when they are in extremis and relying on each other.
They’re not arguing over word-choices at such a time. Faced with life and
death, the little annoyances that drive people crazy in intimacy slip into
their rightful perspective. For the couple with their composite Sun in Aries,
it isn’t actually necessary that they risk their necks so dramatically, but they
do need the kind of stretching that comes from taking risks together.
Traveling to places that frighten them a bit could be on the list—and for one
couple that could mean driving five hundred miles to Peoria, while for
another it might mean reaching the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro. Sports
might figure positively in their life together. So could hiking, biking or
hang-gliding.
All the imagery we’ve explored so far has been physical, but not all the
Arian work is centered on the fears we have around keeping our bodies
intact. There are also emotional and psychological fears, and facing those is
actually closer to the heart of the evolutionary intention of this composite
Sun. In fact, the more physical kinds of adventure simply support the
development of the courage and the mutual trust that allows these two
people to do their deeper inner work together.
Perhaps one of them is bothered by the other one’s defensiveness in a
certain area of their relationship. If he or she brings up that subject, there’s
going to be an emotional bloodbath—but if the subject is left unaddressed,
then tensions and estrangement build toward the boiling point. “There’s
something we need to talk about.” Those are the fateful, necessary words,
and it takes courage to speak them. That courage is the very essence of what
it means to have the composite Sun in Aries. If the couple goes ahead and
deals with each other bravely, directly, and honestly, fur will fly sometimes.
The fights will be glorious. And the two Warriors will love each other more
deeply and more respectfully over the years. If on the other hand they go
down the coward’s road, then the Arian energy devolves into pettiness and
bickering, and a mood of endless, undefined stress in the relationship. It’s
critical to remember that, while intimate courage is really the key, its
development must be supported by a rough-and-ready, adventurous attitude
toward their life together in the world. That’s the foundation. The higher
ground is not only a lot more satisfying. It’s also a lot more fun.
COMPOSITE SUN IN TAURUS
The logic of Taurus is the logic of the inner animal. Of all the signs, it is the
one closest to the way of nature. The basic mood, needs and values of a
couple with this composite Sun reflect our biological heritage as creatures
on this earth: the desire to be safe, in familiar surroundings, comfortable,
warm and well-fed. Walk into any home such a couple might share and you
can feel it right away: put your feet up, settle into that supernaturally comfy
sofa, and relax. But not before enjoying a long bear hug. This earthiness is
disarming; you soon find yourself talking about how you really feel. And if
you feel bad, you are soon comforted. Even a cup of tea in such a home
seems to get you quickly back to basics.
Despite pervasive phallic mythology, most men don’t really think of
themselves as bulls. Very few women identify themselves with cattle.
We’ve found, with Taurus, that it helps to expand our zoological horizons—
we’ve learned to be open to leaving the bovine world behind and look for
other animal-metaphors better suited to the realities of the couple.
Incidentally, a couple with this composite Sun may very well find
themselves literally attracting animals into their lives: cats, dogs, horses,
and maybe more exotic species. Asking about their pets is often a terrific
icebreaker. That’s the exoteric reality. Be admitted into the secret world of
such a relationship, and one often finds a fantasy life in which each member
of the dyad plays an animal role: in privacy, they’re snuggle bunnies, or
proud lions, or mischievous, wild-eyed monkeys.
The maintenance of basic vitality in this relationship depends upon
establishing stability and peace. The more rapidly psychodrama can be put
aside, the better—so long as necessary struggles are not swept under the
carpet in the name of the general bonhomie. All forms of non-verbal
relating are helpful here: sex, of course. But also simple touch, and listening
quietly to music together. Making a sacred ritual of sharing long, easy
meals helps. So does having pets. And a garden, if possible, or at least
potted plants. Paramount is time spent in nature together, far from the noise
of the human world, to celebrate everything the wise animal inside us
knows and values.
COMPOSITE SUN IN GEMINI
Imagine that you were born blind, and that a miraculous operation restores
your sight. Suddenly the world is a dazzling riot of color and form. You see
your spouse’s face for the very first time. You know the names of all the
objects in the room, but not which names belongs to which ones. Is that a
rose, a teacup, a candelabra? Why are those flames dancing and shimmering
in the fireplace? No one had ever told you that fire was in motion. And its
colors! Which is yellow and which is orange and which is blue?
Presented with such an overwhelming new set of perceptions, what
would you want to do? Explore every last inch of this fascinating world.
Now stretch your imagination a bit further and pretend that all your senses,
not just sight, had been restored. The hunger to experience everything you
possibly could would become that much more powerful, wouldn’t it?
A couple with their composite Sun in Gemini runs on much the same
fuel. Feeding the core energy of this relationship requires what, to a more
peaceful couple, might look like a serious case of cognitive overload. But
for the composite Sun in Gemini partners, a fast-paced, colorful and almost
bewildering diet of mesmerizing new experiences, ideas, and conversations
is absolutely essential. Accept a dinner invitation to such a couple’s home,
and you may walk into a living room where the wife is surfing the local
library’s online catalog while watching a music DVD. Meanwhile, the
husband is taking a long distance call from Singapore on the kitchen phone
and peering at stock quotes on his laptop. Two friends have resumed the
husband’s interrupted dinner preparations from a recipe written entirely in
Italian, which neither of them speaks. A third friend is trotting to and from
the living room to ask the wife for help in translating the recipe. A cell
phone beeps, and there’s a mad scramble to locate both it and its owner.
Then the doorbell rings. Your host puts Singapore on hold to go answer the
door, then falls on the visitor’s neck with happy cries: it’s a long-lost friend
the couple hasn’t seen for ten years and who’s shown up unannounced with
a magnum of Champagne—and a couple of trapeze artists he’s representing
and who need a place to sleep that night.
Overwhelmed? Intrigued? Ready for a freewheeling evening and hot
competition to get a word in edgewise? So are the composite Sun in Gemini
couple. These people do well to befriend and encourage one another’s
curiosity about this endlessly fascinating and mysterious universe. While
they can have great fun debating how many angels can dance on the head of
a pin, they should never be positive they’ve answered such questions. Why?
Because certainty withers Geminian energy, while questions and puzzles
nourish it. The writer Shirley Jackson once said, “Give the reader
something to wonder about,” and that’s excellent advice for a composite
Sun in Gemini. This couple should give one another lots to wonder about,
and make their journey through the world far more interesting together than
it would have been apart. Developing their skills in the various ways that
we humans communicate, with one another and with anyone else, will
always help them, as the curious seekers inside this pair well know.
COMPOSITE SUN IN CANCER
Cancer is the Crab—or the turtle! In either case, it’s a creature with a wall
of shell around its soft places, and that’s really the point: Cancer represents
the ultimate vulnerability, and also our natural skills at defending it against
pain or attack.
Leaving aside physical trauma, what are the most painful experiences
that can befall us? Quickly, most of us think of relationships breaking up:
we all know how much that hurts. A very common answer to the question is
“losing a child.” That’s so painful that most of us don’t even want to think
about it. Losing a friend, even losing an aged parent—these are the griefs of
life. And every one of them is rooted in that ultimate human risk: loving.
With their composite Sun in Cancer, this couple is faced with a high-
stakes evolutionary challenge: loving each other absolutely, committedly,
and without any recourse at all to defenses against each other. The more
deeply we love, the greater the potential hurt. With Cancer, the stakes go
through the roof because this is the ancient sign of “home and hearth”—of
bonded relationships. And that means relationships that, in principle, only
death can unweave. There is No Exit.
It’s almost a lost art. We live in a time of experimentation in terms of the
meaning of love, commitment, home, and parenthood. Hardly anyone says
“until death do us part” anymore. As a culture, we’re currently enamored
with individuality, personal growth, and freedom. That’s not the Cancer
way: radical commitment is the theme here. And that’s like handing a crazy
person a gun and then saying “please don’t shoot me.”
For the couple with the composite Sun in Cancer, the very core of their
bond depends upon promises they keep. It thrives on words such as
“forever” and “always” and “never.” Those are the magic words that open
the door to a tenderness, a security, and a faith almost beyond modern
imagining.
This doesn’t mean that all partners who happen to have their composite
Sun in this sign should immediately commit to a lifetime together! Maybe
that’s not what their relationship is ultimately about. What it does mean is
that, if two people with their composite Sun in Cancer hedge and vacillate
about total commitment, the fire will go out of their connection. The Sun
won’t shine anymore. Such commitments are serious and profound, of
course, and no one should rush into one. Courtship is necessary as trust
gradually builds. But sooner or later, they arrive at that ancient Rubicon:
they cross over into becoming a “home” together, or their vitality—and
their sexuality together—quickly leaches away.
If they do cross the line, the couple with their composite Sun in Cancer
will create a wonderfully nurturing home together. Friends will flock there,
especially when those friends are feeling fried or frightened. Stray cats will
mass at their door. If they choose to have children, those will be lucky,
happy kids, rich in love. But everything hinges on their profoundly adult
decision to make that homeward leap into absolute commitment.
It’s funny how in the astrological literature Cancer is often represented as
timid. That shows how far our culture has drifted away from understanding
the fierceness and courage it takes to follow this path.
COMPOSITE SUN IN LEO
Children swinging as high as they can on their playground swings will
shriek, “Look at me!” And if mom and dad ignore them, you can feel the
kids’ empty sadness from fifty yards away. There is something in us all that
wants to be seen and noticed, something that wants to leave an impression
on the world. Astrologically, the sign Leo represents that drive. With
composite Sun in Leo, the basic vitality of a couple depends on that kind of
visibility. They’ve got to be seen.
We have to be careful to think deeply here. Try on this statement: “If no
one pays attention to them, they don’t exist.” Sounds pretty pathological,
huh? But no sign of the Zodiac is inherently crazy! The shallowness and
lack of a solid center that our statement implies may describe Leo’s shadow,
but not its true nature. Imagine an artist without paintbrushes, or a fine
pianist without a piano. The pain they feel is not pathological; it’s perfectly
natural. Dogs can be surgically modified so they can’t bark, or cats so they
can’t meow. Just ask your heart how you feel about that. Something inside
us knows it’s simply wrong. It’s a violation of the animal’s nature. The
creature will suffer sorrow, just like the painter and the pianist.
This couple needs to bark, meow, paint bright colors, and bang on the
keys! They are true to themselves when they take up space and provide a
little entertainment for those around them. This process can stretch in a
healthy way from silly, simple earthy things all the way to the stars. At the
simple end of the continuum, with composite Sun in Leo, a couple needs to
dress up and go to a fancy restaurant from time to time. It’s good for them
to learn to dance. They need to experience themselves together as a
beautiful couple—even if they’re not “beautiful” in the conventional sense.
Leo is the Lion, the “King of the Beasts.” And everyone knows that Kings
need castles. It’s supportive to their well-being and their faith in their
relationship that they would put a lot of energy into having a home that
helps them feel proud, an expansive place where any guest immediately
feels smarter and better-looking. This feeling of living life to the fullest, this
generous feeling of expansiveness, celebration, and joie de vivre are the
lifeblood of Leo, and a couple with their composite Sun there needs those
feelings.
To say the same thing backwards, we must recognize the deadening
effect on such a couple of a steady diet of practicality, sobriety and
austerity. Not to say that they can’t go down such a road—only that it will
kill them.
Reaching higher, let’s recognize that with the composite Sun in Leo, two
people benefit enormously from a shared creative life. We can imagine, for
example, that they would join a local theater group together. Performing on
stage would provide a merry memory, a place in their mental scrapbook to
which they could return year after year—and every time they did, they
would feel a little boost in their sense of bondedness. To design a house—
their castle—jointly is something sweet to their shared spirit. Supporting
each other’s individual creative efforts is part of the Leo process too. If one
writes a poem, the other one takes it seriously and reads it carefully. And if
one tells a joke, the other one laughs loud and hard—even if it’s not very
funny! Why? Because laughing is a big-hearted, generous act, and that’s
what fuels the love of this Leo couple.
COMPOSITE SUN IN VIRGO
Love is hard work, and Virgo thrives on it. With their composite Sun in this
sign, these two people have taken on an evolutionary project. They’ve got a
challenging task ahead of them. Notice how immediately these words make
it sound as if they’ve made some kind of major cosmic error in meeting
each other? That’s not the point at all! The point is that Virgo is about
rolling up our sleeves and getting on with it—whatever “it” may be, from
cleaning the house to dealing with each other’s unresolved psychological
issues. Whoever said, “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” was not a Virgo.
Remember that astrologically the Sun represents vitality. For this couple to
feel alive together, they have to feel as if they are growing, changing, and
pressing ever higher. Lazing on the beach—or in bed—is not taboo. In fact,
they’ll need it, given the effort that relationship demands. But always the
centerpiece is their own evolution, and it doesn’t matter if they use that kind
of language or not. What matters is growth and improvement, step-by-step,
over the years of their relationship.
Together, they develop an uncanny capacity to scope out whatever is
wrong in their interpersonal dynamics. Generally, what they see is real. The
trick is to keep perspective; always, the underlying risk is that they begin to
niggle each other to death. Forgiveness has a role in love, as does silent
forbearance. Humor is essential. Some issues can’t be resolved today.
Put them in a comfortable box with nothing to do and a couple with their
composite Sun in Virgo will quickly drive each other mad. The key here is
to stay out of the box! And they can do that by honoring another
fundamental dimension of Virgo: this is the Sign of the Servant. What that
means is that part of the core soul-intention of this couple lies in making a
difference in the lives of other people. They are naturally helpful—and
people around them will be drawn to them as if by magnetism in times of
need. Sometimes the needs are emotional, but often they’re purely practical:
Will you help us move house this weekend? What do you know about air
conditioners? With their composite Sun in Virgo, these two have practically
put out advertising as Helpers in their community, family, or “tribe.” They
actually benefit from this, and not just in terms of karmic “brownie points.”
Focusing on the needs of others helps balance their attention away from
what otherwise could become an obsessive concern with themselves and
their own issues—a concern which, while inherently healthy, can lead to a
crash-and-burn scenario of emotional exhaustion, lost patience, and
rampant tension.
Virgo is of course the Virgin—but fear not! There’s no reason to expect
that a couple will have sexual problems or undue primness just because
their composite Sun lies in this sign. In fact, we have at least one reason to
believe the opposite. Virgo is an Earth sign, and that means about what you
would expect it to mean. It’s earthy. Given half a chance, the physical side
of love comes naturally to this couple. But again, like everywhere else, they
need to find a balance between constantly improving that part of their life
together and just simply enjoying it as it is without “helpful” comment.
COMPOSITE SUN IN LIBRA
Libra is the balance scale, and it represents the idea of two equal but
opposite entities coming into equilibrium with each other. Thus, it is
naturally the symbol of loving human relationship at its best—that is to say,
a bond based upon harmony, mutual respect, and equality. With their
composite Sun in Libra, our couple has a high ideal toward which to strive!
They are definitely “going for the gold.”
A graceful quality naturally radiates from these two. They look good
together. They seem to “fit.” Perhaps there’s a kind of symmetry between
them: they are similar types. Or perhaps it’s more as if they complement
and complete each other, with one of them a thinker and the other a feeler,
or one practical and the other visionary. It can go either way—and in either
case, from the outside perspective, there’s a sense that they did well in
finding each other. People tend to believe in their relationship, or even to
hold it up as an ideal.
Whether our two individuals actually experience it that way is another
question! They surely can, but as always it takes effort to make love work.
The single most important existential vitamin for these two is calm.
Serenity. Everything healing and positive that sustains this relationship has
its ultimate source in that sense of spacious, graceful timelessness. It’s
worth a thousand insights. By instinct, together they will move in that
direction, attaining it perhaps through simply creating a visually beautiful
home full of art, light, and music. They’ll relax over their meals, and have a
candle on the table on winter evenings. In lovemaking, they’ll take time to
be tender. In conversation, they’ll hear each other out without inappropriate
interruption or gratuitous crudity. Primness isn’t the point; nothing as funky
as two human beings in a bodily, intimate relationship can ever be “prim”
for long! The point is more like never losing sight of human grace.
Simply to predict that our couple with the composite Sun in Libra will
automatically behave so elegantly would be naive. Such balance is the true
core of their relationship, the “divine plan” for them. The more they
approximate it, the happier and more vital their bond will be. Conversely,
we need to recognize that nothing will destroy their faith in their love faster
than the jagged emotional edges of crassness or disrespect, or resorting to
the familiar arsenal of emotional weapons of mass destruction.
Paradoxically, we need to warn these two that avoiding natural conflict can
actually worsen it when it finally breaks out. They need to be wary of false
compromises—and by “false” we mean compromises that are actually
grossly dissatisfying to one or both of them, and undertaken only out of fear
of a serious row. Libra is all about “fairness,” and that is of course a
beautiful, necessary part of lasting love. But even fairness has a dark side
when it drives these two into bland agreement—a calm before an inevitable
storm. Let their motto be, “Love, honor, and negotiate!”
COMPOSITE SUN IN SCORPIO
Clearly, our ancestors were not trying to comfort us when they decided to
name a sign of the zodiac after a scorpion! The spooky little stinging
creature makes most of us shudder. We think about sudden, dreadful death,
whatever we may know about the actual probabilities. Having their
composite Sun in Scorpio isn’t likely to sound very encouraging to our poor
couple!
On the other hand, maybe they know enough about pop astrology to
know that Scorpio is usually associated with sex, which might represent a
more heartening perspective.
Death and sex. Fear and desire. The end of life and the very source of
life. How come these two are so often associated? Unravel that mystery and
you’ve begun to understand the sign of the scorpion—and to grasp what
motivates this couple. Death is generally a taboo topic in social situations,
quite unlike sex which tends to be the subject of a lot of playful banter. But
once we stop joking about sex and start being honest about it, people often
get pretty nervous. It’s a very delicate topic, full of psychological
undercurrents—just like death. People get nervous during honest
conversations about sex, just as they get nervous about being honest in the
face of such topics as ageing, disease, our fears, our shame. Astrologically,
Scorpio simply refers to the mechanism of honest self-awareness in the
human mind: our ability to delve into the things that make us feel scared or
crazy. With their composite Sun in Scorpio, these two people will delve so
deeply into each other’s “stuff” that their relationship will often feel like
psychotherapy. That, or it will be a living demonstration of their need for
psychotherapy! Simply said, they are powerful triggers for each other. They
“press each other’s buttons.” That can be a profoundly healing and
energizing experience for them, or it can push them into shattering realms
of intensity, draining drama, and unending heaviness. What makes the
difference? Certainly a part of the answer lies in their individual willingness
to face that degree of intimacy—it’s not for everyone, nor should it be!
People have a natural need for privacy and boundaries, and there is
something about Scorpionic energy that runs right over those kinds of
barriers. Thus, respect is essential here—and a wise corollary of respect,
which is vigilance in making sure that neither partner “becomes the
psychotherapist” while the other one gets cast as the madwoman or
madman. We should add that a sense of humor is critical too—with
Scorpionic material, we often find ourselves in situations where you either
laugh or you cry. Both are necessary! Finally, and perhaps most importantly,
trust is the foundation of everything for this couple. We can only be this
psychologically naked with someone whom we know is not going to
abandon us or betray us, who will never violate our confidentiality, and who
has taken the same risks of self-disclosure as we have.
If any of these pieces are missing, these two people tend to slip into
psychological warfare, moodiness, and sniping. But with all these pieces in
place, our couple with the composite Sun in Scorpio can come to epitomize
the modern, post-patriarchal model of healthy, committed intimacy: two
souls, bound by a shared commitment to grow, and virtually unable to
conceive of being closer to anyone else than they are to each other.
COMPOSITE SUN IN SAGITTARIUS
There is no sign of the Zodiac so oriented to sheer intensity of sensory
experience as Sagittarius. With their composite Sun in this sign, these two
people have signed up for a roller coaster ride. Regardless of their natures
as individuals, there is something in the chemistry they share that attracts
life’s wild side. It’s all a bit like Gandalf the Wizard knocking on the
Hobbit’s door—once the portal is opened, there is no turning back. Maybe
they feel settled in a home and a community. Wheels turn, and before they
know it they’ve been transferred to Ireland—or Patagonia! Maybe they’ve
settled into certain values and philosophical perspectives—and they meet
someone who glows in the dark with the fire and the power of some
alternative path.
It really has to be this way. Sagittarius, to be fully alive, needs to be
packing in the experience of ten lifetimes. Should life become too prosaic
and predictable, something vital seeps out of this relationship. Boredom can
kill it faster than any other toxin. Together, these two need change,
freshness, and wonder. They need to stretch. They do tend to magnetize
extremity into the life they share, but of course, Gandalf can knock and the
Hobbit can choose not to open the door. In other words, they can potentially
make a militant choice to value stability above their own natural course
through life. If they do that, then we’ll see chaos nagging at them all the
time, eroding their peace—plus, a disturbing tendency toward one-
dimensional dogmatism in their shared thinking. More tellingly, we will
also see a kind of tiredness creeping into the relationship, as the life-force
drains from them.
Ultimately, the feeling for this couple with their composite Sun in
Sagittarius is one of being on a Quest. Together, they are endlessly seeking
something. The actual nature of that something is elusive, but what it boils
down to is a meaningful life. They will pursue it down cross-cultural roads,
taking pieces of the puzzle from various different nations and mythologies.
They will chase it through education in the broad sense—learning together,
and talking about what they’ve learned, whether it’s through books or
classes or other sources. They’ll perhaps be drawn to religion, and almost
surely to philosophy. Always, the road stretches a little further before them
—just one more horizon, and they’ll be there.
COMPOSITE SUN IN CAPRICORN
One of the main things that gives angels their sense of humor about the
human race is the way various virtues go in and out of style. Currently, the
virtues we associate with Capricorn seem a bit passé. And that’s sad,
because they are precious ones: integrity, character, a sense of personal
honor, dignity. They’re preciously relevant in many areas of life, but
perhaps nowhere so vividly as in a life-long vow of mutual care and defense
between two people, whether they are sexual partners or comrades. When
we find the composite Sun in Capricorn, the soul-stakes are very high. In
the long run, whether or not they remain together, the dignity of these two
human beings will depend very much on how honorably they treat each
other during the course of their relationship.
The highest—and most challenging—prospect here is the idea of
marriage. We go ahead and use that traditional term because of its innate
gravity, although we welcome a future in which there’s less emphasis on
pieces of paper filed in courthouses and more upon a promise held sacred
by two people and professed publicly in their community. If two people
come together with their composite Sun in Capricorn, sooner or later they
will face the serious issue of whether or not they choose to make that kind
of vow to each other. If that is their higher destiny and they vacillate too
long without answering it, vitality and energy quickly drain out of their
relationship. Drifting in limbo is death for this archetype. Capricorn, more
than any other sign, thrives upon Great Works—and in the context of a
composite chart, that Great Work is by definition a long-haul, deeply
committed relationship.
Of course just because the midpoint of two people’s Suns happens to fall
in Capricorn doesn’t mean they must head for the wedding chapel or fail
spiritually! Obviously, that would be silly and extreme. But it does mean
that they need to handle their relationship in a way that makes them feel
proud, no matter where it ends up. Honesty, tempered with gentleness and
maturity, is essential. No prudery is intended here: even in the briefest of
relationships, there can be respect and a feeling of decency—and a residual
feeling of connectedness that neither person would ever deny or dishonor.
But one night stands and their like are not what Capricorn symbolizes. Its
tastes and predilections run toward steeper mountains. And, if a couple
chooses to scale such peaks, an alchemical process is triggered in each of
their psyches. Soon that ancient Capricorn archetype, The Elder, begins to
make its presence felt in the air around them. They come to represent the
mountain in their community—something solid and consistent in this
swirling world of endless change, a beacon to which people can turn when
they are confused or feeling lost. After a while, their higher destiny together
begins to reveal itself, at first not so much in their own minds, but rather in
the minds of those who watch them, awed and inspired by the mighty thing
they are doing together day by day.
Offering that gift to the people around them is the higher work these two
have taken on. Once they’ve crossed the line into commitment, their
successes give us all hope—and, conversely, if the stone of their failure
strikes the waters of the community, concentric circles of hopelessness and
despair spread far and wide. Fair? Not at all. But the Elder archetype is
about giving a gift, not about demanding one—and for these two, that’s
where the path of energy, vitality, and purpose lies.
COMPOSITE SUN IN AQUARIUS
Couples have been trying to live together, one way or another, for a couple
of million years. Long-term loving remains difficult despite all the
experimentation and post-mortem discussion groups. Still, in those
countless centuries, humanity has learned a few things: Forgiveness is
precious. Commitment is essential. Honesty must be tempered with
tenderness. Passion changes over time. Children change everything. Beware
of in-laws. Say five nice things for every hard one. And so on.
It’s a precious legacy, handed down through the generations in the form
of customs, folklore, and chicken soup wisdom. Flawed by sexism,
undercut by sexual shaming, twisted by patriarchal perversity as it may be,
these principles generally work better than flying blind—unless, that is, this
couple’s composite Sun lies in Aquarius! Then, we can count on the fact
that there will be at least one relationship ideal, “obvious to everyone”
which would be the kiss of death for these partners. Their task is to figure
out which one it is.
Perhaps they are meant to be totally, monogamously committed to each
other—but not even try to live together under one roof. Maybe, once
together, it becomes essential to the relationship that they quit their jobs and
go raise llamas or ostriches. Maybe they’re not supposed to have kids. The
point is that the natural expression of this relationship involves breaking
some “rule” that both partners were both trained to hold as obvious and
natural. Once they see it, they feel liberated—and the bond between them
can breathe and grow. Until they see it, they are haunted by an ill-defined
sense of something being wrong. It’s as if the music is written in the wrong
key for their voices. All the harmonies are strained.
Going further, it’s clear at this juncture of history that humanity is re-
defining marriage, family, and intimacy. So far, we’ve mostly figured out
what doesn’t work. Love, sex and procreation aren’t going to go away, but
what will they look like in a hundred years? Here’s part of the answer:
assuming that this couple gets it right, some of the “weird” aspects of their
relationship today will be perfectly normal in the future. Aquarius is always
the cutting edge, always the place where Life is experimenting with new
possibilities for the human future. That still leaves these partners without
much guidance in the present tense! But it does underscore the wonderful
gift they’ve signed up to give the next generation. Every deepening
discussion they have and every creative solution they put together not only
benefit them, but also echo down the corridors of time. How? Easy. People
are watching them.
COMPOSITE SUN IN PISCES
Rare is the wedding or commitment ceremony that doesn’t invoke the
divine mysteries. Almost always, there is talk of God, souls, the Holy Spirit
—the sacred dimension of life. Those perspectives may not be on our minds
every minute of every day, but they always pop up when we think big
questions about why two people might come together to share a life.
Astrologically, Pisces represents the part of human consciousness that sends
a tap root down into that bedrock. It is the archetype of the Mystic. With
their composite Sun in this sign, the energy that animates this relationship
depends totally upon these two people spending a lot of time tuned into that
broader, deeper sense of themselves. They need meditative time together,
and lots of it.
Who can walk into a room lit only by candles and not feel a change in
attitude? Who can walk down the beach in the moonlight without being
lifted into a new place? With their composite Sun in Pisces, these two
people need regular doses of exactly that kind of magical experience. Some
Piscean couples encounter it in “officially” spiritual settings—religious
ceremonies, meditation groups, and so on. But that formality isn’t
necessary. Sometimes candles are enough.
Once we get over our discomfort, there’s usually something ridiculous
about other people’s relationship spats. Everyone’s “stuff” is hanging out,
usually liberally spiced with self-righteousness and psychiatric
interpretations of each other’s behaviors and motivations. For all our talk
about the spiritual dimensions of love, it’s also clear that ego makes its
presence felt when we vexatious, flawed human beings try to love. From
the higher Piscean ground, ego looks pretty hilarious! Thus, a sign that
these two people are centered and strong in their relationship is that they
consistently “get the joke” about themselves. Lots of laughter is a very
positive spiritual sign. Even in the midst of a passionate, angry exchange,
it’s not unusual for one member of a Piscean couple to suddenly get the
giggles about it—and the giggles, after a moment, often prove contagious.
As always, every front has a back. Pisces can “transcend” itself right into
oblivion—and it’s usually a bleary oblivion of lassitude, resignation and
escape. The composite Sun is the ego of a couple, and ego serves a good
purpose in the cosmic scheme. It’s the pro-active part of us that’s in the
driver’s seat of the psyche, that goes and gets what we need, even if faced
with resistance or censure. With their composite Sun in Pisces, what this
couple needs is a regular diet of shared soul-time. They can call it yoga.
They can call it moonlit nights in the desert. They can call it lying in a bed
listening to music with the lights down low. Whatever they call it, they need
it. Without it, their love withers on the vine. With it, they shine like a
beacon of magic in their community.
COMPOSITE SUN IN THE FIRST HOUSE
An invisible gravitational field radiates from this couple. People are
affected by them. The impact may be overt or covert, depending on other
factors in the composite chart, but once you look for it, it is unmistakable.
These partners are trend setters. If they’re happy, when they walk into a
crowded room, the jokes get funnier—even if their own mouths are closed.
If they’re feeling low, the room gets quieter. If they’re feeling sexy—well,
make sure you’re not serving martinis.
The paradox is that, despite the power and confidence that radiates from
them as a couple, inwardly there is a feeling of uncertainty about this
relationship. Are they “supposed” to be a couple or not? What is “God’s
position” on that one? God is mum, kind of like one of those enigmatic
Buddhas with the inscrutable smile. Ultimately, there is no house as free as
the first. There, human will reigns supreme. There’s not much interference
from any sense of destiny. For this relationship to work, it must be a
conscious choice. They must burn bridges behind them and not look back.
Should they? It’s up to them. Not every dating couple that happens to have
their composite Sun in the first house is supposed to spend life together. All
we know for sure is that, sooner or later, they will come to a fork in the
road. They’ll choose this love, or they’ll choose to leave it. And it will need
to be a totally adult decision, without any figures of authority—worldly or
divine—intervening.
A few lines back, we mentioned the gravitational field around these two.
Whether they know it or not, they are leaders in their community. People
are influenced by them, even model themselves on them. There are serious,
far-reaching undercurrents here. If this couple breaks up, there’s a spike in
the local “divorce rate.” If they remain committed and vibrant together,
more people in their crowd are likely to take the plunge into serious
coupling. First house energy is always about leadership, and with composite
charts, it_s about leadership in terms of the local attitude about committed
love. If they choose to be together, they can light the way for many others to
take that path. And if they choose not to be, that’s all right—they can still
model kind, sensitive, honorable endings. The world benefits from that too.
But if they model catastrophe, prepare for a minor epidemic.
COMPOSITE SUN IN THE SECOND HOUSE
Self-confidence is always a big issue with the second house—and right
away let’s make it clear that this self-confidence isn’t to be confused with
the “hormonal courage” that arises naturally about ten seconds after a first
kiss! With their composite Sun in the second house, these two people are
working toward believing in themselves as a couple enough to trust the
real-world, grown-up potential of their relationship.
There’s an irony here, one familiar to every bright twenty-one-year-old
who’s read the words “experienced only” a few too many times in the want
ads. For a couple truly to believe in itself, it really helps to have some miles
on the relationship. To have survived a few storms. But no relationship
starts out that way! At first, they must rely on faith—and hormones. With
the composite Sun in the second house, the risk is simple to define: too
much aversion to risk. And love is always a risk. The upshot is that this
couple could fritter away their potential “making sure they were ready.”
They could delay escalations in the level of commitment for too long. They
could hedge their bets with fugues in their heads along the lines of “maybe
this relationship will work, but then if it doesn’t, there’s always . . . ”
To exhort every couple with the composite Sun in the second house to
promise themselves to each other immediately would be wrong and
irresponsible. Not every relationship is supposed to last a lifetime! We only
caution them that hesitation can take as costly a toll as haste—and add that
they benefit a lot by giving themselves signals of the seriousness of the
bond. They might, for example, plan to go on a cruise together six months
from now. Or buy a little sailboat together to share. Such steps send deep
signals down into the soul, announcing the expectation that the relationship
has a future. That triggers two positive possibilities. The first is that they
begin to believe more in themselves. The second is that, if the relationship
really doesn’t have the “legs” it needs for the long run, they scare
themselves into seeing it. And better sooner than later!
COMPOSITE SUN IN THE THIRD HOUSE
You’re driving in traffic through an urban landscape. A jaywalking
pedestrian dashes out in front of you, knowing you’ll slow down enough to
avoid vehicular manslaughter—and betting his life that you see him. A light
turns red: hit the brakes. A driver just ahead does something crazy. Adjust.
Observe. React. Welcome to Chaos Theory. Welcome to the third house.
With a composite Sun in this sector of the chart, the couple has signed up
for a wild ride. However orderly they may be as individuals, however neat
and controlled, so long as they remain together they’ll be improvising
decisions at the speed of light in the face of unpredictable reality. Together,
they are a magnet for the unexpected and the improbable. And together, two
halves of a greater whole, they have what it takes to enjoy the ride.
Navigating an automobile illustrates third house consciousness. But so
does a rollicking conversation between two people engaged with a
fascinating topic. One makes a statement. The other one half-agrees—and
takes the topic in a new direction. Which prompts a creative leap in the first
person. And a joke from person number two, which leads to a tangential
remark, which swings back into the topic from an unexpected angle. And
soon both people have learned something they never knew before—and
said things they didn’t know they knew!
Traveling, learning, talking: all these activities are likely to be central to
the shared experience of a couple with a composite third house Sun. The
word “media” figures prominently in their life together. As an entity, they
are simply curious—and the maintenance of the basic vitality of their
relationship depends upon indulging that need for endless fascination. Thus,
boredom and predictability are anathema here. Hurling themselves
headlong into the unexpected and the unknown is essential. An open mind
and a willingness to improvise are needed tools. Language is absolutely
pivotal here—a silent third house relationship is soon a dead one.
Are there actually patterns underlying apparent chaos? That’s a hot topic
in modern physics. From the perspective of a third house composite Sun,
we can define one such pattern. Understanding it brings us to the
evolutionary heart of this configuration. Whatever this couple believes and
expects, they’ll draw the opposite to themselves. It’s as if the universe
insists upon saying to them, “I am more complex than your conception of
me.”
COMPOSITE SUN IN THE FOURTH HOUSE
The stakes are beautifully high with a composite Sun in the fourth house.
This is the classic “house of the home,” and it refers to the Holy Grail of
human intimacy: a truly bonded, stable relationship that provides a sense of
“home” for both people involved. It is about radical commitment and a
lifetime of mutual support. Its orientation is naturally domestic. It tends
toward fertility—with this configuration, if you don’t want kids, practice
birth control diligently! There’s a sense of permanence and stability, of a
relationship “meant to be.”
Sometimes a couple that has been together for decades will refer
endearingly to each other in terms that baffle young lovers: “she’s like an
old familiar shoe,” or “we hardly need to speak to each other anymore.” Not
the kinds of words on-screen lovers whisper to each other with the
buildings blowing up behind them! Clearly, there are potential horrors in
those sentiments. They reek of the blind, sexless boredom of a love that
died long ago but never fell over. As a culture, we’ve gotten estranged from
the beauty of the fourth house, which makes it a little harder for modern
couples with this configuration to find their rhythm. Naturally, as this love
matures, these two find themselves less oriented to the outer world: to
appearances, to their careers, to the night life. They’ll probably find their
blood-families playing a big role in their life together. We mentioned the
fertility of this configuration. Let’s add that the nurturing energy here
extends beyond children: friends-in-need will abound. Stray cats meow at
the door. Something safe and calming radiates from these two, and anyone
under stress will be drawn to them like a home-made meal after a month of
fast food.
Once this relationship moves in the direction of commitment, the
physical location of the home they choose to share is a big issue. The
overriding principle is that they are very sensitive to their domestic scene,
and pushing it up the list of priorities is a very positive move. Often, in
practical terms, it comes down to spending more money for a place they
love—and it’s money well-spent. A cheaper place might allow them to
vacation in Europe, but the daily drain of an uncomfortable home
outweighs that. Furniture they love, maybe a little garden, some extra effort
to keep the place cleaned up and attractive—all these are relationship-
affirming moves. Above all, they need quiet time together in their “Hobbit-
hole.” Some couples prefer city life, and that’s fine—one can have a
comfortable, safe home there too. But the classic response to the fourth
house Sun involves a strong sense of relationship with the land itself.
Probably, sooner or later, this couple will discover their “true home,” and it
will be a piece of land that speaks to them from under their feet. If they can
possibly buy a place, that’s to the good. It’s easy to visualize them planting
an apple tree there—and eating apple pie fifty years later!
COMPOSITE SUN IN THE FIFTH HOUSE
How long can you fall in love? A month? A decade? A lifetime? For the
couple with their composite Sun in this “house of love affairs,” the basic
vitality of their bond depends upon keeping that magic alive. There’s room
for realism here—this couple, like all others in history, will experience
frustration and boredom with each other sometimes. That’s only natural.
But they compensate for it with the kind of attention that lovers pay each
other. They need to compliment each other freely. Enormous benefits come
to them from simply dressing up and going out to dinner at a nice
restaurant. Ditto for showing up with flowers “for no reason.” Some
couples make a joke of never remembering their anniversary—not this one,
at least if they’re healthy! Like new lovers, the myth of the relationship
needs to be fed. Taking each other for granted is toxic. Too many oblivious
“yes, dears,” and Eros seeps out of the connection. A fifth house
relationship tends to be high maintenance. Balancing that, it’s also highly
energizing for both partners.
Shared creativity is pivotal to a couple with their composite Sun in the
fifth. After they’ve cast off the magical hormonal training wheels of the
early stages of sexual bonding, finding artistic outlets that engage them both
is an enormous support for their faith in their connection. It can be as
simple as reading each other’s poetry—and a fifth house relationship will
bring out the poet in both of them! It can be as elaborate as some kind of
public performance. Maybe they play music together or co-author a book.
Maybe they step on stage together in a community theater. Perhaps they
hang a show of their photographs. In any case, there is something about the
aliveness, immediacy and emotional risk of shared creative work that feeds
them. It helps keep the nakedness of new love present for them, and that is
the soul of the fifth house.
All through their life together, the couple with the composite Sun in the
fifth house will experience something of a “revolving door” in terms of
their friendships. This doesn’t mean they’ll have no life-long bonds with
other people; they can and do. But it guarantees a pattern of people coming
into their lives in very big, time-consuming ways—and then disappearing.
This isn’t necessarily painful. Often it happens naturally, as, for example,
when a theater ensemble bonds deeply, then moves apart after the show is
over.
Finding a right, healthy relationship with the human need for pleasure is
another fifth house issue, and this couple will wrestle with it. At the obvious
level, we need to say that they should beware of the insidious way
addictions and compulsions can creep into the life they share. At the more
subtle level, we do need to add that a celebration of life is essential to the
fifth house—and thus to the evolutionary intentions of this couple. It comes
down to ensuring that they are actually enhancing their joy rather than
going down the sad road of some kind of escapism.
COMPOSITE SUN IN THE SIXTH HOUSE
In the standard lexicon of astrological interpretation, the sixth house is as
sexy as a dish rag. The interpretations generally emphasize duties and
responsibilities, “spiced” with daily routines. We’ll do better than that
below, but first let’s pay the devil his due: with the composite Sun in the
sixth, these two people will indeed attract more than their fair share of hard
work. Likely, weighty responsibilities will find them. Perhaps it takes the
form of familial duties: the elder parent who can’t be abandoned and who
can’t care for himself or herself. The demanding or incapacitated child.
There are some duties from which we simply cannot walk away and ever
respect ourselves again. The sixth house represents that part of human
reality.
If the responsibilities aren’t so close to home, they probably take on a
professional tone. There’s a good chance this couple will find themselves
sharing work somehow. Unbeknownst to them when they first meet, they
are a natural team, custom-designed to do a job brilliantly well. Each has
skills the other one lacks. Once the alchemical process of their bonding gets
underway, it’s as if the word magically goes out to the community. Very
soon, circumstances are pulling them toward their natural service—which
can provide a solid center of gravity for the relationship and a very real
basis for believing in themselves. The work they share, even though it
exacts a price from them, definitely pays more than money. And the
clincher is that if they shirk the more public service, they’ll surely manifest
all this sixth house energy in the form of more dispiriting duties that
descend upon them as “the luck of the draw.”
Mentoring relationships are another big part of the sixth house. As this
relationship matures, this couple will find themselves over and over again
in the role of showing other couples the way. Sex comes naturally to human
beings, but relationship is really an art. And like any other art, it can partly
be learned—and taught. Destiny call our couple with the composite Sun in
the sixth to both ends of that process. When they first meet, they need to
keep their eyes open for their own teachers. A good bet is that this will be
an older couple—or at least a couple who’s been together a while—who
offers critical support and insight to our heroes in their salad days. Later,
they’ll find younger couples knocking on their door, ostensibly asking to
borrow a cup of sugar—and looking to learn the secret of sane, lasting love.
COMPOSITE SUN IN THE SEVENTH HOUSE
With the composite Sun here, this couple has enrolled in post-doctorate
work in seventh-house relating skills. Developing and maintaining
intimacy, trust, reciprocity and commitment is the territory here. As
individuals, they may be profoundly independent, assertive, even suspicious
or combative. Nonetheless, as a couple they must learn to share, to connect,
to let down their guard with one another, and to compromise. Each person
must assume that the partner’s needs and feelings are just as important as
his or her own, not more so and not less so.
Fortunately, given the nature of the seventh house Sun’s composite
terrain, these two people are often drawn to each other immediately. A spirit
of friendship and camaraderie can swiftly arise here, a sense of
complementarity. Even if we don’t fall in love, if we have a seventh house
composite Sun, on some level we feel that we have business with this
person. We want to throw our lot in with him or her. Constant awareness of
the other person is a feature here; we are rarely indifferent to someone with
whom we have a seventh house composite Sun. Such emotions are most
conducive to the work of the seventh house.
Remember that this house, the traditional “house of marriage”—although
the eighth may have just as good a claim to that title—is the house of that
which is not the Self. The house of the Other. It has also been called the
house of open enemies and the house of worthy opponents. How can all
those names apply to this house? Sooner or later, conflict arises with
someone who is not yourself, not your clone, not your twin. We’ve all
learned that before we even left high school, yet there is such a powerful
tendency, and possibly an unconscious tendency, for a couple with a
seventh house composite Sun to identify with each other that the first
conflicts can come as a shock, and may even feel like a betrayal. “You
mean you don’t want what I want? You, my other half? You, who complete
me? How can that be?” If your seventh house composite Sun partner lets
you down, you are so sensitized to him or her that you feel profoundly let
down. What do you do then? Deal with the conflict, don’t run from it. This
composite Sun prefers harmony to wrangling—but it also must learn how to
handle conflict in order to maintain the harmony it desires. Affirm the
affection and connection between you, listen to one another without judging
or blaming, find common ground, and work out a mutually agreeable
compromise. Easier said than done, but that’s the work of the seventh
house, and with enough consciousness and good will on both sides, this
couple is well suited to its accomplishment.
A potentially helpful factor is that these partners are a magnet for other
people. They draw friends. Let’s take it a step further: they need friends. It’s
possible to maintain a seventh house composite Sun and never see anyone
outside the relationship, but it isn’t easy. These people need to connect with
others: with other couples, with other individuals. To share good times, to
compare notes about relating, or just to blow off steam about one another to
someone who loves both partners, has a sympathetic ear and can keep
confidences.
Minor annoyances accumulate in any bond. We are more sensitized to
them if we have a seventh house composite Sun, because we are more
sensitized to everything about our partner, for good or ill. He rarely wrings
out a washcloth properly, and water keeps getting on the bathroom floor.
She keeps hogging the counter space in the bathroom.
Please understand that we are referring to minor annoyances, not
relationship-damaging ones that require a discussion with the mate. These
partners both need to take ten minutes and ventilate, separately, to their
closest friends about these minor things. “I adore Jack, but . . . ” At the end
of the ten minutes, chances are they’ll each be more able to put the little
things in perspective and conclude, “But those are minor, and I’m glad I’m
with him.”
COMPOSITE SUN IN THE EIGHTH HOUSE
Why, ultimately, does sexuality exist? Arguments about the Darwinian
advantages it gives us over amoebas are compelling—but that line
practically demands a wisecrack. Many aspects of this universe serve more
than a single purpose, and sex is doubtless one of them. Once we accept the
metaphysical notion that our world is an incubator for the evolution of
consciousness, the pieces of the puzzle fall into place. What promotes
conscious evolution faster than sexuality? What, in other words, so
confronts us with the realities—and the limitations—of our present
consciousness? For the majority of us, the most compelling answer is
usually lying in the bed next to us.
Nothing drives us deeper into our psychological selves than sexuality.
And that is precisely what the eighth house represents astrologically. With
their composite Sun in the eighth, these two people have taken on a Great
Work. Together, they will evolve—or tear each other to shreds. Something
in the chemistry between them triggers the emergence of whatever issues
they least want to face—fear of abandonment, jealousy, possessiveness,
insecurity, gender-anger. It all comes up. And it either gets healed or it
dominates the relationship. Piece by piece, step by step, they go deeper and
deeper. Whatever they uncover, there is of course more behind it. In the
end, if they’ve succeeded and stayed together, then they face the ego’s
pluperfect challenge: death itself—and remember that in traditional
astrology, the eighth is indeed the house of death. Two people who’ve loved
each other for a big chunk of a lifetime sooner or later confront the prospect
of one of their deaths. Imagine looking each other in the eye and dealing
with that one in a spirit of stark naked emotional honesty! That’s the
composite Sun in the eighth house.
So who’d want to bother with having such a composite chart? Why
would they? There are two answers. The first is soul-evolution itself:
nothing we can possibly do on this earth so accelerates the growth of the
human spirit. And if that sounds a little abstract for you, try this one:
fabulous sex. When we are young and inexperienced, we often imagine that
sexual energy sustains itself automatically, or at least that it will do so if we
hook up with someone who looks like a movie star. Life soon enough
disabuses us of that notion. It’s not the bodies that sustain sexual heat
between two individuals; it’s their souls. Without soul-nakedness, give it six
months or a year and we might as well be siblings sharing a bed. Enter the
eighth house composite Sun: that soul-nakedness is the essence of the
process these two have triggered between themselves. They’ll pay a price in
terms of psychological effort, humility, and sheer emotional exhaustion
sometimes. And they’ll get what they pay for in the form of intensity,
sustainable passion, true closeness, and a sense of having hit the button on
the evolutionary warp drive.
COMPOSITE SUN IN THE NINTH HOUSE
Get out the suitcases! With the composite Sun in the ninth house, these two
are going to need them. The destiny they trigger as they come together will
literally stretch their horizons. Even if they are homebodies by nature,
circumstances will arise that press them to leave home—and more pivotally,
to leave the defining context of their familiar culture. Maybe they’ll simply
travel a lot. Quite possibly, the life they share will lead them actually to
move to another part of the country or perhaps to make their home
overseas. Perhaps their families are of different ethnic, regional, or
socioeconomic origins. It’s all “travel” in the broad sense of the word.
There’s more to the ninth house than travel. Anything that expands our
horizons is part of it. With their composite Sun in the ninth house, if they’re
healthy and happy as a couple, you’ll find these two sitting in the front row
of lectures on new archaeological discoveries in the Yucatán. You’ll
overhear them at the next table in a restaurant talking about books they’ve
read or new ideas they’ve encountered. Anything that stretches them feeds
them. Together, they share an evolutionary intention to press beyond any
limiting framework, be it cultural, philosophical or mental.
Traditionally, religion is a central ninth house theme. That may still be
accurate today. Quite possibly, a couple with their composite Sun in the
ninth will find themselves increasingly identified with a particular faith. It’s
also helpful to note that the ninth house embraces any kind of “lens”
through which we look at life—religion can do that, but so can a
philosophical perspective, such as liberal or conservative politics,
entrepreneurialism, or even cynicism. They’re all “religions” in the larger
sense, and they can all potentially fit the driving ninth house need for a
sense of meaning in life.
Life without something in which to believe may be empty, but we must
also recognize that people create prisons for themselves with their own
belief-systems. Here lies the shadow for the couple with the Sun in the
ninth house. Their basic energy and vitality as a couple depend on a steady
diet of anything that stretches them by evening beyond what they knew that
morning. Once we’ve “come to understand the meaning of life,” we’ve got
life in a neat little box. The freshness goes out of our experience. Together,
these partners are on a quest for meaning—but whatever they find, it’s more
than that. To endlessly seek something they dare not find: that is the destiny
of our pair of gypsy-pilgrims. Think about it too hard and they’ll blow some
mental fuses. Live it every day, and they’ll find their relationship
invigorating, surprising, and never the same.
COMPOSITE SUN IN THE TENTH HOUSE
To think of the tenth house in terms of career is mainstream astrology today.
And that’s accurate enough. But just because a couple has their composite
Sun in the tenth doesn’t mean they’ll be rich and famous, or even
particularly ambitious. Those questions are more related to their individual
birthcharts. To get to the true heart of what this configuration means, we
have to go beyond the blinders of our present culture and grasp some of the
deeper layers of this house. Then we have to put two and two together.
First, the tenth house represents the human need to play a meaningful
role in one’s community. That drive goes way beyond any fundamentally
ego-driven need for money, status or power, but it is not inconsistent with
them. That’s a critical point: you can do something publicly in which you
believe and simultaneously get paid, empowered and respected for it. And
who would really want a job that paid only money? Ultimately, the tenth
house has more to do with those loftier drives than it does with mere status.
It’s more about the dignity and self-clarity that comes from giving than it is
about “getting ours.”
Next, remember that the composite Sun is always, by definition, about a
relationship. So, in understanding what it means to have the composite Sun
in the tenth, we put these two factors together, and realize that the couple as
a unit is destined to offer a gift to their community. Quite possibly, they’ll
work together as a professional team with each one contributing something
unique and essential to the partnership. “Chicken soup” wisdom about
relationships often cautions against adding the strains of a collegial,
working relationship to the natural strains of intimacy. That’s fair advice in
general, but it does not apply in this case. For this couple, considerable
vitality and confidence arises from being partnered in their “Monday
through Friday” lives as well as in the bedroom. As their destiny together
unfolds, this option of sharing their work will quite likely present itself as a
possibility, and they should take it seriously.
Going further, we can count on any couple with their composite Sun in
the tenth house playing a significant “tribal” role simply through the
outward symbolism of their relationship. Regardless of their intention or
even their awareness, people will be modeling themselves on these two.
They’ll be held up as a standard, and their style of intimacy—at least
insofar as it can be observed casually—will impact the values and choices
of other couples. Sexual bonds are probably the oldest human institution,
but of course their stylistic mythology changes with each generation. With
their composite Sun in the tenth, these two people are style-setters. In
monkey-see, monkey-do fashion, if they “moon” on each other in public,
others will follow. If they tend to process their disagreements openly, other
people will do that too—and ditto if they err in the direction of keeping
their dirty laundry private. If they part, there will be an epidemic of
relationship endings around them. And if they love each other well and
truly, they will have offered a sweet gift to this lonely, crazy world.
Whether they know it or not, this couple is leaving deep footprints behind
them.
COMPOSITE SUN IN THE ELEVENTH HOUSE
The eleventh house is about our images of the future. With the composite
Sun there, a couple draws energy in the present-tense from pictures of
where they may be in time. It’s almost like borrowing money—you take it
from the future and you use it today. Here’s how it works:
A couple who have been dating for nine weeks agree to go on vacation
together this summer—three months from now. They both walk away from
the conversation happy and maybe a little shaky too. Even if they didn’t
discuss it explicitly, a lot more just passed between them than a decision
about a trip to the beach. They’ve signed a contract to still be together a bit
down the road. They’ve affirmed their shared faith, for now, in their
connection. They’ve narrowed their options—and defined themselves as a
couple.
In a new romance, a lot can happen in three months. Quite possibly,
they’ll be split up by then. There goes their deposit on that nice beach
house!
A couple decides to marry or otherwise commit to each other “until death
do us part.” And it’s exactly like the beach trip—in the same way that a
nuclear bomb is just like a firecracker! It’s all a question of scale. The
principles are precisely the same. Such a commitment is energizing—and
frightening. It can add dignity and meaning to two lives. It can literally
increase one’s longevity and boost one’s immune response. It can “cash
out” one’s dreams with shared resources, financially and in terms of all the
advantages of teamwork. And, if the relationship crashes and burns, it can
take a big bite out of one’s soul.
With the composite Sun in the eleventh, these two benefit a lot from
thinking strategically. The most dangerous condition for them lies in
reaching a kind of “comfort zone” of rudderless contentment. They are
really much better off striving together toward shared goals: a big trip to
South America, a house they might design and build together, deepening
their yoga practice. Above all, there is a sense of moving endlessly toward a
more perfect partnership. Not every couple with a composite Sun in this
house is supposed to go down the long road of life together, and it would be
wrong to interpret the configuration that way. Still, a long, directionless
limbo of “dating” will quickly drain their batteries. The eleventh house
sustains itself on progress and commitment—committing to the beach
house this summer or committing to life together, as appropriate.
One more piece of the puzzle: the eleventh house is often related to
“friends,” although words such as “networking” or “teamwork” make the
point more clearly. Bottom line, these two share destiny with a lot of other
people. Many of the plans and goals that sustain them are not attainable
except through some degree of cooperative effort. Perhaps they join a
couples’ group. Maybe they derive a lot of their identity from a religious
affiliation—or from weekend contra dancing. Metaphysically, they are
participants in a kind of “group soul,” and what they have come to this
world to do and experience together is inseparable from that larger
framework.
COMPOSITE SUN IN THE TWELFTH HOUSE
Loss, trouble, secret enemies—the traditional litany describing the twelfth
house would be quite dispiriting for any couple who found their composite
Sun placed there. If they read on, they might finally run into the notion that
this house has something to do with monasteries and convents. Once
through giggling about what that insight boded for their sexual life, they’d
probably be eager to forget about astrology entirely and head for the
bedroom.
They’d have our blessing, too! Only we would encourage them to make
sure to turn off the lights and light a candle or two before they lie down
together. And when they were making love, we would encourage them to
keep their eyes open at least part of the time. We would, in other words,
encourage them to use their sexuality as a doorway into another world. With
their composite Sun in the mystical twelfth house, conscious sexuality is
their monastery!
What about all those grim predictions in the traditional books? They are
not without foundation. We just need to keep perspective, and allow a little
wiggle room for human freedom and human consciousness. Together, they
have signed up for a high stakes path: in a nutshell, they grow spiritually, or
they lose everything, including each other.
All through history, mystics have practiced intentionally giving up their
attachments in order to get closer to the Divine. Whether we like it or not,
many of us will have things we love ripped from us in the course of life—
professional reversals, bereavements, the weakening of the physical body
with time or disease. In response to these losses, some of us become bitter
or depressed. Others turn to spirituality for solace. Many of us have
witnessed the miracle of a person dying of cancer or AIDS who glows with
the aura of a saint. Loss can be a doorway into spirituality.
Does this mean that our couple with the composite Sun in the twelfth
house is destined to experience such losses? Not necessarily. If their
relationship is truly used as an evolutionary vehicle—the actual agreement
their souls made—then these losses are not necessary. It’s only if they
become forgetful that these “reminders” of the transitoriness of earthly life
are triggered.
So how do they get it right? Much of it comes down to quiet time
together. Candlelight helps. Keeping spirit in their bodily relationship is
critical. They may be drawn to some shared spiritual practice. That would
be of great benefit to them, even if they differ in terms of theology or
religion. They must of course live in “reality,” as we all do. But they can
also create little pockets of peace together away from the noise and the
shallowness, places where they can experience each other as
consciousnesses passing briefly through this ghostly world of forms.
Chapter 6
The Composite Moon
“Happy together—unhappy together. Oh wouldn’t that be fine?”

S o go the lyrics to the jazz song, “Rain or Shine.” It’s a rich, grown-up
sentiment. Children want to be happy all the time and imagine that
when they’re not, something’s wrong. As we mature—if we mature—we
come to know that sadness is part of life too. We make peace with it. We
console ourselves with the realization that sadness is the mirror in which we
become aware of happiness. We learn that each has its own beauty. If we’re
fortunate enough to find a soulmate, more veils are lifted from the mystery.
Happiness shared is happiness squared—and sorrow shared is one of love’s
sweetest faces.
This flow of sheer, shared feeling is the composite Moon’s domain. If we
could average the mood of a relationship over its duration, we’d see clearly
into the heart of its Moon. This “averaging,” by the way, wouldn’t turn into
gray neutrality. Instead, it would convey a uniquely personal style of shared
response to joy and sadness—not to mention victory and loss, adventure,
encounters with the unexpected, the challenges of hard work, and the very
real challenges of simple relaxation. Each couple, just as each individual,
responds to such stimuli in a particular way. Just think how an introvert and
an extravert respond to the words, “There’s someone you just have to
meet.”
Their composite lunar mood radiates from a couple as surely as one can
feel the “sink” of a depressed person walking into a room, or the “lift” of a
merry one. Nowhere is the lunar mood of a couple so visible as in the
private spaces they create for themselves. The simplest illustration is the
mood of a home, which leads to one of the main correlates of the composite
Moon: the domestic environment. Not all couples live together, but when
they do, the composite Moon gives tremendous insight into the nature and
spirit of their home. More importantly, it prescribes certain stylistic
necessities if the couple is going to weather the gold-plated intimate
challenges of living under one roof. Even for two people who aren’t trying
to form a shared home, the composite Moon sheds a revealing light on their
secret world—their private jokes, their intimate style when no one else is
looking, the tone of their bond.
Life and love are battering experiences sometimes. How can a couple
actually heal from a necessary conflict? Or an unnecessary one? How can
warmth and trust and easiness be restored? How can two people escape
from those silent, icy hell-worlds some lonely author of self-help books
might label “good boundaries” or “respect for each other’s differences”?
How can simple monkey looseness remain alive? Mother Moon, in her
infinite, forgiving humanity, holds the answers. To understand her message
in a composite chart is to enlist kindness, humanity and humility to serve
lasting love.
COMPOSITE MOON IN ARIES
This couple shares a warrior’s heart. That’s a prime Aries archetype. We
could also invoke the pioneer, survivor or daredevil. However timid and
retiring they may be as individuals, the happiness of their union is fed by
adventures great and small. They need to prove themselves to themselves,
develop their combined willpower, and face worthy adversaries. They thrive
on challenges, testing their limits, and healthy competition—preferably
with something outside the couple rather than with one another.
That last point is important. A composite Aries Moon couple whose idea
of adventure is folding the laundry needs challenges just as much as a
couple plotting to climb Mount Everest. Strange as it may sound, the lazier
couple is taking a bigger risk with their love than the mountain-climbers!
Warriors need battles, and all astrological energy manifests somehow.
Whether it manifests well or poorly is up to us. Without something to push
against in the outside world, without a consciously chosen “common
enemy,” a composite Aries Moon starts pushing against itself. Humor turns
to sarcasm. Grudges become feuds. Bickering escalates into all-out
vendettas.
Whether the common enemy is the mutual need to get into shape or to
get home from that white water rafting trip in one piece, whether the shared
challenge is buying a house or writing a play, this couple needs something
to pursue together. They need combats and victories. When all that vibrant
Aries energy is directed consciously and the heart of the relationship is fed,
these two can not only have a lot of fun, they can experience a profound
and growing loyalty to one another. Because they’ve faced foes together,
each partner will know the mate is a good person to have at his or her back
in a fight. For warriors, there isn’t much higher praise.
On the domestic front, the home of our happy couple with a composite
Aries Moon may be full of the “spoils of war”— or its weapons. A trophy
from a doubles tennis tournament they won. Skis or bicycles on the wall. A
pool table in the living room. The first dollar their business earned. Patience
is not what Aries is about. Therefore, the home of a couple with this
composite Moon is best designed to be dashed through at top speed, with
frequently needed objects close at hand, a minimum of clutter to trip over,
and few if any doodads to rearrange. It may not be the most relaxing home
on the block, but a visit there can be most invigorating.
COMPOSITE MOON IN TAURUS
What nourishes the soul of the couple with their composite Moon in
Taurus? Simple: a garden of earthly delights. Inside us all is a wise old
mammal that’s been around for a few million years—long enough to know
exactly what it wants. The trick for this couple lies in listening to it.
We humans tie ourselves in knots. It’s the dark side of that big, concept-
generating brain inside our skulls. Most of us have been so busy “we didn’t
notice we were hungry.” How smart does that look to the average raccoon?
With the composite Moon in this sign, listening to the “inner raccoon” is the
first step on the path to a lasting sense of well-being in the relationship.
You’ll notice we said “raccoon” instead of “bull.” That might raise a few
astrological eyebrows. But Taurus isn’t narrowly about bulls—it’s about
being true to our animal natures. Basically, to the couple with composite
Moon in Taurus, we would say, “Pick your favorite animal and use it as the
guiding image.” In fact, if you’ve been together a while, you’ve probably
already chosen it. It’s there in the secret Moon-life you share together, the
one you’d be embarrassed if anyone knew about, where you pretend to be
“pooh-bears” or meow at each other like cats.
That’s your totem animal, and it has messages for you. What it needs,
you need. Some of those needs are about being in your “natural habitat”
regularly, paddling a canoe or hiking the mountains. That animal describes
how social or how solitary your needs are. It reveals how much time
together you need. It will offer insight into whether this “creature” you are
likes daylight or moonlight. It will tell you how much stimulus you need—
or can stand. It will, in other words, guide you unerringly through the
questions that really matter—the ones that relate to the needs of that ancient
creature in the two of you, beneath the veneer of civilization and its
neurotic complications.
COMPOSITE MOON IN GEMINI
The soul of this relationship is elfin: curious about everything, magical,
whimsical, hard to define or pin down. Quick. Full of riddles. The more
these two people are true to that spirit and mood, the happier they’ll be.
With composite Moon in Gemini, there’s wisdom in lightness and folly in
an overly serious attitude. Here, truth looms in the mirror of humor. Every
idea, however brilliant, soon gives way to another—and these two love to
follow the threads of free association through that labyrinth! Conversation,
lively and fast, is a sign of fundamental health for this pair—and if
conversation stops, something between them is sick with sorrow.
Always with the Moon, we are talking about a place within to which we
must soften and open. It has a deep kinship with the “inner child,” or,
simply, with the heart. Thus it’s easy—perilously easy—for the adult parts
of us to ignore it. That’s always the trick with the composite Moon: the
couple needs to feel the message of that “still, small voice” within them. If
they do, they’ve caught that slippery fish we call happiness. If they don’t,
however productive, efficient and well-adjusted they may be, some basic
delight is missing between them. And that brings us right back to that
ultimate Geminian barometer of health and well-being: talk. This
relationship should be one long fascinating conversation.
To keep the conversation going, it helps to have something new to
discuss. Thus, we recognize another elemental need for the couple with this
composite Moon: stimulus. Surprise. Change. Wonder. When in doubt, they
need to do something they’ve never done before. It can be as simple as
going to a new restaurant, or as complex as taking a class that stretches their
intellectual horizons. In saying this, we also define their nemesis: boredom.
And boredom sneaks into relationships, hiding inside the Trojan horse of
adult responsibility, reasonableness and practicality—each of which is
mortally perilous to these two if operating at more than bare-bones
necessity.
The natural domestic environment for a couple with composite Moon in
Gemini is probably media-intensive, with conversation pieces everywhere.
Shifting furniture and repainting walls regularly can encourage
conversation, and it’s a good bet they’ll move house more often than the
average couple.
COMPOSITE MOON IN CANCER
The Moon is the heart, and it’s stronger in Cancer than it would be in any
other sign. For a couple with the composite Moon there, the volume is
through the roof on “Moon energy.” That covers a lot of bases, all of them
soulful.
First, this is a very emotional relationship: the love is deep and the bond
very powerful. Cancer and the Moon both link to the human need for hearth
and home. With their composite Moon here, these two doubtless felt an
eerie degree of familiarity with each other right from their first meeting. It’s
as if there were a pre-existing pact of mutual defense and protection, as you
would find in families. In terms of serious commitment and long-term
intimacy, it would be hard to find a more solid foundation on which to build
than a composite Cancer Moon.
Still, there is a moody quality to the connection. That’s not a disease and
we shouldn’t overreact to it. All couples naturally go through ups and
downs. The swings are just a little wider with these two. The one mood
which we need to watch out for is a kind of quiet “clamming up.” When the
Crab withdraws into its shell, certain of its basic needs aren’t being met. A
big risk, with the Moon in this sign, is that rather than risk the expression of
needs, the couple retreats into silence. Far better to say the needs out loud
and thereby get them met. With Cancer they are very primal, almost exactly
the same as the needs of a newborn infant: touch, attention, time,
gentleness, a feeling of tenderness, a sense of safety. One person approaches
the other in the midst of a chaotic day and says, “I need a hug.” If you just
let that image wash over you, you’ll get a good handle on everything we
expect in a healthy, mutually-nourishing Cancer Moon relationship.
In terms of the domestic environment, one of the absolute basics with the
composite Moon here is that these two are simply very good at nesting: they
can make a room, or a floor, or an entire home feel as cozy and safe as
apple pie at Grandma’s house. There’s a nourishing energy around them—
it’s likely that at least one of them is a good cook, and probably when
people visit they congregate in the kitchen. Friends going though hard times
will be drawn to them like iron filings to a magnet. Ditto for stray kittens.
And should they choose to go down this road together, they would make
skilled, happy parents of some profoundly lucky kids.
COMPOSITE MOON IN LEO
The mood of this couple, with their composite Moon in the sign of the King
of Beasts, is regal. A quality of presence radiates from them. And, as we
say in the American South, “they clean up real nice.” Translation: they look
comfortable and natural in expensive evening clothes. You can almost
picture them as extras in a James Bond flick—hanging around the glittery
roulette wheel in Monaco, looking slightly bored, and tempted to return to
the yacht. An exaggeration perhaps, but it fits the regal mood of Leo.
The composite Moon always speaks eloquently of the reigning needs of a
couple—so do these two need a yacht? It wouldn’t hurt! But mostly what
we see here is that need to treat other with that kind of devotion, support,
and attention—they need, in a nutshell, to spoil each other.
Someone is telling a joke. He or she is being a bit long-winded about it,
but having fun in a good-natured way. That person’s mate is watching. Two
scenarios: in the first, the mate is looking heavenward, bored and
embarrassed by the partner’s performance. In the second, the mate is
enjoying every second of it, hanging on every word, laughing out loud at
the punch line, even if the joke wasn’t very funny. Which style of response
is most conducive in the long run to a feeling of warm, easy spontaneity
between two people? Which one supports them in feeling sexy, being
emotionally self-expressive, and feeling safe? Which one makes them feel
like a king or queen? Easy questions—and they profile what it takes for a
couple with a composite Leo Moon to establish the kind of mood in their
relationship that allows them to go forward together comfortably and
happily. They need to egg each other on, encourage each other, and
celebrate one another. A new hairstyle, a new shirt? Instant recognition and
positive commentary. Birthdays are never forgotten. Always, underlying
whatever surface details, you sense the currents of unconditional support,
and the evolutionary call: come out, wherever you are! Show me who you
really are!
In their domestic life, we again see the mark of the sovereign. Not
everyone can afford a castle, but that’s not the point. Self-expression and
applause are closer to the heart of the matter. Each partner’s creative works
are happily displayed—paintings, flower arrangements, musical
instruments. Any signs of personal victory or success are welcomed upon
the walls and bureaus. Five minutes in the house and you have a three-
dimensional sense of who lives there: that’s the castle!
COMPOSITE MOON IN VIRGO
With their composite Moon in Virgo, the mood of this couple can be serene,
but they’ll have to work on it to get there. Easily, the energy between them
can slip into a harried game of catch-up, with the nervous feeling of
catastrophe lurking around every bend in the road. That is not what the
configuration is ultimately about, and certainly that is not their shared soul-
intention. But without effort, that’s where they wind up.
Throughout these pages, we emphasize higher ground and more positive
perspectives. Not so here. Is that because this is a bad place to have the
composite Moon? Not at all. We do it because the spirit of Virgo is one of
effort. It thrives on challenge, and it breathes evolutionary change. Point
these two at the mountaintop and stand back. They are wired for effort.
Some people say, “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.” For this couple it’s more
like, “If it’s not growing, it’s broken.”
Meditate with us for a moment on the concept of discontent—an emotion
never in short supply with the composite Moon in Virgo. At first glance, it’s
an unpleasant word. Go a little deeper and the flower opens. Built into
discontent is a sense of higher, better possibilities. It is highly motivating,
and correlates strongly with a drive toward improvement. That’s the energy
here, and for it to be a positive force for this couple, it should be harnessed
and directed. When they’re healthy, they cultivate a spirit of open dialog.
Constructive, supportive criticism is welcome between them. They’ll be
willing to ask advice and to seek helpful counsel about their relationship.
Together they’ll express faith in the relationship and in each other and, in
the context of that love, they fearlessly name the mountain that lies before
them: they know the relationship will be better next year than it is today.
Where trouble can start is when that discontent turns into unsupportive
pickiness. They can fuss over trifles, especially silly outward details—
housecleaning, family responsibilities, money. That leads to an erosion of
their shared belief in their relationship. A spirit of harried exhaustion enters
the emotional equation. But it doesn’t have to be that way. All they have to
do is aim a little higher. A “perfect relationship” is probably an unattainable
goal, but for these two, there is glory, joy and fire in reaching for it together,
step by step, day by day.
COMPOSITE MOON IN LIBRA
An aura of rightness surrounds this couple. With their composite Moon in
Libra, people around them feel a kind of “lock” in their relationship, as if
they were meant to be together. Probably they look good as a couple. Their
bodies, their attitudes, their styles—all seem to fuse harmoniously. It’s easy
to imagine them dancing. Waltzing in the moonlight.
Underlying the elegant surface, a composite Moon in Libra suggests an
evolutionary challenge. As always, there are ways to get it right—and
plenty of ways to misuse the tools and make messes. Libra, the Scales, is
about balancing opposites. Light gives meaning to dark. Wet gives meaning
to dry. Truth gives meaning to kindness. Similarly, these two people can
give meaning to each other. But only if they don’t blur into each other. Their
individuality must remain intact. The inherent, natural tension of opposites
must remain alive. “Wet” and “dry” aren’t supposed to agree on “slightly
damp!”
When this relationship is healthy, we see these two celebrating their
differences. Discussions are spirited. When one wants to go to Yosemite
and the other wants to go to Kitty Hawk, they don’t settle on Omaha. They
negotiate everything and take turns bending to each other’s will. With the
composite Moon in Libra, there’s a risk they’ll prioritize agreement over
actually knowing each other. That misses the evolutionary point and would
drain the soul out of their bond.
The tension between opposites is . . . well, tense, sometimes! How do
they live with that? Libra harmonizes itself fundamentally though aesthetic
experience. These two benefit enormously from time spent engaged with
the arts. Attending concerts or dance performances. Walking through art
galleries. Gazing at beautiful sunsets. It’s profoundly helpful for them to
share a creative outlet: designing a garden, forming a banjo and mandolin
duet, or singing Motown tunes as they cruise down the highway. Earlier we
mentioned waltzing in the moonlight. Dancing would be good for them, as
each of their bodies viscerally learned the rhythms and moves of the other,
and tweaked themselves into graceful harmony at that level.
Similarly, the natural home environment for a couple with composite
Moon in Libra reflects this need for outward support for the inner condition
of serenity. Art on the walls. A good stereo. At least one pretty room in the
house, where keeping it lovely is viewed as a sacramental duty. With all
these harmonizing behaviors in motion, and with a balanced, attractive
domestic environment, the deeper, lasting, more individualized romance this
composite Moon promises can blossom.
COMPOSITE MOON IN SCORPIO
When our astrological ancestors named a sign after a scorpion, they weren’t
aiming to soothe our nerves. With a composite Scorpio Moon, this couple
faces daunting profundity together. They’ll enter the depths like shamans,
or the psychological depths will rise up in each of them and destroy the
relationship. Stark statements perhaps, but they reflect reality.
Together, these two are well-armed for the task. With their composite
Moon in the sign of the scorpion, there is a natural intensity to their bond.
It’s easy to imagine them getting spookily honest on their first date, talking
about places inside themselves they’d never discussed with anyone before.
That kind of honesty comes naturally—at first! Of course, Chapter Two is
entitled “Oh My God, I Can’t Believe We Talked About THAT!” Fears and
insecurities arise. In reaction, closeness is punctuated with distance or
aloofness—which of course creates a response in the partner. Soon, they
need to talk deeply and honestly about that development too. And the whole
relationship can potentially spiral down into exhaustion for both people.
Should that reality emerge, then their mood turns into one of brooding
caution and heaviness. In a nutshell, these two can get deeper more quickly
than they can handle! They need humor and outward distractions. They
need friends who can offer—or demonstrate—the one quality these two
most lack: perspective.
Moon-energy is not naturally oriented to thinking. It’s more about
feelings, instincts, and reflexes. That’s why we’re emphasizing caution
here. Together, these two human beings are wired to pick the locks on each
other’s deepest secrets and psychological wounds. That is almost the
definition of intimacy. But human beings need boundaries too. They may
need time before they can trust each other that much. All that can be blown
away by the reflexive Scorpio Moon drive to delve into the depths.
Domestically, it’s easy to visualize these two living in a haunted house or
perhaps in a mysterious, moss-encrusted cave. Encoded in those silly
images is a serious point: their penetrating soul-intentions are best
supported by a home environment that triggers reactions of depth and
seriousness in each of them. Bold paintings on the walls. Maybe Mexican
Day of the Dead figures on the mantlepiece. A statue of Kali in the corner.
A shaman’s rattle or drum on the coffee table. Sitting there together, they’ll
feel right at home.
COMPOSITE MOON IN SAGITTARIUS
This pair of human beings has a gypsy soul. If they’re going to be happy
together, they need what the proverbial gypsy needs: an open road, a
flamenco guitar, and a rose in the teeth for good measure. In the old
astrological paradigm, we might say to them, “I see travel in your stars.” In
the modern one, we’d rephrase it: “I see a need for travel in your stars.”
That minor distinction is actually hugely important in that it honors
something dear to the Sagittarian heart: freedom—which includes the
freedom to fail as well as the freedom to get it right. The point here is that
travel—and more generally, the notion of life lived to the full—is
completely optional. Claim it, and this couple is radiant. Watch network
television every night, and they become dull and petty. It’s their choice.
Their flight from dullness and pettiness is further enhanced by a shared
process of ongoing education. Sagittarius is the scholar as well as the gypsy
—although we must instantly affirm that this lunar need is about the joy and
adventure of learning, not about pedantry or life lived strictly above the
neck. Attending lectures together, reading books and talking about them,
visiting a planetarium or a museum—all those activities feed the Sagittarian
composite Moon. So might signing up for an afternoon of shooting each at
other with paint guns! The point is, when in doubt, do it. Repetition is the
venal sin here—and boredom the mortal one.
Underlying this kaleidoscopic hunger for experience is the most
elemental Sagittarian drive: the urge to understand life and find meaning in
it. These two will experience their relationship as one long philosophical
conversation. They are very concerned with justice, and with questions of
right and wrong.
The happiest domestic environment for such a pair reflects this basic
Sagittarian expansiveness. Their home will likely fill up with artefacts from
their various adventures—Nepalese icons crowding Celtic crosses and
fulsome pagan goddesses. A kind of easy, slap-dash chaos pervades their
natural environment. Good humor, intelligent curiosity and expansive good
will fill the air. There are cartoons on the refrigerator and a pile of letters
from virtuous non-profit organizations on the kitchen table.
COMPOSITE MOON IN CAPRICORN
When two seventeen-year-olds announce their engagement, we experience
trepidations. We fear that there’s an excellent chance they don’t yet have the
maturity to make a relationship work. Two seasoned souls in their thirties
make the same announcement, and it feels natural and right. Of course we
may be dead wrong about both relationships. Maturity, that ultimate
Capricorn quality, is not rigidly related to how old we are. With their
composite Moon in Capricorn, we can’t guarantee that these two have the
maturity to deal with the challenging realities of committed intimacy. But
everything else being equal, a Capricorn Moon is about the best promise
astrology can offer in that department.
By instinct, together these two people see reality with clarity. They add
two and two and come up with four. One spin-off is that they’d probably
make a good team in the business world, or in any endeavor where a sober
ability to calculate odds is relevant. More to the point, in terms of their
relationship there’s a grounded attitude. They expect a lot of each other—
but not too much. Little so inflates our hopes and expectations as much as
fresh love. New lovers often imagine themselves to be “perfect for each
other.” And the rest of us roll our eyes, knowing that human beings are
difficult creatures, full of contradictory needs and psychological razor
blades. From the beginning, these two keep an instinctive grasp on terra
firma. They understand that relationships must be built stone by stone, like
fortresses. Capricorn likes vows—the mortar that binds love’s stones
together—and is good at keeping them. Not all bonds are meant to go the
distance, but a couple with their composite Moon in Capricorn moves
toward “resolution,” not rapidly, but persistently and seriously—and
“resolution” means either commitment or a clean finish.
Should they go down the long road together, these two need to recognize
that there is potentially a down side to all this maturity. Their “inner child”
needs breathing room too. Together, they must master the discipline of
relaxation—knowing when to take a break, when to ask for a hug or
reassurance, when to say “no” to yet another responsibility.
In their domestic environment, a couple with this composite Moon often
finds comfort in everything old and enduring. In conjuring up their dream-
home, we’d see a lot of stone, some perhaps carved long ago. If possible,
they benefit from owning their own place—again, there’s that Capricorn
signature: a commitment to the future as enduring as a pyramid. Maybe
we’re all ultimately “renters” here in this transitory world, but Capricorn
carries the dignity of commitment, kept promises, and the long haul.
COMPOSITE MOON IN AQUARIUS
You never know what they’ll do next. All you know is that it will be the last
thing you imagined. With the composite Moon in Aquarius, these two aren’t
necessarily setting out to shock anyone—it just seems to happen as a side-
effect of their listening to their shared heart. Their relationship has the “soul
of a rebel.” When they are true to themselves, they re-invent the rules. A
“normal” life would be the kiss of death for these two. Their relationship is
just not wired for it.
The Moon is always very sensitive to the nature and quality of the home
environment. If two people with the composite Moon in Aquarius live
together, one look at the space they share gives tremendous insight into the
health of their bond. Basically, if you immediately get a sense of who they
are as individuals from a single glance at their home, that means they’re on
the right track. On the other hand, if the place is fine but sort of “generic,”
their love may not be doomed, but they’d better start thinking for
themselves as quickly as possible.
Interior decoration won’t of course make or break a relationship. That’s
not the point. It’s only a barometer of deeper Moon-issues. Every family
and every subculture has its own sense of what constitutes an “appropriate”
kind of home. There are acceptable colors, levels of neatness versus chaos,
assumptions about the purpose of each room and so on. With a healthy
response to the composite Moon in Aquarius, these two people aren’t
steamrollered into blindness by all that. They create a space that reflects
who they are and what they like—and if others disapprove, no worries. The
creation of a highly individuated living space reflects a deeper commitment
to creating a relationship that also follows its own natural rules. And that
of course is the deeper point. These two, for example, might need more
time apart than most couples. They might choose to vacation separately or
to have separate friendships. They’ll tend not to make plans for each other.
They’ll support each other’s right to have idiosyncracies, even when family
or community pressures arise. Probably, they’ll behave in ways that are
“inappropriate for their ages.”
All that is the higher ground. If they slip into more conventional
assumptions about intimacy, a kind of coldness sneaks into their
relationship. They become sardonic and aloof, living in their heads.
But that’s the garbage can. The real point is that, with the composite
Moon in Aquarius, the older these two get, the weirder they’ll become! And
if their hearts are in the right place, they’ll enjoy every minute of that
process, even if their friends are marveling and scratching their heads.
COMPOSITE MOON IN PISCES
With the composite Moon in Pisces, together these two have the soul of a
mystic. For their relationship to feel right and healthy to them, they need
almost everything a typical mystic would need—we say “almost
everything,” because fortunately celibacy is not on the list!
Throughout history, mystics in all cultures have craved solitude: escape
“from the madding crowd.” It’s the same with these two, except that they
need to escape together, so it’s not about individual solitude, it’s about the
renewing impact on them of quiet time spent alone together, relaxing in
privacy. Mystics meditate, and that’s a healthy practice for these two people
as well. Naturally they can frame that process any way that feels good to
them—they can call it prayer, or yoga, or contemplation, or just quiet time
watching the evening fall. They can call it shared creative time. Anything is
fine, so long as it includes a quiet awareness of each other combined with a
sense of the “spaciousness” of consciousness. But without that magical
silent time together, the soul seems to drain from their bond. And with it,
they feel alive and connected to each other.
The paradox in Pisces is that, in common with all the signs, it represents
an evolutionary need. Thus, certain experiences are essential to its well-
being—and it takes a degree of ego-driven willpower to make anything
happen in this world. But Pisces is ultimately about going beyond the ego.
The bottom line is that poor Pisces can just sit there like a rabbit in the
headlights, “transcending” its way into the life of a ghost. With the
composite Moon in Pisces, these two people need to defend aggressively
their need for quiet time and shared solitude. This relationship needs
boundaries around it. Together, they need to conspire against their own
vulnerability toward letting their relationship drift. And if drift it does, then
it will probably be drifting on the currents of other people’s demands and
expectations.
A home environment conducive to contemplation is of great benefit to
these two. Comfort, and an ability to create dim light, are essential. A
feeling of well-defended, uncontested privacy is pivotally important. A
piece of that might be as simple as having a telephone answering machine
left on with the volume down, at least at certain times. Perhaps a trickling
fountain in the home would help them. Almost certainly music would play a
role in terms of creating the right atmosphere around the home. If their
tastes run in this direction, religious or spiritual symbolism and iconography
in various rooms of the house can contribute to the feeling. A hot tub
wouldn’t hurt. A mood of easy quiet, one that lets the distractions of the
world slip away, is the point. There, these two can find the peace that
sustains their happiness.
COMPOSITE MOON IN THE FIRST HOUSE
With the Moon about to rise in the composite chart, we are sure of two
points. First, the Moon’s general influence is very strong on these two
people. Second, everybody around them will know that. Nothing in the first
house is very good at hiding. By definition, it shines out into the world,
forming a big part of a couple’s outward style and affect.
Let’s take these two pieces of the puzzle one at a time, starting with the
sheer power of the lunar influence. There’s a lot of “soul” in this
relationship—and a lot of moodiness to go along with it. Feelings are
central to all intimate human bonds, but they run at a higher voltage with
these two. Add that feelings don’t always make sense—that’s not their job
in the psyche. Instead, they directly reflect and monitor the condition of our
hearts. Just think of a baby, which is a pretty good illustration of pure
emotion unchecked by reason. Babies typically break out crying at the drop
of a hat. Then it’s our job to figure out what they need. Maybe they don’t
know themselves. Maybe they’re crying for fundamental, immutable
existential reasons. That’s how the lunar energy works in a couple with their
composite Moon in the first house. As individual adults, they’ve
presumably learned how to restrain the impulse to burst into tears because
they’re a little bored in the grocery store. But the relationship—which is
what the composite chart is all about—carries its emotional energy closer to
the surface.
The key, then, is to make sure its needs are as well-met as possible at all
times. The nature of those needs has a lot to do with the inner agenda of the
sign the Moon occupies, so reading that section again is a good idea here.
All this could potentially sound as if having the composite Moon in the
first house is a liability. That isn’t really true. There’s good news: feelings
of emptiness or of having lost emotional contact with each other certainly
are not going to sneak up on this couple. There’s a very “present tense”
spirit here; problems are not unwittingly swept under the carpet.
Anything in the first house shows. People can see it. Part of this is
reflected in the fact that the heart of this relationship is fairly transparent to
the world. If these two people are angry with each other, they won’t hide it
well—and when they are feeling love for each other, it’s like a warm bath
for everyone in the room.
Let’s add that the Moon is a nurturing, caring energy. With it in their first
house, these two individuals tend to draw out emotional needs in the people
around them. The phone rings and a friend’s voice says, “Hi. Mind if I drop
over? I’m feeling a little blue and could use some company.” With a dear
friend, what follows may be a very soulful evening that leaves everyone
feeling an ancient Moon-truth: that familiar, reliable love is the soul of life.
With someone they don’t know so well, it’s more complicated. Maybe they
help heal a relative stranger’s heart, and that can be a good feeling. Or
maybe the intrusive needs of others become a stumbling block in terms of
these two meeting their own needs—in which case boundaries need to be
set. But if they make the wrong judgement there, they’ll soon know it. The
big inner child they share will start bawling and whining until they figure
out what’s wrong—and fix it.
COMPOSITE MOON IN THE SECOND HOUSE
The Moon is always changing, and the same goes for whatever part of the
composite chart it occupies: that area of life is usually in a state of
fluctuation. With the second house, the main theme is the level of faith the
couple has in their relationship. It tends to go up and down. One week,
they’re “born to be together.” The next, they’re questioning the
fundamentals. Naturally, this can be a harrowing experience for all
concerned. And that brings us to the next step, where we consider the
evolutionary perspective. What are these two learning? What’s the soul-
intention behind the psychological phenomenon? In a nutshell, they are
proving themselves to themselves as a couple. This is a relationship that is
learning to believe in itself.
Immediately we hit a delicate point. How do we know that the
relationship is actually supposed to last? We don’t—and we shouldn’t
assume it. It proves itself by passing through a series of initiations. If, after
solid effort, any of the hurdles prove too high, probably the best bet is to
release the connection.
All the hurdles are lunar in nature. The first one involves the fact that
everyone’s Moon is innately a bit ridiculous and silly. Think of the dumbest
movie you love—and how embarrassed you might feel if a professional
rival saw you gleefully imitating one of the characters in it. Think of your
most irrational and extreme opinions. These are all lunar attitudes, and
revealing them is the first hurdle. In a nutshell, it is a willingness to risk
embarrassment with each other. To reveal the “inner child.”
The second hurdle has to do with that classic, central dimension of the
astrological Moon: vulnerability. Can these two show each other their “soft
underbellies?” Can they cry in front of each other, or express personal
insecurity or self-doubt? Can they let out their feelings? The third one
involves each partner showing the fruits of his or her imagination—taking
the great emotional risk of being creative in each other’s presence.
The fourth lunar hurdle is about the nesting instinct. Deep down, almost
everyone wants to find true love and a real home. Some people are afraid
even to say it. If these two pass the first three initiations, in their own time
they begin to become so entangled in other’s emotional lives that a break-up
would be devastating. Can they risk trusting that nesting instinct with each
other? Can they “mate” like mourning doves—for life, trusting the ancient
mammal-brain programs, and not looking back?
With each of these steps, the couple with the composite Moon in the
second house gains confidence in their bond. If they get past those hurdles,
they’ve created something precious—and a fifth hurdle arises. Unlike the
others, this one is optional. It’s about that ancient Moon-mystery: fertility.
Children—and the vast commitment they represent. Not all couples want
kids, or are in a position to have them. It may sound strange to some ears,
but this fifth step can take another form: anything to which we are radically
committed as nurturers—a pet, a piece of land, the needs of the destitute.
The key is that, as with kids, the commitment is not temporary. It is total.
COMPOSITE MOON IN THE THIRD HOUSE
Together, these two people are magnets for what many would view as total
chaos. Two comments: they’re wired to handle it, and they like it that way!
With their composite Moon in the third house, they’ve signed up for a wild
ride. To call them “busy” is like calling an interplanetary rocket launch
“complicated.” As soon as they think they have everything settled, the rules
seem to change. The life they share is a massive improvisation. A lot of that
endless adjustment is, seemingly, circumstantial in origin. We say
“seemingly” because underlying it is a synchronistic principle: something in
their own psyches is calling that unsettled weather into manifestation. And
underlying that is the core evolutionary intention of their souls, which in a
nutshell, is to have plenty to discuss.
Plenty to discuss? The line may seem a bit anticlimactic. But it shouldn’t
be. Communication is a critical human function, and, astrologically, it’s the
heart of the third house. With their composite Moon there, these two are
nurturing their capacity to speak to each other from their hearts. The most
fundamental work here lies in verbally putting lunar material out on the
table: emotional matters, human needs, insecurities, fears. But, with speech
as with everything else, practice makes perfect. Establishing a free-flow of
language is a necessary first step. Nothing hinders that intention more than
being bored and having nothing to say. And nothing helps it more
effectively than a constant diet of wonder and amazement. So, together,
these two people create a tremendous feel of sheer curiosity. There is a
restlessness in their relationship, something that goads them always to ask
another question, see another perspective, take in another bit of information.
Probably their life together is mobile. Often cars—or airplanes—are
important to a couple with this configuration. They’ll travel a lot. Many
times, circumstances arise that require something like commuting—and it
may not be for work. An elderly family member who lives three hours
away, for example, may require attention every month or so—which affords
them a monthly six-hour conversation. The key is that there is constant
evolutionary pressure on them to deepen their capacity to listen to each
other and to express themselves. Even when discussing light or abstract
matters, their deeper skills are developing. And when it comes time for their
hearts to use the miraculous bridge of language to link across the abyss of
their separateness, they’ll be ready.
COMPOSITE MOON IN THE FOURTH HOUSE
The fourth house is the house of home, hearth and roots. Those roots may
be psychological—how our family of origin affected us. Perhaps they are
ethnic or cultural roots. Or geographic roots. In every case, fourth house
symbolism points “downward,” toward the archetypal realm in all its
profound inwardness and personal mystery. It’s opposite the tenth house,
which is the house of public identity. Thus, the fourth is the house of private
identity—one’s inner life, hidden life, home life. It refers to the whole
matrix of the personal unconscious.
Note these two streams in fourth house symbolism: the inner life and the
domestic life. When you’re asleep and dreaming, your fourth house is
active. When you’re fixing a meal for beloved friends or family, your fourth
house is active too.
The optimal psychological health and happiness of a couple with the
composite Moon in the fourth house depends on their spending a lot of time
simply hanging out at home. Maybe they’re engaged in a shared hobby.
Maybe they’re gardening on a fine Saturday afternoon. They thrive on long
quiet talks over dinner. Or cuddling up and listening to music.
The couple with a composite fourth house Moon needs a sense of shared
roots. Some of that rootedness is strictly between them and involves no
outsiders: a well-thought-out and well-cared-for home, with lots of
comforts and privacy and perhaps an affectionate pet to warm up the space,
is essential. It serves as a cocoon, an enfolding nest where it’s easy for them
to claim fourth house “down time,” to float, to daydream. Sometimes the
circles extends a bit more widely: those shared roots might include an
intimate circle of friends who feel like family.
Kinship ties—relatives—used to be part and parcel of the fourth house.
For many modern people, that’s no longer the reality: we’re mostly not so
deeply involved with our cousins anymore. But for the couple with the
composite Moon in the fourth, family issues—in joy or burdensome sorrow
—may loom a little larger than they do for other people. Please understand
that we are not talking about spending lots of time with both sets of in-laws
no matter what, nor about trying to reconcile all differences. Some families
are toxic and some differences are irreconcilable. But there is a need for a
fourth house composite Moon couple to understand the family systems that
helped form each partner. Many times there’s a degree of involvement, and
perhaps even love, that harks back to another era. And often, but not
always, with this configuration there is a real drive to create a family of
one’s own, whatever form that family might take.
COMPOSITE MOON IN THE FIFTH HOUSE
How sweetly and unknowingly new lovers nurture each other’s confidence
and self-expression! Even a bad poem puts tears in the eyes. Dumb jokes
evoke gales of laughter. A glimpse of naked flesh produces gasps and sighs.
No wonder everyone loves falling in love! And the fifth house rules that
merry process, start to finish. The last thing anyone wants to do is analyze it
to death, but we need to endure that risk in order to understand how a
couple with their composite Moon in the fifth house can keep the magic
alive beyond the first six weekends of the relationship.
It comes down to confidence and self-expression. Those are the critical
fifth house ingredients. Lovers support those qualities in each other
essentially through one simple, effective device: they pay attention to each
other. Whatever the other person does merits loving scrutiny and generous
interpretation. And there is no reason why that kindness has to end. All that
“has to end” is that it happens automatically. Freshness and that delicious
strangeness naturally and inevitably wear off with the passage of time.
Familiarity arises—and with it, potentially, blindness, numbness, and even
contempt. And as soon as we see any of those in the eyes of our partner,
something inside us loses its spontaneity. We no longer feel supported. In
fact, we may no longer feel safe. And the fifth house processes stop cold.
For a couple with their composite Moon in the fifth house, such
“maturation” of the relationship is fatal. Their evolutionary aim is to keep
on falling in love—forever. That may sound unrealistic, and in some ways it
is. But intention and skillful means are powerful tools here. These two can
succeed, at least for four days out of every week. And that’s enough.
How? One huge piece of the puzzle is that they need to find a playful
creative outlet to share. Dancing together. Playing music. Maybe enjoying a
sport at which they can develop their own personal styles. Such activities
naturally invoke some of the energies of new love—easy laughter, a sense
of freshness, emotional energies revealed, imagination expressed.
Another piece of the puzzle lies in this couple befriending other couples
and individuals. Such new relationships trigger more freshness. Old stories
can be told again. New surprises and possibilities arise. Likely, there will be
something of a “revolving door” for these two in terms of friendships.
There may be lasting friendships as well, but there will almost certainly
be a theme of people coming and going.
Children may play a role in the bond as well. With most of us, kids are
an obvious possible correlate of loving, and fertility is probably a bit more
likely with these two than with the general population. The key here,
though, is the role of children in the relationship—think of them as little
experts on childlike behavior, come to share the wealth!
COMPOSITE MOON IN THE SIXTH HOUSE
The sixth house is about work and responsibilities and both of them will
proliferate for this couple. There’s a fair chance that circumstances will
arise that allow them to work together professionally somehow. If they do
that, they’ll probably find it satisfying. While there are inevitably additional
strains on a relationship with that dimension, for these two the benefits
outweigh the down side. Working together will make them feel closer and
further deepen their involvement with each other. They’ve just got to be
careful to set boundaries between their work and the rest of their lives, or
work will surely eat the whole pie.
Another argument for working together, should that possibility arise, is
that if they don’t choose that path, then the sixth house energy will have to
find another one. And of course it will: non-professional responsibilities
will loom, and they’ll be sufficiently extreme to stand out as notable.
Maybe an elderly parent will need a home. Perhaps a child with special
needs will enter the picture. Destiny—or karma—may call for those kinds
of realities, and it would of course be wrong to think of them as evidence of
some mistake. The bottom line is that the sixth house is about service, and
this couple with their composite Moon there will called upon to serve. The
path of service invariably involves some degree of self-sacrifice for the
benefit of other beings. One of the world’s best-kept secrets is how
satisfying that can be!
Still, a couple with the composite Moon in the sixth does need to be
vigilant about the insidiously draining effect upon their bond of getting
completely lost in the efficiencies of daily routine. It’s a natural part of the
sixth house, but it can be like a river that overflows its bank. Learning how
to say no, and how to set limits on how far they will go in terms of being
the answer to everyone else’s prayers, is a critical survival skill for these
two.
As time goes by, they will attract other couples, probably younger than
themselves, into their lives. Likely, no one will think to use the word
“apprentices,” but that’s really what is happening: these two people, having
loved each other well for a while, will begin to pass on the skill-set. When
to fight—and when to shut up and forgive. The balance between kindness
and truth. The role of humor. How to live with sexuality for the long run.
Whether they start out knowing it or not, a couple with the composite Moon
in the sixth are a link in a long chain of lovers, a chain that goes back
further than they can imagine or remember. And if there are stable
relationships in the future, it will be partly because of what they
demonstrate. Of all the services they offer, this is arguably the kindest.
COMPOSITE MOON IN THE SEVENTH HOUSE
Having the composite Moon in the traditional house of marriage seems like
“good planning” on the part of this couple. The Moon is all about the heart,
so its presence there warms the atmosphere between these two, deepening
the feelings of intimacy and shared vulnerability. The Moon is moody too,
so there’s a sense of having their emotions, both the sweet and the sour
ones, close to the surface. Not much can be hidden in this relationship, and
that’s part of the true intimacy they share—which is of course not always
simply about expressing feelings of romantic tenderness.
Going further, the Moon is connected to the most primal parts of the
psyche: instincts, animal reflexes, non-verbal communication. Much will
pass between these two that no outsider could decode, especially once the
relationship has lasted a while. Another side to that coin is that the basic
transactions of intimacy between them—the foundation of their bond, in
other words—depend on their ability to get “underneath” the civilized parts
of themselves. That means a touch or a glance can mean more than words.
Sleeping together, literally, has tremendous significance. Without
necessarily knowing it, they will become quite positively reactive to each
other’s natural physical odors, smiling when they sense one another that
way—provided, at least, that the ever-volatile “mood” between them is in
its positive phase!
There’s another fundamental dimension to our understanding of the
meaning of the composite Moon in the seventh house. As every neophyte
astrologer knows, this is the house of relationships. But a composite chart is
itself about relationship. Extending the logic rigorously leads us to an
elemental insight: the couple itself must have relationships. Together, they
have soulmates—people without whom they cannot reach a state of full
self-actualization. These people, who may be individuals or other couples,
have a strong “Moon-signature” in their natures. They themselves are
sensitive, expressive of emotion, moody, and probably nurturing in
disposition. If they are couples, the aura around them is that they are
together permanently, that they have truly become a “family.” There’s a
good chance they have children, or at minimum some profoundly fortunate
pets. These people are not really “gurus” for our couple with the composite
Moon in the seventh house. The bond is more balanced and mutual than
that, more in the category of an even exchange equally helpful to all
concerned. The critical point is that these two need to look into a mirror that
only their lunar soulmates can provide. What they will see there allows
them to fulfill the happy promise of the Moon in the house of marriage.
COMPOSITE MOON IN THE EIGHTH HOUSE
Almost everything connected with this house triggers strong emotions:
sexuality, death, psychological depth and confrontation. Add the emotional
Moon to the eighth house stew, and you begin to get the picture: with a
composite Moon in the eighth, this couple has signed up for stormy
weather. Let’s add that they’ve also signed a reliable astrological contract
for lasting passion.
When we’re kids just out of puberty, we often imagine there are easy
formulas for keeping passion alive: all you have to do is find somebody
cute enough, and the heat will take care of itself. That illusion quickly
collapses in the face of experience. How old are we before we’ve seen
sexual desire evaporate like dew in the desert? All it takes is a few ugly
betrayals, clueless remarks, or bitter, unresolved fights. We no longer even
want to look our former beloved in the eye, let alone lie down together. Add
the fact that all relationships encounter difficulties, and the picture is clear.
The secret of lasting body heat lies in dealing skillfully, honestly, and
immediately with the natural tensions of any relationship.
With their composite Moon in the eighth, nothing of a psychologically
edgy nature is going to remain buried for very long between these two.
Their relationship seems to have a defective repressive mechanism. That
can be beautiful, in that it promotes truthfulness, transparency and a kind of
“nakedness” between them. Naturally, it can also prove volatile. Jealousy,
anger, possessiveness or insecurity—whatever they don’t want to see in
themselves—is quickly out in the open. One side effect is that eighth house
Moon relationships tend to “resolve” rather rapidly: that is, move to greater
depth or come to an abrupt end. That’s good news, even in the less-pleasant
scenarios. If a relationship is going to wind up on the rocks, do you want it
to happen quickly, or five years down the road?
The only caution we’d offer is that for most of us it takes a while to
digest a growth experience. If we have a successful one on Tuesday, we
don’t need another one on Wednesday. But the Moon is emotional, not
rational. Hot material tends to keep coming up as long as the relationship
lasts. Part of the price of continuing passion lies in enduring the scars it
creates—that’s a humble, realistic perspective in that it doesn’t promise a
magic bullet that will make the reality of the eighth house composite Moon
disappear. There isn’t such a bullet. But forgiveness, patience, commitment,
and some humor go a long way in that direction. With an eye on those
virtues, this couple can create the sort of bond that many of us would envy
—at least looking at it from the outside.
COMPOSITE MOON IN THE NINTH HOUSE
Gazing into our crystal ball, we see Frequent Flyer miles and lots of
bookcases in the future for these two. With their composite Moon in the
ninth house, they’ll pack the experience of five relationships into this one.
Together, they’re all about stretching beyond the constraints of the Known
World—at least the world as they presently understand it. The mood of their
bond is one of pilgrims on the road together, endlessly going further.
Happiness is, of course, an emotion. Being logical about it has serious
limitations. Although reason can play a role, nobody ever becomes happy
through purely logical means. Some people feel happy playing golf. Others,
doing cross-stitch. To know what will make a person happy, you’ve got to
suspend reason, feel the Moon, and do what it recommends without asking
too many questions. That’s as true of couples as it is of individuals. For the
couple with the composite Moon in the ninth, the secret of happiness lies in
recognizing that they need a far richer diet of change, newness, and fresh
experience than most of us. When in doubt, move to Argentina!
It’s tempting to say that they are “impractical,” or at least that they need
to be—and as always, let’s affirm that the Moon only offers good
suggestions, with no guarantee we’ll heed them. There’s no compelling
astrological reason for us to assume that these two won’t lead a boring life
—only that the soul would go out of their relationship if they did. The
charge of “impracticality” is an interesting one in other ways, however.
What, ultimately, is “impractical” about using our brief moments in this
uncertain, impermanent world in an attempt to figure out why we’re here?
Such broad, philosophical perspectives come readily to this couple. Many a
night they’ll stay up late talking about big ideas—or delightfully debating
them. Principles are important to them. They may be drawn to religion or
metaphysics. But always the rocket fuel that truly propels their joint quest is
raw, undigested experience—and that brings us back to the notion of travel.
The magic here is not simply the idea of seeing new places; it’s more like
internalizing the perspectives and values of different cultures. This triggers
a kind of inner travel, to complement the pretty, exotic postcards.
One more notion: the Moon is very connected to home and domestic life.
Putting it in the cross-cultural ninth house often suggests opportunities for
these two to live abroad or to relocate to another part of the country. Very
likely, that would be a positive, life-affirming step, at least for a while.
COMPOSITE MOON IN THE TENTH HOUSE
When two people fall in love, for a while their relationship is like a magical
island, apart from the world. They are doing a complex and ancient ritual:
the merging of souls. They are like two candle flames that come together as
one, yet maintain their own natures at the same time. That’s a beautiful,
subtle process and, instinctively, we honor their need for privacy—for a
while. But soon they’re asked to rejoin the community, to contribute again
to the larger reality we all share. That larger social reality is the tenth
house’s domain, and with the composite Moon there, public life will have a
deep and fundamental impact upon this relationship.
There’s a tendency in modern astrological practice to think of the tenth
house in strictly career terms. That’s an incomplete perspective, as we’ll
see, but it does provide a good launching pad. It’s tough to put a bad day at
the office behind us. Almost inevitably, the dark mood left in its sorry wake
spills over onto the dinner table at home. And there’s the other side of the
equation: professional triumphs leave their happy fingerprint on our
evenings as well. That’s true of everyone, but it’s simply a very compelling
force in the life these two share. For good or ill, work casts a long
emotional shadow over their home life. Their relationship’s emotional
quality is a barometer of their contentment about what they are doing with
their lives. Thus, finding the right work—and supporting each other in it—
is a critical piece of the puzzle for our couple. In practical terms, this might
manifest as a situation where one person’s mental well-being has been
sacrificed on the mighty altar of income—and the evolutionary challenge
lies in generously supporting that person in finding a more satisfying
profession even at the price of a pay cut.
Let’s go beyond purely professional interpretations of the tenth house
composite Moon. This house has a feeling of mission about it, and we don’t
always get paid for doing our missions. Together, these two have something
significant to do for their community. Its impact will surely go beyond their
personal relationships and actually touch the souls of people whom they
probably don’t even really know personally. The exact nature of that
mission can’t really be determined from the Moon, although knowing what
sign the Moon is in will help narrow it down a bit. We do know that the
Moon tends to be a nurturing, supporting, healing force—and that therefore
their shared mission lies in those categories. Something out there needs
these two and is depending upon them.
The Moon is also about our “nesting instinct,” which is the capacity of
some humans to commit to each other and form stable home-bases.
Manifesting that reality is also part of their mission. Especially today, with
so much evolution happening in terms of the meaning of family, the
community needs a few guiding beacons in that department, whether they
are traditional or wildly experimental. If these two choose to bond in that
way and face love’s challenges with enough wisdom and humility, they’ll
offer us that precious gift just by being who they are together.
COMPOSITE MOON IN THE ELEVENTH HOUSE
Two views of the eleventh house persist in traditional astrological writing: it
is about friends, and it is about goals and aspirations. If we’re careful, both
perspectives teach us something about this pair.
The idea that a couple with the Moon in the eleventh will surely have
lots of friends is generally true, but not always. More trustworthy by far is
the notion that, in order to accomplish what they’ve set out to do together in
life, they require alliances or networking. Some human activities can’t
happen in a social vacuum—basketball comes to mind, as does playing in a
string quartet, or working for a corporation. None of those actions requires
deep affection and shared intimate processes. In fact, many times it’s
cleaner and clearer to avoid emotional complexities there, and instead favor
courtesy, diplomacy, and strategic silence—ancient social instincts that have
allowed humanity to survive for a few million years.
Are those collective realities meaningful to this couple? That question
brings us to the second traditional view of this house: goals and aspirations.
Elemental to the psychological health and happiness of this pair is a shared
dialog about their own values and broad intentions. Where do they want to
go in life? What’s ultimately important to them?
Say that the answers to those questions reflect spiritual values. Say that
their shared values are basically traditional. Then perhaps they will be
drawn to be active in a local church or temple—and thus be involved with
those group enterprises. If their answers are political, perhaps they will
become involved in political parties or causes. In both cases, we will see the
core ideal: the goals and aspirations should underlie, inform, and define the
alliances. That’s the critical notion. The crowd depends on the goal, not the
other way around.
If there are no such overriding goals, then the couple finds itself
overextended in meaningless, emotionally draining social activity. They
become involved with people with whom there’s very little common
ground. They may imagine that this vitiating social superficiality is the
problem, but it’s not. The real problem is their own lack of clear direction.
Notions of strategy and the long view permeate the eleventh house. A
couple with the composite Moon there feels better when they are engaged
in creating something big together. Thus, when healthy, there is naturally an
emphasis upon projects, plans and great works. How could we manage to
go live in Europe for a year? And who might help us? How can we live
ecologically-responsible lives? And where are the intentional communities
that might be part of the solution?
Many times, given the domestic associations of the Moon, there is a
long-term goal involving the manifestation of a home—building a house
together or sustaining the vision over many years that leads to “growing a
family.”
COMPOSITE MOON IN THE TWELFTH HOUSE
If you’re in a relationship, here’s a feeling you know well: the sheer relief
that can arise when, after a day spent with acquaintances or distant cousins,
you two finally retire to your bedroom. Hooray! Tension leaves your
bodies. At last you can rest and relax. Comments you’ve been dying to
make can finally be said. There’s something wonderful about being alone
with your partner. It meets a primal need in our psyches.
Multiply that need by a hundred, and you’ve gone a long way toward
understanding a couple with the composite Moon in the twelfth house.
Their happiness and well-being depend on having lots of time alone. They
renew themselves through isolation.
As individuals, they may not be so reclusive. Possibly they’re both
extraverts. That’s a question we can only answer with a look at their
individual birthcharts, not at the composite. As always, the composite is
about the needs of the relationship, not necessarily those of the individuals
in the relationship. Whatever this pair’s individual natures may be, we
know for sure that because of their twelfth house composite Moon, too
much social interaction, even happy interaction, drains their batteries.
Underlying the twelfth house composite Moon is the archetype of the
mystic. This house refers to actions motivated by spirituality. Throughout
history, mystics have backed away from the world and gone apart to
meditate. Something akin to that happens automatically when these two
withdraw. Even if they’re not thinking in spiritual terms, the veil of the
social ego naturally parts when they’re alone. That may be mystical
kindergarten, but it’s a healthy first step.
Taking it further, it is profoundly healing for this couple to engage in
more conscious, intentional mysticism—meditation, religious practice,
yoga. Between that lofty stage and “kindergarten” are some other, less
recognized steps: experiencing aesthetic rapture together, gazing silently at
a perfect sunset, or riding the crest of the energy-wave coming off the stage
at a concert. Or just sitting quietly in a dimly-lit room with no agenda other
than being close and silently sensing each other.
Traditional astrologers takes a far bleaker view of the twelfth house,
calling it the house of troubles. They might predict misfortune, and imply
that these two should part before the ax falls. As tempting as it is to dismiss
such fear-mongering, there may be a little bit of truth in it. Underlying all
the points we’ve made about mystical withdrawal is an evolutionary
intention these two share: to grow spiritually together. They can do it the
easy, natural way, which is what we’ve described so far. Or they can wait
until loss or catastrophe bends their knees and compels them to turn to the
world beyond this one for help and solace. The stakes are obviously high,
but the darker potentialities of this configuration are optional.
Chapter 7
The Composite Ascendant
P icture that rarest of miracles—a big, fancy, dress-up party full of
strangers that actually works! Everyone is loose and having a good
time. The band has found its groove, exuberance is in the air, and everyone
is feeling three times more interesting than they were when they got out of
bed that morning. Single people and couples are there, but since this is a
book about composite charts, we’ll concentrate on the latter.
Meet the Joneses—everyone else has. They’re friendly, extraverted,
maybe a little overbearing in the long run, but they’re sincere and warm.
Pleasant enough in modest doses. Here’s Joe and Bobby, a gay couple,
radiating a mix of knockout elegance and sly good humor in their perfectly
tailored Armani suits. There’s a couple we haven’t met yet, and probably
won’t. They’re quiet, and a little mysterious. Shy people? Spies from
Kazakhstan? Oh—they’re gone. Where did they go?
The pyrotechnical Joneses have Sagittarius rising in their composite
chart. Whatever the intimate realities of their relationship may be, when
they’re observed in the world, their style has impact. They are colorful,
theatrical, and in your face. Joe’s and Bobby’s smooth and well-tailored
composite chart shows a Libran Ascendant conjunct Venus, with Saturn
deeper in their First House, just over the line into Scorpio. That quiet couple
who disappeared? Cancer rising, or maybe Scorpio—they were gone before
we could find out.
Every partnership has a face it wears for the world. Secrecy or phoniness
aren’t the issues here—although the composite Ascendant is in charge of
those tricks too, when circumstances demand them. Here’s the point: at that
party, none of those couples had any business revealing the true inner
dynamics of their bond to the general public. In society, a certain amount of
“editing” is appropriate, expected, appreciated—and lamented when absent.
We all know the discomfort created by a couple bickering in a social
situation. Unless we know people very well, we expect that any references
to their sexuality will be brief, probably humorous, and not too graphic.
Strictures such as these operate in every stratum of society, every culture
and every epoch. Humans seem to appreciate a little distance among
themselves. Intimacy, in other words, is a gift we bestow on a few trusted
friends, not something we offer everyone indiscriminately.
The composite Ascendant is the buffer between the couple’s secret world
and the general public. When two people make a conscious and
individuated response to their composite Ascendant, they generally function
well in social situations. They seem comfortable together. They’ve “got
their act together.” A weak response to the composite Ascendant tends to
have the opposite impact: there’s an awkwardness about the pair when
they’re seen in public. Often, the effect is that they don’t seem right for
each other—a statement which may not actually reflect the deeper realities
of their relationship. Still, once a couple gets past the courtship phase, they
must exist in society. And most couples who have been together for more
than a few months come to appreciate the support and camaraderie of
others. All that is infinitely more difficult if the composite Ascendant isn’t
working right.
Each composite Ascendant suggests a set of specific shared activities and
attitudes which can contribute mightily to the ease of the bond. They help
the couple dance together naturally and without excessive damage to their
toes, figuratively—and literally too. Our consideration of the composite
Ascendant should expand to include the Ascendant’s planetary ruler. Thus,
if a couple has Cancer rising, the Moon is going to play an extra-important
role in their chart. If they have Gemini or Virgo rising, play close attention
to their composite Mercury. Read our basic interpretation of that planet in
terms of its sign and house elsewhere in this “cookbook” section of
Skymates Volume Two: The Composite Chart. Along with those layers of
meaning, add that a high response to this Ascendant-ruling planet also
enhances the smoothness of the relationship, helping the couple feel
comfortable together in the world. A weak response undercuts them,
leaving them feeling awkward and unnatural.
COMPOSITE ASCENDANT IN ARIES
Whatever inner lights illuminate the secret world of this couple, those lights
blaze into the world through fire engine red filters. If the rest of the
composite chart is passionate and intense, then stand back: together, these
two are as unstoppable as a downhill freight train. Even if the rest of the
composite chart is relatively mild, there is still a certain tingle in the air
when they walk into the room. Together, they radiate confidence and pluck.
One senses—wisely—that this team would make a better friend than
enemy. What we are picking up here is not hostility; it’s more like a simple
potential for formidability. Imagine coming upon Arnold Schwarzenegger,
stripped to the waist, armed to the teeth—and smiling at you with genuine
warmth. That’s the picture.
The deeper forging of this bond requires initiation by fire. Even though
together these two are a powerful team, they still must be “blooded” if they
are going to have full faith in themselves. They need to face challenges
together, and learn to trust each other as comrades. All this may sound
dreadfully militaristic, but these are the natural metaphors of Aries the
Warrior.
In practice, with the composite Ascendant in Aries, the path may entail
shared physical adventure. Maybe they learn to sail—and learn to count on
each other’s moves in forty knots of wind. Perhaps they take up scuba
diving and explore a deep, jagged wreck together. Maybe they’re milder
people than that—and they drive a car across the country together or visit
Peru, bonding in the heat of those adventures.
Not all Aries evolutionary work is so physical, although one cannot deal
authentically with this sign without recognizing the psychic transformations
triggered by having our bodies on the line. Still, together this couple may
come into their natural poise and “centeredness” by fighting joint battles
that offer no physical threat at all. They might, for example, take on a
crusade against a rapacious land developer threatening to destroy a
community or an environment. They might stand up to an intellectual or
spiritual bully.
Becoming a “couple” is a uniquely human mystery, hard to understand or
explain, let alone accomplish. Desire and affection between people are far
easier to grasp. Always, with the composite Ascendant in Aries, the road to
attaining that feeling of naturalness and smoothness is a little more
challenging than it might be otherwise. Flowers and poetry—those
sacraments of intimacy—are less effective here. So put them aside, and
strap on those boots, sunglasses, and backpacks. Cupid is waiting out there,
somewhere to the left of the rattlesnake.
Be sure to take a close look at Mars, the planetary ruler of Aries, in the
composite chart. It will carry the story further, with a specific reference to
areas where this passionate bonding-in-fire is especially suited to the
realities of the couple.
COMPOSITE ASCENDANT IN TAURUS
Adam and Eve must have had it pretty easy in the Garden, at least until the
unfortunate affair with the apple. Imagine having no worries about status or
weight-loss or style! Imagine no one competing for your mate’s attention,
no deadlines and no bills! Imagine no family of origin and no in-laws!
Everything would be gloriously simple: nothing but instinct and the present
tense, with our natural goodness shining through. Even with the composite
Ascendant in Taurus, getting back to the Garden is tough—but the more
these two people succeed in re-creating it, the happier they will be.
Taurus thrives on naturalness. For this couple, a deepening sense of
rightness seeps into the bones of their relationship when they stay in touch
with their instinctual animal natures. They need a lot of silence together, for
one thing. That doesn’t mean they shouldn’t talk; all couples need
communication. But for these two, time spent without words can be
eloquent. Similarly, they benefit from days spent alone together in the forest
or desert or by the sea. They thrive on physical touch. Sharing food brings
them closer together. It is comforting and affirming for them simply to be
naked together—and if that leads to sex, so much the better! Venus, goddess
of love, is the ruler of Taurus, and the sensual side of their relationship is
profoundly important, and probably vigorous. Couples bond in primal ways
through sexuality—and the more they try to understand that fact in a
cerebral way, the less they know.
From the Taurean point of view, the human world is a shallow,
pretentious place. People are always posing, trying to be seen as sexy or
cool or important. Because of the silly insecurities created in us by
“civilized” life, it’s easy to be swept up in that game. With their composite
Ascendant in Taurus, the entire basis of the relationship between these two
depends on finding safe havens out of reach of all those games. They may
live in a city and have high-powered careers. They may even be invited to
hang with movie stars and have their smiling faces in People magazine.
Fine—but it is still profoundly helpful for them to get away from that kind
of environment, and to let simplicity, instinct, and nature wash over them
from time to time. And it is desperately important that they get far enough
away from those kinds of values inside themselves that they never lose
sight of the joke of it all. How does all that glitter look to an eagle—or to a
wise old Navajo?
Nature—an unpretentious naturalness—calms us. That serenity is a big
part of the evolutionary aim of composite Ascendant in Taurus. One
practical spin-off is that this couple benefits from a fairly steady life
together: they need familiar friends and familiar places. Some degree of
financial security helps calm them too, along with a cautious attitude
toward risk, and toward change just for the sake of change.
Outwardly, these two probably look good together—that’s part of the
Venusian signature. They radiate a soothing quality of unpretentious
naturalness. They seem to be silently telling everyone that it’s fine for them
to be exactly who they are, and that underneath our clothing, we are all
perfectly naked.
Be sure to take a close look at Venus, the planetary ruler of Taurus, later
in this section. It will carry the story further, with references to specific
areas where this calming, centering Taurean work is particularly central to
this couple’s shared evolutionary intentions.
COMPOSITE ASCENDANT IN GEMINI
Will all of you who enjoy being bored out of your skulls in a relationship,
please raise your hands?
Anyone who can count to zero has no trouble with the math here.
Boredom, numbness and predictability are great enemies of lasting love. No
one likes them. But with composite Ascendant in Gemini, they’re fatal. For
this couple, keeping their life together interesting is absolutely pivotal.
Instantly, we need to make a sharp distinction between “interesting” and
fast. Gemini and fast are practically equatable. With this Ascendant, these
two people constantly feel the tendency of their life together to accelerate
into ever-increasing over-extension and existential clutter. This Geminian
“zoom-factor” should never be confused with being interesting! We’ve all
had days that were incredibly full—and incredibly forgettable. If there is a
devil, this is where he’ll try to get to these two. They’re not likely to spend
much time sitting around with nothing to do, but they are vulnerable to
starving themselves to death on a rich diet of cotton candy. The key here is
simple: the antidote to boredom lies in exposing themselves to perceptions
that they’ve never entertained before and which fill them with shared
curiosity.
With composite Ascendant in Gemini, this couple should take seriously
the idea of attending classes and workshops together. It’s easy to imagine
them radiant, hanging out in a café after class with six people they’ve just
met, talking about what they’ve learned. It’s natural for people with this
composite Ascendant to be drawn to the media: books, film, television, the
Internet, magazines. That’s fine and natural but again, they need to be
careful: the Geminian need to be fascinated can be seduced by the
kaleidoscopic flicker of content-free imagery. Is their intelligence being
stretched and their curiosity truly fed? Do the media experiences leave them
with anything new to talk about? Those are the critical questions. If the
answers are positive, they are on the right track, and their poise and
confidence as a couple will blossom. If they are negative, then the
relationship, however busy, is not moving or evolving and will become
increasingly vulnerable to foundering.
Conversation needs to rise to an art form here. Probably these two have
plenty of wit—likely, they “perform” well together and are good at making
other people laugh. Much of that depends on the quickness of their
chemistry together. Between themselves, it’s helpful to recognize that deep
statements can at times also be simple ones—and serious truths can be
drowned in too many words. Similarly, some emotional realities are
paradoxical enough that it takes a paragraph to express them. An
enthusiastic interruption can leave the speaker feeling unheard and the
listener quite mistaken about what was being expressed. As they slow their
speech, more interesting statements are put on the table, and the composite
Ascendant is purring.
There’s an animated, buzzing vibration around this couple. People are
drawn to them because they seem to be fascinating, and probably fun.
Because of their vivacity, strangers will underestimate their ages—and often
imagine that their relationship is a relatively new one. Their aura of
openness leads others to offer them unusual opportunities and experiences,
and many times it’s good for them to go for it. “When in doubt, do it” is a
dangerous statement—but with the composite Ascendant in Gemini, it’s
generally a merry policy.
Be sure to take a close look at Mercury, the planetary ruler of Gemini,
later in this section. It will carry these ideas further, with references to
specific areas where this appetite for wonder is particularly central to their
shared evolutionary intentions.
COMPOSITE ASCENDANT IN CANCER
Got the blues? Feel like you need a hug? Maybe a little tea and sympathy?
Head straight for the home of your friends with composite Ascendant in
Cancer. If you do that, your instincts are sound: these two will take good
care of you. But you may have to wait in line, because you’re not the only
one who can feel their warmth and comforting presence from ten miles
away. It’s not that they are so extroverted or social—they may in fact have
been looking forward to a quiet evening of reading or watching a familiar
old film together. It’s just that anyone who gets near them feels a little better
—not giggly or high. Nothing so wild. Think of the way you feel about
three minutes after settling into a hot bath after a long, hard day. That’s
about it.
Maybe you’re on our Cancer Ascendant couple’s short list, and you’ve
actually got a the key to their front door. They might be off visiting family
on the other side of the country. No matter; if you need soothing, all you
have to do is walk into their house and sit there for a while. When it comes
to making a place comfortable, these two have a magical touch. Just settle
into that sofa and put your feet up. In a few minutes, you’ll be all right.
Everything about this couple radiates through the “stained glass” of the
Mother archetype. Whatever the rest of their natures might be, their mask in
the world exudes a consoling, reassuring, unassuming gentleness. The rest
of us believe in them as a couple—and if they were to separate, it would
feel as if something terribly wrong had happened.
That’s beautiful and appealing—but any couple working with this
composite Ascendant needs to be cautious about other people draining their
own inner batteries, even with positive projections. For these two to feel
centered, they have an absolute, non-negotiable need for time spent alone
with each other. They need to be really careful about that Mother energy
drawing an endless stream of needy people to their door. Their home life is
very important to them. Passing quiet, easy hours together in their Hobbit
hole is one of the most healing activities available to them. Trouble is,
people they love may not allow them enough of that sustaining solace.
“Family” is absolutely central to the logic of Cancer—and we’re putting
the word in quotation marks because its meaning is so flexible nowadays.
They may declare you to be “family,” even though you are not related by
blood or marriage. And once you are family to these two, you’ll always
have a place in their hearts. Their loyalty is unquestionable.
Here’s the paradox: in order to thrive, the Cancer composite Ascendant
needs committed human connections—but it must also learn to set solid
boundaries. Otherwise, other people’s dramas can so distract them from
their own private intimate processes that something withers between them.
They might lose those life-sustaining Cancer vitamins: a sense of safety,
privacy, and sanctity in their domestic environment, a sense of control over
its borders. They might lose that precious feeling of having enough time to
stretch slowly out into sharing the nuances of their own complex emotions.
With every escalation of commitment in outside relationships, both the
prizes and the risks head north. This is deeply true with dear friends,
especially when they are in need. With literal kinship—mothers and fathers,
for example—learning to set clear boundaries can be pivotal. If these two
take that ultimate Cancerian step and have children, then profound caution
must be exercised that they don’t completely sacrifice their natural right to
withdraw into their own nourishing, sustaining secret world.
For more insight into how a couple with a Cancer composite Ascendant
can take care of themselves, have a close look a few pages back at the
position of the composite Moon, which rules their Ascendant.
COMPOSITE ASCENDANT IN LEO
Styles change. What’s considered beautiful in one century might be sources
of personal insecurity in another. The most obvious illustration is our
varying enthusiasm for body fat: compare the zaftig reclining goddesses of
the Renaissance with the more willowy feminine ideals of modern
Hollywood. In classical Rome, a large, hooked nose on a man was seen as a
sign of virility and authority. Nowadays, a man with such a proboscis is
under social pressure to consider corrective surgery. It’s worth spending a
few pages lamenting the pointless hurt these styles create for people, but
we’ll spare you that. Instead, let’s consider it from the angle of
psychological realpolitik: being considered appealing is a real boost in the
self-confidence department. If we feel attractive, we’ll often take more self-
expressive risks and be bolder about asking for what we want—and
expecting to get it.
People who are naive about such matters imagine that one’s allure is a
fixed quantity. You are born with it, and that’s that. They may try to pave
over whatever tricks God played on them with cosmetics and clothing, but
deep down they know the fearful truth. With a little more wisdom and
experience, we recognize that the game is a lot more subtle: attitude, style,
and a sense of theater go a long way to creating an aura of magnetism
around a person. With their composite Ascendant in Leo, the fulfillment of
the evolutionary intentions of this couple depend upon their playing this
stylistic card. They may not need to be beautiful in the narrow sense of the
word, but they do need to become impressive.
Why? Isn’t that just a superficial concern? Yes, it is—and, in a sense, the
composite Ascendant itself is superficial. So is your skin! For this couple to
have the experiences they need in this world, this colorful Leo appearance
is the ticket that gets them aboard the right train. There are two dimensions
to that observation. The first is that impressive, appealing people can get
through doors that would be barred to others. The second, and more
important, consideration is that, if we feel impressive and appealing, we
will often be more willing to take more creative risks. We are simply not as
fearful of rejection.
Automatically, with the composite Ascendant in Leo, we tend to see a
certain flair in this couple. Others may be more aware of it than they are.
They are not necessarily loud or extroverted, but eyes turn to them as they
enter the room. There is a certain “royal” dignity about them, as if they
ought to “be somebody.” With only modest exaggeration, we can imagine
that we’ve dressed them expensively and sneaked them into the Academy
Awards banquet. Movie people at other tables are whispering to each other,
wondering who they are . . . “I’ve know I’ve seen them somewhere before.
I just can’t place them.”
If this couple can learn to cultivate these qualities and to trust them, they
can increasingly begin to take on leadership and style-setting roles in their
communities. Their soul-intentions depend on doing that. These two would
benefit by literally going on stage together—acting or presenting
workshops. A great “yoga” for them is having a serious, creative
professional photographer take their picture. Coaching each other about
language, clothing, and physical posture is central. It’s good that they
remember the “joke” inherent in all such concerns—and recognize that the
joke can be on them if they don’t take it seriously!
For deeper perspectives on how the couple with the Leo composite
Ascendant can take care of themselves, have a close look a few pages back
at the position of their composite Sun, which rules their Ascendant.
COMPOSITE ASCENDANT IN VIRGO
Maybe your jeep has broken down in the Kalahari desert in South Africa.
Good luck—you are eighty yards from the only gas station within five
hundred miles! You walk up to the attendant and explain your plight. He’s
friendly, concerned, and—here’s the bad luck—perfectly incompetent. He
doesn’t even have a telephone. He can’t fix your car. He may have tears of
compassion in his eyes. He may be the soul of good will. But he’s about as
useful to you as a runny nose on your wedding day.
Competence is a precious commodity—and with their composite
Ascendant in Virgo, this couple radiates it. There is something grounded
about their appearance. People tend to trust them quickly, and generally that
trust is well placed. One look, and we instinctively take them seriously. We
may not even know them, but we are instantly sure that they are good at
something. They radiate skillfulness, earthy reasonableness, and an
undefined proficiency.
Our assumptions are probably accurate—a couple with this composite
Ascendant, given a bit of time together, soon develops into a team.
Sometimes the complementarity of their skills is evident right from the
starting line: they may even have met through their professional lives. Other
times, they are attracted to each other for more typical romantic and
psychological reasons. But, as the wheels turn, they come to recognize that
their skills lock together like a jigsaw puzzle.
In any case, we all quickly sense that these two could be useful to us.
Wearing the mask of the “servant,” they seem to invite requests for
assistance and advice—even when they might actually prefer that we left
them alone! Even people who normally wouldn’t be intrusive feel a kind of
permission to approach them. Mercury—the planet of communication—
rules Virgo, and therefore it’s quite evident in their style: together, these two
are verbal, even if they are more quiet as individuals. The chemistry
between them seems to bring out language skills. Since most social
interaction is verbal, this communicativeness also contributes to their
“availability.”
The “servant” role is simply a reality here. There isn’t much these two
can do about it, even if they don’t like it. Where freedom enters the
equations is in the determination of the nature of the service they will
render. With the composite Ascendant in Virgo, their soul-intention pivots
on finding the right work to offer their community—and the right work is
something that gives them joy and a sense of meaning as well as benefitting
others. They will be happy if they succeed in finding it—and, if they don’t,
they will be under constant pressure to accept duties that return nothing to
them.
Naturally, it is not unusual to see couples with this composite Ascendant
drawn to the idea of actually finding a profession they can share. In many
ways, that is the ideal. But work is not always something we get paid to do
—or at least that is not our sole source of support. The real issue, from the
evolutionary perspective, is finding the nature of that shared talent where
their joys and their skills fit together in a way that makes the whole greater
than the sum of the parts. Then they experience the fulfillment and the
dignity of offering that shared talent as a gift to the people around them.
Be sure to take a close look at Mercury, the planetary ruler of Virgo, later
in this section. It will carry these ideas further, with references to specific
areas where we might locate this precious skill.
COMPOSITE ASCENDANT IN LIBRA
Some people view themselves as the most fascinating topics in the world. In
the standard joke, they say, “Well, enough about me—what do you think of
me?” Naturally, we find such behavior off-putting. We don’t feel any sense
of connection with such individuals. On the other hand, when someone
finds us fascinating, we generally take that to be a sign of their good taste
and their wisdom in matters of character! We open up to them, often
imagining that we have a lot in common—that our values are similar, that
we vote for the same people, and so on. That may be an illusion, but it’s not
an unpleasant one. The world could use more of it, and if there were more
couples with the composite Ascendant in Libra, we would enjoy a lot more
simple graciousness, sensitivity and support as we went about our lives. We
would all feel more interesting and appealing, and some of the usual social
chill in anonymous human interactions would thaw. With these two, once
their relationship gets established, it is as if everything inside them takes on
an appealing glow of bridge-building empathy as it shines out into the
community.
The orientation in Libra is toward the other person—that’s a critical
piece of our understanding. It’s not that they put themselves forward in an
extroverted or assertive way, it’s more that they draw us out. With these
two, we don’t have the feeling of being seduced or manipulated, or even
necessarily entertained. When we walk away from them, we are not blown
away. We’re not in love with them. We just like them and feel a certain
simpatico between us.
Furthermore, they have learned more about us than we have about them
—and half of what we feel we know about them is probably incorrect. They
didn’t lie or intentionally deceive us. It’s just that their orientation was more
toward outreach and connection than it was about self-revelation. For them,
the real content of the interaction was not actually personal information; it
was the quality of the interaction itself.
With the composite Ascendant in Libra, a big part of the soul-intention of
this couple revolves around the awareness-triggering impact of other people
—and other couples—upon them. They are taking in a lot of data about
relationships in general, digesting it, and turning it into wisdom in the
context of their own bond. Thus, people who serve well as bad examples
are as useful to them as people who serve as good ones. To that end, Spirit
has given them the capacity to have the string quartet over for dinner one
night and Hell’s Angels over the next. And they will learn from both!
If life were infinitely long, this strategy would be instructive for them.
But life isn’t—and that leads us to the realization that these two benefit a lot
from learning to do some careful selection in terms of who lies at the other
end of the bridges they excel at building. To get some insight into the
optimal answers to that question, have a careful look at the location by sign
and by house of their composite Venus a few pages ahead. Venus rules
Libra, and thus is the ruler of their composite Ascendant. People who are
described by the higher possibilities of that Venus placement are their true
allies—and people who represent lower expressions of it can weave tangled
webs for them. With the latter type, these two need to run away politely!
And with the former, they benefit from cultivating real trust and, comparing
notes, moving into the deeper waters together.
COMPOSITE ASCENDANT IN SCORPIO
Everyone’s got a few embarrassing memories. Some of them are just silly,
like when we put salt in our coffee, thinking it was sugar, on the day we met
our new in-laws. Once we feel comfortable with other people, we often
revel in sharing those kind of tales. Everyone laughs, and we all feel closer
and more human. But other memories and inner realities are less
comfortable, and we tend to keep them private. We might have had second
thoughts about a relationship to which we’ve committed, or doubts about
whether we should have had children. Most of us have a few sexual stories
we’d prefer didn’t get into the National Enquirer. Legal, moral and ethical
lines get crossed. We carry these secrets inside ourselves, and find the
thought of being “discovered” so unnerving that we don’t even want to
think about it—until we encounter a couple with their composite Ascendant
in Scorpio. Then, unaccountably, we hear ourselves saying, “I’ve never told
anyone this before, but . . . ”
There is a disarming aura of intensity around this couple. Once we get
near them, the usual superficialities of social life fall away. Frivolous
posturing and banal conversation—the staple ingredients of civilized
existence—feel unnatural to us. We want to get down into the meat of
things. Their sexuality is usually very up front—you can feel it between
them, even though they are probably not talking about it. You sense the
psychological depth in their bond right away. Something about their
chemistry brings out confession in other people. They seem to demand
truth, and they do that without ever actually asking for it. You simply know
that they would see through any false front you put up as easily as we see
through the lie of the child caught with a hand in the cookie jar.
Humor has a part in all this. We humans have always made jokes of the
things that are most frightening and personal to us: death, sexuality, ageing,
and so on. With their composite Ascendant in Scorpio, these two are
probably pretty funny once you get to know them. But even their humor just
seems to pull us into their gravitational field more deeply.
At the evolutionary level, this couple is moving through a developmental
stage involving a kind of “talking cure” healing process that is happening
between them. The key is to recognize that this process requires outside
input of a taboo nature. They need honest information from others. Without
it, they can’t keep perspective on their own psychological intensity. How
much saner we all might be if we didn’t have to face so much of life in
silence! But conventional wisdom demands that we avoid unpleasant
subjects in social situations—you don’t ask Grandpa if he’s in his Viagra
years yet. With their composite Ascendant in Scorpio, this couple has
reached a passage in which shared truth is everything. To that end, their
outward style is practically advertising for it.
Be sure to take a close look at the position of Pluto, the planetary ruler of
Scorpio, in their composite chart. It will carry the story further, with
references to specific areas where this goose-bump level of emotional
honesty is especially suited to the realities of the couple.
COMPOSITE ASCENDANT IN SAGITTARIUS
Sagittarius, in some astrological writing, is viewed as “idealistic but
impractical.” That viewpoint breaks down when we demand a definition of
“practicality.” For many people, the word boils down to staying safe and
making money, but what’s really so practical about that? We have our brief,
uncertain lives in this world, and no one gets out alive. Any truly practical
response to living has got to face those facts—and in facing them, we
immediately recognize the practicality of philosophy! Why are we here?
What is really important in our lives? No way we can lead “practical” lives
without having some working hypotheses regarding those issues. These are
Sagittarian questions, and with their composite Ascendant in that sign, this
couple is wrestling with them. A quality of high-minded principle radiates
from them, as does a quality of seeking and an openness to exploration.
Let’s continue to be ruthlessly practical. If the purpose of life lies partly
in trying to determine the purpose of life before the bell rings, what kinds of
methods make sense? Let’s start with a popular one that makes no sense at
all: cautiously take up a defensive position in life. Establish safe, boring
relationships, pursue safe, boring careers, make sound investments, and
hope fervently that you’ll live forever. Here’s a wiser approach: hurl
yourself into living. Gather wide experience. Entertain exotic perspectives.
Then engage the intuition, and decide where to place your precious faith.
With their composite Ascendant in Sagittarius, that latter method is the one
that fulfills the soul-contract of this couple. They have made a deal to take
chances together, even if that means they’ll sometimes make mistakes—in
fact, even their mistakes will prove quite instructive to them.
Together, these two wear the mask of the gypsy. There’s something
dashing and colorful in their style. They are ready for adventure—and
adventure makes them feel more centered and confident as a couple.
Traveling benefits them enormously. It blows out the mental cobwebs and
gives them a broader perspective. They gain a kind of legitimacy in their
own eyes when they can tell people that they are just back from living in
Argentina for a year, or that they are off to India to study yoga.
Immediately, a natural objection arises: not every couple with the
composite Ascendant in Sagittarius is wealthy. That kind of questing life
may be appealing, but there are bills to pay and so on. This leads us right
into the deepest layers of the soul-contract that binds these two: together,
they are learning about faith. And faith is meaningless without risk. To have
faith is to be willing to recognize that a certain course is the right one, and
then to trust God to provide the means and the methods. Pay close attention
at this point to the position, by sign and house, of their composite Jupiter.
That’s the ruler of their Ascendant, and it will pinpoint certain areas where
this openness to risk is most pivotal for them. We’ve used traveling as an
illustration, and it’s often quite relevant to couples with this Ascendant. But
there are other areas of life where faith and risk are catalysts for evolution.
Their Jupiter will point the way to them.
COMPOSITE ASCENDANT IN CAPRICORN
Confusion is part of life. We all arrive at existential crossroads, knowing
that the success or failure of our lives depends on our making the right
choices. And we stand there, clueless. Should we commit to this
relationship? Move to Idaho? Quit this safe job and accept that exciting,
insecure one? Have a baby?
Blundering is costly, and yet usually at these crossroads the voices in our
heads are arguing. Is that wisdom talking—or just fear? Is this true love—or
an infatuation I’ll be paying some psychotherapist to explain before too
long?
In traditional cultures, faced with these kinds of dilemmas, we knew
what to do: go have a talk with an elder. That didn’t just mean someone
who was old—plenty of people become old without becoming elders.
Elders have digested their experience and turned it to a tempered, nuanced
understanding of life. At every level, from the psychological to the purely
practical, they simply know things. And we trust them and naturally turn to
them.
With their composite Ascendant in Capricorn, this couple already plays
the role of elders in their community. That statement has nothing to do with
their chronological age: there are “elders” who are twenty years old. The
point is that a quality of grounded wisdom radiates from this couple. People
sense that they are valuable fountains of knowledge. They’ll turn to them
for opinions and perspectives on everything from what car to buy to the
most perplexing relationship dilemmas. And, nine times out of ten, the
advice these two offer is sound, solid, and helpful.
The soul-contract they’ve signed involves gathering a set of experiences
that allow the elder archetype they carry to develop and blossom. While
couples can play that kind of supporting, sobering, counseling role for
others at any age, years in the world do deepen it. With their composite
Ascendant in Capricorn, these two carry the seed-intention of literally
growing old together, becoming one of those gray-haired couples who
immediately make us think of wizards—which, incidentally, is another
Capricorn archetype. As they evolve together, we begin to see a wintry
strength in them. They carry not only understanding, but also integrity,
character, and a steely determination to look the reality of life straight in the
eye.
How can they accomplish this aim? We learn about life essentially by
living it. For this couple, there are many mountains to climb. Some
astrologers think of Capricorn as an unfortunate sign. There’s no such thing,
but Capricorn does refer to challenges and difficulty—and to the positive
qualities of character that arise in us if we rise to them. With their
composite Ascendant in Capricorn, they achieve their right orientation to
life by daring to push themselves toward the limits of excellence. They
thrive on vows, starting with a sober commitment to work through their own
relationship, aiming to “grow” it over time. They may benefit from having
children: another “great work.” Accepting a larger sense of mission in their
community is another evolutionary tactic for them. Perhaps they open a no-
kill animal shelter, help establish a spiritual institution, or lead an
environmental crusade. Always, the key is the realization that an elder is
tempered and forged by challenges.
A close consideration of the position of Saturn, the planetary ruler of
Capricorn, will typically offer a lot of specific insight about the nature of
these great works, and the concrete arenas in which they are taking place. It
is particularly imperative that this couple rise to those missions, because it
is through them that they come into the full power and authority of their
“wizardhood.”
COMPOSITE ASCENDANT IN AQUARIUS
These two stand out in a crowd, not necessarily because they’re trying to
call attention to themselves, but simply because they just don’t seem to fit
in. Even when they’re sitting still, you can tell that they walk to the beat of
a different drummer.
Sometimes these zany, out-of-synch Aquarian qualities show up in
obvious, external ways: she’s taller than he is; he’s younger than she is.
They are married, but have no rings and no kids—or they are living
together, but not married. They’re gay; they’re of different races. Those
distinctions are outward, and run counter to mainstream customs. Far more
importantly, a socially-transformative energy radiates from a couple
wearing the mask of Aquarius, the Rebel, the Non-conformist and the Exile.
Their very existence is helping to change the world.
Upon first meeting, these two can come across like amiable but detached
extra-terrestrials. They may or not be friendly, but they are definitely “not
from around here.” Why do they live in a planned community when they
barely socialize with anyone in it? Why is there an observatory on their
roof? They never send any Christmas cards. Good grief, is that a pet iguana
living in their art gallery? Gosh, they’re hard to understand—but
fascinating.
And if they’ve done their work on themselves, they won’t mind a bit that
you’re having trouble figuring them out. “You like us? Great. You think
we’re weird? That’s interesting.” A couple with this composite Ascendant
needs to develop a thick skin, because they have to get past any needs they
might have as individuals for social approval. The creation of their bond
involves learning to think for themselves, and making their own decisions
about how they will—and will not—structure their relationship.
That may sound easy, but it often involves puzzling or disappointing
others. Sometimes, poignantly, it involves hurting them. Maybe they leave
the religions of their childhoods. Maybe they move from the town where
their families have lived for eight generations. Maybe they choose not to
have children, or adopt an interracial child. Whatever the rules, sooner or
later you hear the sound of some of them being broken.
Which ones? Give careful consideration to Uranus, the planetary ruler of
Aquarius, in the composite chart. It will carry the story further, with a
specific reference to an area where this mutual declaration of independence
is especially relevant to the evolutionary realities of this couple.
COMPOSITE ASCENDANT IN PISCES
There is a fine line between taking ourselves too seriously and not taking
ourselves seriously enough. On one hand, we have self-absorbed egotism.
On the other, drifting—a very cosmic and humorous drifting perhaps, but
it’s still not leading anywhere. With their composite Ascendant in Pisces,
this couple needs to be wary of the second pitfall. This isn’t because they
are weak. It’s because of a strength they have, but which they necessarily
know how to handle. When these two came together, the chemistry between
them was mystical—or perhaps we should say psychedelic. Suddenly, they
were having uncanny psychic experiences together. Suddenly, they were
bigger than the world, or above it, or outside it. They were looking at the
rest of us the way the angels do—with love, but also a shake of the head at
our ridiculous vanities and our silly posturing. Together, these two get the
joke of life. One manifestation of that is simply their fantastic sense of
humor. Another is a vulnerability to just watching life as it happens to them,
without claiming the specific experiences that actually are the intentions of
their souls.
What are those experiences? Pisces is the archetype of the mystic, and
we can answer our question simply by considering what mystics want.
Immediately, we might think of mountaintops or wildernesses for
meditation. We might think of lofty spiritual teachers or candle-lit
cathedrals. The key is the realization that none of those consciousness-
invoking situations or experiences are likely to just materialize in front of
two people sitting at home watching television! They’ve got to go seek such
experiences actively, and that requires effort. It demands some ego-energy
and some focus—and that means choice, intention, a willingness to act. It
also implies an openness to displeasing others when they have alternative
plans for us. With their composite Ascendant in Pisces, the fulfillment of
the soul-contract between these two depends upon their behaving outwardly
like mystics: meditating or praying together, seeking inspiring teachers,
visiting sacred places.
Always, they can act. To Pisces, all the world is a stage. They can play a
lot of different roles together, and understand the arbitrariness of all of
them. That skill allows them to move easily through varying social
environments. It’s easy to imagine them as spies, playing their parts with
flawless grace, all the while watching and studying everyone around them.
Where the risks come into the equations is when we imagine their
functioning as “spies” in a life they have created—and never leave. Their
understanding of the grand joke doesn’t make them any less a part of it.
The alternative? Actively to engage in the exploration of consciousness
together! Their “religion” is their own business. Maybe they are Hindus, or
Shamans, or Jungians—or Jehovah’s Witnesses. No matter. What matters is
that they actually work the methods together as a couple, using them to
open doors into higher states of consciousness. To get more specific insight
into certain mystical experiences which are pivotal to their journey, be
particularly alert to the position of Neptune in their composite chart. It rules
their Pisces Ascendant and thus gives some very concrete suggestions about
the path that works for them.

(Please note: there is no “Composite Ascendant in the Houses” section


here, because the Ascendant itself is the cusp of the first house.)
Chapter 8
The Composite Mercury
M ercury may not be one of the officially romantic planets, but almost
everyone understands that effective communication—Mercury’s
territory—is one of lasting love’s essential ingredients. Chemistry and
electricity are amazing phenomena: a couple destined to spend decades
together might meet for the first time and instantly recognize their
connection. That’s real and authentic. But if they’re going to stay truly
connected through the inevitable negotiations that adult love entails, they
have to be able to speak their hearts, hear each other well, and convey that
hearing back to each other effectively. Eloquence isn’t the point—under
certain circumstances, it can be intimidating, bombastic and repressive. Nor
is the point even so narrow as the concept of speech, although speech is
absolutely central to Mercury. We communicate receptivity sometimes with
our silences. We communicate concern or compassion with an eloquent,
well-timed touch. In intimacy, much communication occurs wordlessly
through the mysteries of our eyes and the soul-contact, or lack of it, that
they signal. Mercury’s place in the composite chart teaches us about those
exchanges too.
Furthermore, not all communication described by composite Mercury
involves serious transmissions about The Relationship. What human bond
could thrive without humor? Or without shared interests outside itself?
Those are Mercury territories as well, and must be fed in accord with the
nature of the planet’s position in the composite chart.
Each couple must find its own natural communicative style. Some people
convey deep, intimate data to each other in single sentences. Or in jokes.
Some successful relationships average ten thousand words a night, some a
hundred. There are compassionate, effective communication styles that may
sound like argument or attack to the outside observer—and ones with real
teeth that may sound wimpy. In every case, the discovery of the
communicative style that works is a make-it-or-break-it issue. And in every
case, we can learn a lot about that style with a glance at the composite
Mercury.
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN ARIES
Aries wants challenges, adventures and victories. It seeks courage and
admires heroics. It wants potency and penetration, to be dynamic, to make
an impact. It likes brinkmanship and winning. This doesn’t mean couples
with this composite Mercury are always fighting, nor always discussing
sports. But verbal sparks can fly here, and these two should establish good
conflict resolution skills. Their natural communicative style is blunt,
forthright and goal-oriented, like two hunters tackling the same mastodon.
This pair can enjoy healthy debate and relish a spirited sort of verbal
one-up-manship. They may tease each other mercilessly, to the point where
acquaintances who don’t know them well may gasp at the risks they’re
taking, and fear they’re headed for blows or the divorce courts. Think of
two warriors bantering in a tavern: swapping stories, bragging, calling each
other names and trading friendly insults, all in ways of which Miss Manners
would not approve. But woe betide anyone who threatens either of them;
they’ll promptly join forces against the enemy.
The need here is to share challenges in Mercury’s realm, and be brave
enough to communicate about potentially explosive topics. A key to
working with this composite Mercury is having the courage (Aries) to deal
with both major anger and minor irritations quickly, rather than letting them
fester and explode, or be displaced onto a substitute issue. If this couple has
a spectacular fight over what color to paint the bathroom, the paint is not
what’s really at stake. Another strategy is sharing a Mercurial challenge:
enroll in a class together, collaborate on the Sunday crossword puzzle, or
invent silly limericks during long car trips. Equally helpful, if there are no
unresolved tensions brewing between these partners, might be outlets where
they can deliberately compete against each other in a harmless, low-key
way: a Scrabble tournament or a poker game. If their individual Mercuries
are in softer-spoken or more affiliative signs, this composite Mercury’s taste
for mixing it up can take some adjustment, but it can also bring plenty of
spice into both of their lives.
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN TAURUS
The God of Speech in the most non-verbal of the signs! What could that
mean? For starters, non-verbal does not mean uncommunicative. It’s just
that the essence of Taurus has little to do with human speech. This sign is
about reconnecting to our instinctive sides, our animal natures, our primate
selves. Once upon a time in human prehistory, we had not yet developed a
spoken language. Did we still communicate? Certainly, and a couple with
composite Mercury in Taurus dimly remembers how. Of course spoken
language is important with this composite Mercury sign, but more than
speech is important here: a hug, a sigh, a meal, a backrub. Body language
matters as well. A relaxed posture, feet on the coffee table, and an arm laid
invitingly along the back of the sofa convey a whole different message to
Mercury in Taurus than the message sent by someone hunched over a
computer keyboard amid half a dozen empty coffee cups.
This couple does well to take time to process things at a pace that’s
comfortable for them. “Back to basics” might well be their motto: back to
what’s most important not only to their sophisticated twenty-first century
selves, but also to their inner primates. It might be easier to talk over an
issue, simplify it and get at the heart of it while they’re taking a walk, for
example, or having a picnic by a lake, or cuddled up in their hammock, than
it is in one of their offices after work. Concrete examples help, too. As the
proverb says, “Actions speak louder than words.” They may spend their
evenings discussing the mysterious landscape of the human body, or natural
history, or their garden, or cooking or working with clay. Music and dance
can also be great facilitators and topics of conversation, and shared silences
can be most eloquent.
The need here is for communication to be uncomplicated, free of hidden
nuances or veiled complexities, and to happen at more levels than just
verbally. That way, each partner can almost sense what the other one is
thinking or feeling, in much the same way that some cats or dogs will sense
when their owners are upset, and come to offer comfort. Living with
composite Mercury in Taurus involves letting go of some of our constant
internal chatter and tuning in to our instinctive side, to how the ancient
prehistoric primate within us experiences the world. Individuals who are
more mentally or intellectually oriented may find this mode of perception
quite a stretch, but one that can truly sensitize them to their partners.
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN GEMINI
The endpoint of Gemini is pure perception, non-judgmental and all-
encompassing. Ideally, Gemini is about sheer observation with no
judgments, every synapse wide open and the whole nervous system firing.
Gemini is, potentially, geared to notice everything. The flow and nuances of
a conversation. The traffic in the street. The single longer hair in the
partner’s left eyebrow. What the cat’s investigating in the garden outside the
window. And, potentially, Gemini is geared to weigh all those perceptions
equally, to give each one exactly the same amount of attention and
importance.
In real life, just to maintain our sanity, we don’t do this. Instead we
practice selective attention: we attend to the conversation more than to the
hum of the refrigerator. But a couple with composite Mercury in Gemini
can find it hard to practice selective attention. So stand back—a
conversation between these partners can resemble a racquetball game at
about Warp Ten. It moves fast. It keeps both partners active and engaged. It
makes a lot of interesting ricochets. And it may rebound all over the place
without arriving at any particular destination, unless the couple strives to
keep it on the topic or topics they most need to discuss. If they’ve set out to
have a freewheeling conversation without no particular goal, this verbal
racquetball can be great fun. Indeed, life will be more interesting for this
couple, and their bond will deepen, if they can spend time in this form of
conversation. But it can be frustrating if they’re trying to work out a serious
difference. Perhaps they should agree to let each other know when they
need to stay on a particular topic, and to gently remind another if they stray
off course. In this case, having their individual Mercuries in more orderly
signs can be a plus.
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN CANCER
What does a planet in Cancer want? Tenderness. Safety. Belonging. A
sheltering nest in which to do inner work and examine the heart. To become
mistress of the inner world of Feeling. For a couple with composite
Mercury in Cancer, profound subjectivity and heightened imagination color
the communicative process and the sharing of ideas and information. Like a
rare and delicate flower, this process opens with warmth, proper nurturing
and light, and it closes under any hint of harshness or adverse conditions.
A conversation between this couple, when they are both feeling secure
enough to connect deeply, will be full of feeling and optimally used to
convey feelings. What kind? Whatever’s appropriate to the situation, be it
love, humor, sorrow or fancy—the waters of imagination run very deep in
Cancer. A full current of emotion should flow between this couple, a sense
that all their feelings, pleasant, unpleasant and in between, can be safely
shared.
What happens if these partners don’t feel safe enough with one another
to communicate? They will clam up, at least about whatever it is that scares
them, which is probably what they most need to discuss. And when a
Cancerian planet has raised the drawbridge, that drawbridge is locked tight,
and no battering ram in the universe can force it down.
To break the impasse, reassurances are needed. This couple should be
careful that, within reason, they don’t make something or someone else
more important than one another’s feelings. They must take care not to
disregard each other’s sensitivities and vulnerabilities. No one can promise
never to hurt someone; sometimes our actions are hurtful, regardless of our
intent. But we can sincerely try not to hurt each other. We can resist the urge
to be sarcastic, or to hit below the belt. And we can avoid behavior that we
know will hurt the partner, simply because we know that it does.
The safer that this couple feels with one another, the more the
communication between them will blossom. Individuals whose natures are
more blunt and fireproof may take time to adapt to a composite Mercury’s
need for this level of gentleness with one another, but the results are well
worth it. Outsiders won’t be allowed to witness some of this couple’s best
conversations, where they take the most risks with each other, and are
tender and funny and passionate and whimsical and outrageous and
insightful by turns, because outsiders have not been admitted to that level of
intimate trust with its rich rewards.
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN LEO
Leo is about saying “yes” to life, about trusting life enough to love it, to
create for it, to perform for it. Like Leo’s ruler, the Sun, a planet in Leo
needs to shine, to give out warm, radiant energy. At its best, it’s like a good
and generous king or queen, who recognizes and encourages the finest
knights, and brings order and plenty to the land. Or it’s like a consummate
performer, who takes in applause and gives that energy back a hundredfold.
A couple with this composite Mercury should exchange mutual
admiration with style and verve. Like a duet, each partner should contribute
to the dialog. Conversations between them are best conducted with flair,
humor, and healthy doses of praise and acceptance. Imagine a pair of stand-
up comics, jamming away, or poets at an open mike reading. The more they
make each other laugh, the better they’ll communicate. As Henry Miller
wrote, “Always merry and bright.”
But life is not always merry and bright, and sometimes we have to
discuss painful topics, which are not the easiest ones for this composite
Mercury to handle. Yet, paradoxically, the more playfully this couple has
learned to converse, the more they’ll be able to trust one another to venture
into darker subjects. Leo is not about the denial of anything negative; it’s
about being able to cope with sorrow while consciously maintaining a
fundamentally optimistic approach to life. How can these two do that? By
trusting Spirit, trusting each other, and finding lots of reasons to laugh
together. A shared creative and performing outlet would be a big plus. This
composite Mercury placement can be taxing for more introverted or serious
individuals, but it can also help the depths in such people be more easily
articulated.
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN VIRGO
The sign of the master craftsperson, the critic, the analyst and the
perfectionist. But the goal of a Virgo planet is not so much to become
perfect as to become whole, to become fully realized, to reach its highest
potential. How? By humility and painstaking self-assessment—recognition
of where we need to grow is a prerequisite of growth. By determined, step-
by-step self-improvement. By an ongoing focus on the continuing
development of expertise in some personally meaningful work or skill.
Therefore, a couple with composite Mercury in Virgo should cultivate
the craft of detailed, careful, practical nuts-and-bolts communication, with
no Is undotted and no Ts uncrossed, like an exceptionally well-written
instruction manual. Conversation is a tool, used to sharpen their relating
skills, and the more skillfully they wield that tool, the better. This takes
practice, a lot of hours logged in at the exchange of ideas and information.
It takes an honest appraisal of where and why they are not communicating
as well as they could. It takes objective and pragmatic steps to correct those
glitches.
This composite Mercury sign can be trying for individuals who are more
geared to see the whole forest than every single tree in it, and they can get
frustrated at what feels like having to belabor points. The shadow side of
Virgo is a tendency to criticize, and these partners will be sensitive to one
another’s criticism or anything that smacks of it. Therefore, they must
accept one another, and how each of them naturally communicates, as they
are. That doesn’t mean there’s not room for improvement. But the focus
should be on what and how to improve in order to deepen the bond between
them, not to correct every verbal misstep in detail. For example, suppose he
consistently makes a particular grammatical error. That error is a little and,
for the relationship, essentially an unimportant thing, however much it may
annoy her. It’s not the same level of communicative glitch as, say,
consistently forgetting to write down dates on their calendar, or always
losing flight information. It’s better to let little errors go, rather than to
berate one another for them. Of course, if he has his Ph.D. oral exams
tomorrow, it might be wise to mention the grammatical error. Gently.
There’s a big difference between correcting a mistake and correcting a
person. One can be helpful; the other is invalidating and dismissive.
Similarly, in the case of the calendar and the flight dates, don’t say, “I can’t
believe how careless you are about our schedules.” It’s more helpful to ask,
“What do you think would make it easier for both of us to write that stuff
down? Should we move the calendar right by the phone and attach a pen to
it?”
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN LIBRA
Libra’s goal is harmony. Reciprocity. Homeostasis. Reconciliation of
opposites, mutually agreeable compromise. Yet, by definition, a system that
is striving to attain harmony doesn’t start out in equilibrium. As if they were
perched on opposite ends of a see-saw, a composite Mercury in Libra
couple is always trying to keep their communication fair, equitable and in
balance.
This doesn’t mean that each partner has to say exactly as many sentences
as the other one over the course of any given evening, or write just as many
love letters—although at times the Libran obsession with “fairness” can
look that way. It means that the quantity and the quality of this couple’s
communication should flow evenly in both directions: mind to mind, heart
to heart. If one partner is conveying only ideas when the other partner is
conveying only emotions, that is not reciprocity. Above all, each partner
should feel both fully heard by the other, and responded to in kind.
The need here is to be well met and fully partnered in the communicative
realm. A satisfying conversation between a happy couple with composite
Mercury in Libra can feel like dancing: two steps forward, two steps back,
whirl and pause and begin again, all in a graceful rhythm. Or it can feel like
fencing: thrust and parry, feint and counter, give ground and gain it.
Sometimes one of them may take the devil’s advocate position purely to
keep the ball rolling. If you’ve seen the movie My Dinner with André,
you’ve had a demonstration of something like a composite Mercury in
Libra in action! The subjects of this couple’s conversations and their shared
interests can be equally Libran: cultural topics, books, music, architecture,
design, dance, the arts in general. Evenings spent wrapped up in long
discussions with mutual friends can be a pleasure as well.
Charming, elegant gestures that affirm and maintain the couple’s
connection and invite communication help here, too: flowers, tickets to a
concert, the gift of an interesting book, a spontaneous surprise. Doing a
good job with this composite Mercury involves always being graciously
ready to listen to the other person’s point to view, to accept, explore and
even enjoy the fact that one’s mate’s perceptions, thoughts and ideas are not
the same as one’s own. People whose individual charts display a tendency
to want to be right all the time may find this difficult, but this couple needs
to agree that they will disagree sometimes, and vive la différence!
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN SCORPIO
Mercury in Scorpio. A cross between a can opener and a laser beam.
Scorpio’s endpoint is making the unconscious conscious. It seeks depth. It
likes intensity. Scorpio probes inward, detecting layer after layer of
previously hidden or unacknowledged material. Scorpio is driven to explore
the traditionally taboo areas of life: sexuality, death and dying, the deep
unconscious and the occult. Conversations between a couple with this
composite Mercury are not for the faint at heart. Always, they must be
willing to go further, deeper. Their defense mechanisms are weakened by
this placement, and their appetite for soul-revealing truths and gut-level
honesty, is increased. Polite, face-saving fictions should have no foothold
here. No topic should be taboo. This couple feels in their bones that
communication between them doesn’t involve just their present, rational
selves. It also involves their shadow sides, their damaged, wounded, crazy
sides, their inner children of the past, their internalized parental voices and
their projections onto one another. Sound like a crowded conference table?
It is. But anything more shallow wouldn’t be deep enough to hold their
interest.
This doesn’t mean that every conversation should be a therapy session,
nor that this couple should be needlessly confrontive with one another. Just
as a skilled therapist doesn’t overwhelm clients with insights for which they
are not ready, so should these partners treat each other with respect and
consideration as well as honesty. Their life together will lead them into
fascinating but charged psychological and intellectual ground—not terrain
in which to tread carelessly. If one of them asks for a time out, the partner
should grant it—as long as it truly is a time out and not an attempt at
permanent evasion of an issue that needs processing.
This composite Mercury placement can be harrowing for more defensive
or private souls. Also, those who already have a lot of Scorpionic energy
may need to remember to lighten up once in a while, and that “sometimes a
cigar is just a cigar.”
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN SAGITTARIUS
Sagittarius wants perspective and relishes new experiences. It sees the big
picture. It wants to act ethically, and yearns to find the meaning of life.
Consequentially, it often knows how many angels are dancing on the head
of that pin, what their names are, and what they all had for breakfast.
If a couple with composite Mercury in Sagittarius agrees about those
angels, great. If they disagree but enjoy the debate, and widen each other’s
intellectual horizons thereby, that’s a good use of this energy. But if they
disagree and attach moral failings to one another’s disagreement, they’re in
trouble. Tolerance and respect for varying points of view is crucial here.
So is making sure there’s always something interesting to discuss and
something new to experience together. In that respect, this composite
Mercury sign is not unlike Mercury in Gemini. We’re reminded of a couple
we met at a conference at the Association for Research and Enlightenment,
an institution centered around the work of the late psychic, Edgar Cayce.
Why were they there? They were on their honeymoon! Another couple
might have gotten a Eurail pass with this composite Mercury, or become
spokespersons for a cause they both believed in.
Intuition—the intuitive function assigns meaning to symbols, data and
events—is Sagittarius’s strong point, rather than logic or observation. There
is a distinct tendency to assign meaning to every experience, rather than
treating the experience as an objective bit of data. In extreme cases,
composite Mercury in Sagittarius can be so busy figuring out what that
power failure during one of their wonderful far-ranging conversations
meant that they overlook the fact that they forgot to pay the electric bill.
Some innate chicken-soup common sense in their individual charts can go a
long way toward reducing this tendency.
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN CAPRICORN
This is the chess player’s or architect’s Mercury, a Mercury that likes long-
term projects which involve structure, organization, planning and consistent
effort, and which produce measurable results. Writing a novel. Learning an
instrument. Mastering calculus. Installing a computer system. Capricorn’s
tools are pragmatism, resourcefulness, self-discipline and reserve. Its goals
are efficiency, integrity and the accomplishment of a Great Work or Works.
For a couple with this composite Mercury, one of those Great Works is
communicating as well and effectively as they possibly can.
Not every conversation these partners have will be about wiring
diagrams, although this composite Mercury is often interested in how things
work—signal chains, telescopes, economics, politics or birthcharts. The
point is more to figure out what methods and techniques of communication
work best for them: structure, not just content. Perhaps they need to learn
how to fight fairly and constructively. Perhaps one of them needs to learn
not to interrupt, or to avoid serious topics first thing in the morning. Maybe
it takes years to discover the triggers of their more foolish arguments: if she
feels that he thinks she’s stupid; if he feels that he’s not being heard. But
once those triggers are determined, a way of dealing with them will be
hammered out and put to work, and the number of their spats will decline.
Always, the concrete is better than the abstract here, and it’s best if these
partners don’t simply assume that they’ve been understood or that they’ve
agreed on something. Instead, they talk it out, write it down, pin it to the
bulletin board, and save those emails.
Shared intellectual projects can build bonds here, whether it’s crossword
puzzles or genealogy or a live action role playing game with the local
science fiction fans. Individuals who are more emotionally expressive and
subjective may find this composite Mercury’s caution and lack of
demonstrativeness a bit frustrating. Because of the natural reserve of
Capricorn, these partners may be more cautious than they should be about
revealing their feelings to one another, but learning how to do so can be part
of the Great Work of improving their communication.
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN AQUARIUS
The goal of Aquarius is individuation. Independence of mind, heart, will
and spirit. Radical authenticity. Being completely oneself. “You like me?
Delightful! You don’t like me? Interesting! I wonder why I press your
buzzers?” This rebellious sign is interested in whatever is unique. Aquarius
has an ability to spot previously overlooked truths, to see that the Emperor
is wearing no clothes—and how the needs for approval and belonging make
people alter their behavior in a thousand ways great and small. It’s hard to
describe the optimal communication style of a couple with their composite
Mercury in this sign, other than to say it will be original. What works best
for them may not work at all for any other couple on this planet.
Conversations may include but not be limited to the space program,
Ripley’s Believe It or Not, every progressive topic under the Sun,
biotechnology, paleoanthropology, chaos theory, speculative fiction,
holographic art: you name it. This sign is said to rule aviation, astrology and
computers—actually, Aquarius seems to be at least temporarily assigned the
rulership of whatever is new and cutting edge in that era. A potential gift
with this Mercury sign may be the ability to spot where each partner is not
being true to himself or herself, and to communicate that perception. “I
know that’s what everyone in your family thinks, but what do you think?”
These partners can thrive on humorously challenging each other’s idées
fixes, as well as society’s consensus views. “Why not eat the frosting before
the cake? Why get a degree in this subject when you’re already earning a
great living at it?” This couple needs to start with the premise that half of
what they’ve been taught about the world is wrong, and then work on
figuring out which half. They must learn to think for themselves. That
applies to how they communicate, too. Conduct their important relationship
conversations by letters? Have every dinner together in silence? Refuse to
have a telephone? Send emails in code? If it works for them, why not?
Doing their best with this composite Mercury involves deep tolerance
and respect for each other’s individuality. That means a live and let live
attitude about one another’s differing points of view, theories and learning
styles. It means being willing to try different ways to communicate and to
pursue radical new ideas. It also means that neither partner tries to convert
the other to his or her own point of view. No one’s a final authority; no
one’s a censor. For people who tend to have a proselytizing attitude about
their own opinions, this can be a challenging placement for Mercury.
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN PISCES
Pisces is always about surrendering. It’s always about that part of human
consciousness that is in closest touch with the multi-dimensional vastness
of both the mind and the cosmos. Because of that contact with the infinite,
Pisces can never be bound to the logic of this world. As Einstein, himself a
Piscean, proved a century ago, time and space are illusions—just artifacts of
our limited senses. Not every couple with their composite Mercury in
Pisces spends their evenings discussing theoretical physics—more likely it
will be poetry, film, music, transpersonal psychology, or mythology. But
when they put their heads together, the communicative processes that arise
naturally between them are not always bound to the space-time logic of our
“reasonable” human world. That’s fine. The place where their intelligences
meet and make contact can work splendidly for them, once they learn to
follow its n-dimensional threads.
Watch a happy couple who’ve lived with this composite Mercury for a
few years, and you’ll see an amazing demonstration of poetic mental
dexterity. One of them makes a colorful point—and the point immediately
seems to disappear, unremarked. No worry—it’s gone through a worm-hole
and will emerge ten minutes or ten days later, unscathed . . . whereupon the
second person picks it up, turns it into a metaphor that saves an idea she
first hatched between them two weeks earlier, like one trapeze artist
catching another in mid-air. But wait a minute—how did she know back
then what he hadn’t said yet, and that he was going to say it? Don’t ask.
Making this composite Mercury fly gracefully requires a lot of
playfulness. It requires suspension of the ego’s need to be right, its need for
linearity and reason, and its need “to know what’s happening.” It requires
that lots of information be stored in a thoroughly random- access part of
both people’s minds. It requires intelligence tempered by soul, poetry, and a
respect for life’s mysteries. It thrives on our ability to laugh at what we
can’t understand—and an appreciation of the way laughter itself can feel
like a form of understanding. It loves quiet time, meditation, and the
immense data-sets that can be conveyed between two people’s eyes with a
moment’s glance. It’s probably most challenging when each of the
individual’s natal Mercuries are more orderly by nature—a classic “Culture
Shock” interpretive situation. That’s one reason we opened this section with
a reference to surrendering!
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN THE FIRST HOUSE
A planet in the composite first house is immediately evident to those around
the couple; it becomes part of the couple’s persona in the world. The first
impression they will make—and should make—is Mercurial. They should
strike others as an articulate, witty, communicative, curious and observant
couple, as raconteurs who are most likely to be asked to a Trivial Pursuit
tournament or a lecture series. But the first house is more than the couple’s
persona; it also represents a sort of astrological behavioral modification
suggestion. If these partners consciously, intentionally assume the role of
that first house Mercury and act upon it, both in their outer lives and with
one another, they will strengthen their bond, help it grow, and feel more at
ease together in the world around them.
An astrologer whose name we don’t remember once said that the
Ascendant is the pathway you need to walk in order to help the Sun be its
most radiant self, that the Sun is who you are, and the Ascendant is the road
you need to take to get there. By that logic, this couple has a Mercurial path
to walk, with one deliberate step after another. What does that mean? That
maintaining good communication is essential. There are more modes of
communicating than just the verbal one, but stony silences in any mode are
anathema for these partners. They must exchange ideas and information,
draw one another out and provoke each other’s curiosity. This is a natural
process early in a relationship, when we are fascinated by each other, want
every detail of one another’s biographies, and haven’t heard all of each
other’s stories yet. In new love, we don’t run out of things to talk about—
and neither should this couple. They should make every effort to provide
themselves with a steady diet of new topics of conversation: travel, classes,
books, intellectual adventures and all manner of fascinating new
experiences. The down side of this configuration is that they may
overextend themselves into sheer exhaustion. The point is not to be
hyperactive, which is trying for anyone, and particularly for individuals
whose birthcharts suggest a need for quiet time. The point is more to
promise each other that their life together will never be boring, and to keep
that promise.
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN THE SECOND HOUSE
In a birthchart, the second house represents resources, self-esteem and
finances. In a composite chart, the second house represents the couple’s
belief in itself as a couple (the relationship’s self-esteem or self-
confidence), qualities they should cultivate to enhance that belief in
themselves (the relationship’s resources), and their attitude towards money.
What could Mercury there mean? That these partners should learn to
value a shared life of the mind, treasure all the forms of communication
between them, and strive to enhance its quality. This doesn’t mean that they
both have to have Ph.D.s. Few things will make them more positive about
their relationship than really good communication: long deep talks, sharing
books and theories, sharing jokes, exchanging love letters, camping out in
each other’s email “in” boxes, and all the other ways that human beings
converse with one another. The reverse is also true: if they’re not talking,
they’ll feel as if something’s wrong, and start to doubt the relationship.
Lose the easy give and take of their ongoing dialogue with one another, and
they’ll lose faith in their bond. “Give and take” is the operant term here—if
only one person is talking, that’s not communication; that’s a monologue or
a lecture.
As for their finances, it’s perhaps easiest to illustrate the attitude that this
couple should avoid: when the economy tanked in the early years of the
twenty-first century, a lot of people not only didn’t read their 401K or
brokerage statements—they didn’t even open the envelopes. Willful
ignorance is precisely the wrong approach to this couple’s money. They
need to stay aware of all the details of their financial situation, however
painful those details may be. They should not only open those statements,
but also get a basic financial education. That may mean reading books,
taking a minicourse in personal finance at the local community college, or
asking their banker or broker plenty of questions.
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN THE THIRD HOUSE
Composite Mercury is in its own house here, and that makes its influence
stronger. Here is a couple who probably won’t have any trouble talking, to
one another or to anyone else. Their challenges may lie more in learning
how to truly converse, not just jabber. Certainly the potential is there for an
unusually high quality (as well as quantity) of communication. It’s
important to use the promise of this composite Mercury to attain that high
quality, rather than fritter its potential away in aimless chatter. How? Each
partner should listen at least as much as he or she speaks, and listen
attentively, rather than merely silently planning what he or she will say
next. If one of them doesn’t feel truly heard or understood, he or she should
say so.
A powerful Mercury can mean not only a lot of communication, but also
a whole lot of impulses of all kinds traveling along the nervous system.
These two make each other’s synapses work overtime. When they are
together, each of them is more alert to his or her surroundings, more
observant, perceptive, curious and restless. Also, each of them can be more
wired, excitable or distractable as their nervous systems go into hyperdrive.
For example, each of them may have a more pronounced startle reflex in
the other’s presence. Therefore, feeding that stimuli-hungry Mercury is only
part of the equation. The other part is learning to relax, which means that
sometimes that composite Mercury needs a rest. They might try turning off
the computer and the stereo, hanging up the phone, putting down the
magazines and taking a long rambling walk without any conversation at all,
for a refreshing change.
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN THE FOURTH HOUSE
The natal fourth house of an individual shows her experience of her home,
her hearth, her family of origin and her family now. It shows her roots—
cultural, ethnic, geographic, socioeconomic, psychological, etc.—and her
psychological or psychic inheritance from those roots. It reveals her attitude
toward her hearth or family as an adult, and what kind of home
environment suits her best. It also says something about the most deeply
rooted part of her psyche, her own personal myth.
Much the same logic can be applied to a composite chart’s fourth house.
It reflects the home and hearth that the couple creates together. It also
shows the couple’s personal myth of the relationship’s beginnings. What
does that mean? Imagine that Joan’s personal mythology of her relationship
with Bob was that it was a fated, once-in-a-lifetime event, love at first sight,
with her immediate recognition of her feelings. But imagine that Bob’s
personal mythology of the relationship was that they were good friends for
a long time, and gradually he became attracted to her on a deeper level.
Joan may continue to wonder why Bob is so slow to “get” the depth and
truth and inevitability of their union, while Bob may wonder why Joan isn’t
equally grateful that their relationship was built on a good solid foundation
of friendship first.
Planets in the composite fourth house suggest an alternate, “third party”
view of a couple’s early days, one they might be wise to hold in common.
With composite Mercury here, they might think of themselves as having
had great mental rapport early on, with each partner admiring the other
one’s intelligence or curiosity. They might tell friends how boring their
lives had become before they met one another, and how fascinating they
still find each other.
With composite Mercury in the fourth house, this couple needs a hearth
that is Mercurial. There’s a bookstore in our area of North Carolina called
“Books Do Furnish A Room.” Shared bookcases can certainly be a feature
of this composite Mercury placement, and so can computers, photography
equipment, or a collection of antique typewriters or chess sets. What’s
important here is shared interests (Mercury), and this couple’s hearth
should reflect those shared interests and their ongoing delight in exploring
them together. If this couple owned that store we just mentioned, they might
well have named it “Conversation Pieces Do Furnish A Room.”
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN THE FIFTH HOUSE
In the birthchart, the fifth house is the house of creative self-expression and
performance, romance and the beginnings of relationships, children, and
pleasures. In a composite chart, it carries the same meanings for the couple,
with some nuances. The composite fifth house shows energy that the couple
needs to feel in order to experience a renewal of romance and of courtship
behavior. It shows what sort of creative or performing outlet they may
share. It can reveal their attitude towards children, and it shows what they
simply enjoy, how they have fun together. That last part is important! Joy
and pleasure are a fundamental part of any bond—we need positive,
affirming reasons to stay together, as well as reasons that have more to do
with responsibility and integrity. How to put great big smiles back on the
faces of a couple who’ve been together a long time? Look at their
composite fifth house.
With Mercury here, this is a couple who finds joy on the Mercury
wavelength. Using their brains, feeding their curiosity, debating. Swapping
books and stories. Joining the local chapter of Mensa. Taking classes
together, or teaching them. Reading poetry together, or writing it. Checking
out the local comedy club or lecture series. They might design their own
website, start a book group, or try out for a play. A puzzle in progress, a
chess set or a telescope might have a permanent place in a corner of their
living room. They need a steady diet of interesting things to learn, discuss,
experience and wonder about. Nothing will kill romantic feelings between
them faster than too much boredom or routine. If they have children,
activities like the ones listed above will help them enjoy parenting, too,
along with family memberships in the local natural history or science
museums.
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN THE SIXTH HOUSE
What does the sixth house signify in the birthchart? Skills. Meaningful
work. Job description (as opposed to job title, which is the tenth house).
Responsibilities. Apprenticeship. Mentoring and being mentored. In the
composite chart, it represents all of the above for the couple, for the
relationship. Shared responsibilities, shared work, shared mentors, and/or
apprentices.
Not all couples work together in the same business, but all couples do
have some shared responsibilities: their home, their vehicles, their bills.
Children more properly belong to the fifth house, and the fourth house of
family has something to do with them, too, but the responsibilities involved
in raising them belong to the sixth house. Couples have their own attitude
toward sixth house chores, and preferences for how to go about doing them.
And while not all couples coach Little League baseball, many of them may
unofficially mentor their nieces and nephews, or the teenage babysitter from
down the street. Similarly, the partners themselves may have mentors. His
great-aunt. Her grandmother. The older couple from church.
Imagine for a moment that these partners live in a large extended
community where every couple chips in some time at various tasks for the
common good. What would be the skills with which our couple could serve
their community? Mercury skills. Perhaps they work on the community
website. Perhaps they teach others to do so. Maybe they write the
community newsletter or do the books or the mailing list. None of these
chores are the couple’s profession—the tenth house—but they are all skills
with which they can serve, and at which they enjoy being competent.
Now imagine that our large extended community is a medieval village,
and that our couple shares a trade or craft there. Their craft would be
Mercurial: making paper, being scribes, telling stories, binding books.
Young people who wanted to learn such a trade would apprentice
themselves to this couple. Crafts for which one becomes an apprentice, in
the sense of the word at the time, are few and far between these days. Yet
we may still see the phenomenon of these partners helping the
neighborhood teenagers with their homework, or loaning them books, or
showing them how to express themselves more clearly. This couple has
“Mercury chops” that they can share. When it comes to their own mentors,
they’d do well to connect to people whose intelligence and curiosity they
admire.
As for their own home, they have a responsibility to learn to
communicate well. Also, it’s not so much that communication itself is a
chore, but that communication about chores is important. Who gets the car
inspected? Who does the laundry; who takes out the trash? Perhaps they
could make a list of duties and divide them, or trade them back and forth
from week to week. Discussing what will work best is the key here, rather
than falling into rigid habits or unquestioned assumptions.
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN THE SEVENTH HOUSE
The seventh house is traditionally the part of the chart that describes
intimate relationships. That’s still quite valid. But all composite charts, by
definition, are about relationships. There is no symbol anywhere in one of
them that isn’t of a “seventh house nature,” so to speak. Thus, when we
observe a planet in the seventh house of a composite chart, we must
overcome the reflex to think of it narrowly as “describing the relationship,”
even though it does that to some extent. Instead, we must think about the
relationships of the relationship—the friends, soulmates, rivals, partners,
and so forth who help the couple fulfill their evolutionary intentions.
With Mercury in the composite seventh house, these external partners
play a crucial role in the primary relationship. Elemental to our
understanding of any seventh house planet in any human astrological
context is the fact that we cannot do what we came here to do without the
help of the people it describes. For the couple with this configuration, there
is a need for information about relating that comes to them from sources
outside themselves. Left to their own devices, they are left clueless—
perhaps not completely so, but with some critical piece of the puzzle
missing, like a murder mystery with page 178 torn out. Who are these role
models and exemplars? Who brings them these clues? The individuals or
couples who do so bear the classic Mercury signatures. They are
recognizable by their curiosity and probably by their intelligence. They read
or are engaged deeply with media. They’re quick and verbally fluent. They
may be younger than the couple forming the composite chart—or at least
have qualities that might be characterized as “youthful.” And (somewhat
scurrilously from an older person’s perspective) that basically means open-
mindedness, energy, a willingness to learn.
What is the nature of the gift these soulmates bring to the couple? Many
times there are strictly practical dimensions to it. Imagine two people for
whom it is essential, for slippery karmic reasons, to visit St. Jean Pied de
Port in southwest France together. In this life, they’ve never even heard of
the place. They meet someone who’s just been there, hiking the old pilgrim
road. Excitement is conveyed; books and photos change hands. The next
year, they make the trip.
Other times, what passes from the Mercurial outsider to the couple in
question models a particular style of communication that, in the end, works
miracles for them. A way of saying heavy things humorously, for example.
Or a way of listening reflectively. One of the sweet miracles of the seventh
house is that this precious Mercury learning often happens quite
unconsciously and easily, in the same manner that we often find ourselves
picking up the expressions and gestures of friends with whom we spend a
lot of time.
It’s a gift. It’s precious and it’s free. With Mercury in the composite
seventh house, the trick lies simply in remembering to make time in our
lives and space in our hearts for the person making the delivery.
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN THE EIGHTH HOUSE
House of the instincts. House of taboos. Sexuality, death, the deep
unconscious, the occult, the afterlife, the Other World and the shaman’s
journeys there: all are ruled by the Eighth House. Sex is part but not all of
an eighth house bond. A sexual relationship with depth and tenderness that
lasts more than a few months tends to head into eighth house territory, and
each partner’s shadow issues are raised. Trust issues? Fear of abandonment?
Given enough time in the eighth house, such insecurities come to light; such
childhood wounds become painfully evident. This is one reason why some
people leave a relationship that has become in any way problematic. How to
work through these dynamics? In an eighth house relationship, healthy
catharsis happens. A difficult but necessary conversation that clears the air,
a fight without which closeness wouldn’t have been maintained, a gritty
year in therapy. Is it pleasant? No. Is it necessary? Yes—if the couple wants
to maintain an intense and honest relationship.
In the birthchart, this house shows what energies the person must
possess, and seek in others, in order to maintain an eighth house bond. In
the composite chart, this house shows what energies must be kept alive and
healthy in the relationship in order to maintain an eighth house connection.
A couple with composite Mercury in the eighth house must be willing to
keep the lines of communication open. The silent treatment should be
verboten here. Certainly we communicate in more ways than just verbally,
but with the God of Speech in the House of Passion, an ongoing exchange
of ideas is essential. Too angry to fight fairly right now? Then write letters,
or send email. Neither partner should be a stranger to what the other one is
thinking, and neither should consistently dominate the conversations.
What topics should be discussed? Eighth house ones! A steady and
unchanging diet of superficial chatter won’t work here. That doesn’t mean
this couple should never tell each other jokes and never take in a mindless
brain-candy sort of movie. But they need to be willing to risk addressing
deep, gut-wrenchingly honest, and potentially embarrassingly self-revealing
subjects when necessary. Their worst fears. The nightmare that woke one of
them up screaming last night. The other partner’s insecurities about the
mate’s office friendship that seems to be heating up. Difficult in-laws. What
they really need in bed. In short, their shadows need to have a voice in the
relationship. If they’re wondering what that means, they could try reading
Robert Johnson’s book Owning Your Own Shadow, for starters.
If this couple feels as if they could, judiciously, say anything to each
other, then they’re on the right track.
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN THE NINTH HOUSE
In the birthchart, the ninth house is the house of the Quest. What is the Holy
Grail or the North Star for this person? What can make his life the most
meaningful? What does she believe in? How can he avoid narrow-minded
and insularity? How can she broaden her horizons? In the composite chart,
this house answers the same questions for the couple.
With composite Mercury here, a shared life of the mind is almost a
“religion” for this couple. Not that they should literally worship the God of
Speech! But without a shared commitment to an interesting life, they may
start to wonder why they’re together and what their relationship is all about.
Ideally, they should resolve to keep nurturing each other’s curiosity. If each
of them feels that the relationship challenges them to grow more than they
would grow if they weren’t together, they’re on the right track. Shared
interests in travel might come into play here, or in literature. Or in
computers, languages, biophysics, medieval cosmologies or
paleoanthropology—the sky’s the limit.
This couple needs to communicate about the various ways they seek to
understand the world. Quantum physics explains life differently than
sociobiology does, and neither world view is right or wrong; they are
merely different.
Our friend Marion Phillips, a blues poet, has a line that we love: “I want
to be able to talk to myself without arguing about reality.” But these
partners need to enjoy debating with each other about reality. If they
disagree, that should make such conversations all the more interesting.
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN THE TENTH HOUSE
In the individual birthchart, the tenth house refers to public identity,
reputation, and mission in the world—one’s “cosmic job description.” In a
composite chart, the tenth house follows much the same logic. It is the
couple’s public identity, what others have heard about them. It is their
public image, their reputation as a team, the niche they fill in their
community.
Follow a couple around for a week. Spy on them. Track their comings
and goings in the world. Interview their neighbors and colleagues and
distant acquaintances about them, never talking directly either to the couple
or to their closest friends. At the end of that week, you’ll have a pretty good
picture of their composite tenth house. You’ll see what is “widely known”
and assumed about them by others.
With a composite tenth house Mercury, you might have heard:
“They do the children’s story hour at the library.”
“They run the local Toastmasters.”
“A writers’ group meets at their house every two weeks.”
“Oh, those two? They teach a journal-writing course at the senior
center.”
You might also have heard, “Don’t strike up a conversation with them if
there’s somewhere you have to be in a hurry! They’ll talk your ears off.” If
they’ve gone down a darker Mercury road, you might hear them
characterized as “the two biggest gossips I’ve ever met.”
This couple symbolizes Mercury energy together in the larger
community. Maybe they’re paid for it; maybe it’s volunteer work. Perhaps
it’s a mutual hobby to which they are devoted. Maybe they’re known for
throwing parties where people stay up simply talking until dawn. Given
Mercury’s classic association with youthful energy, maybe the
neighborhood teenagers hang out at this couple’s house.
Another face of Mercury is that of the messenger. A couple with this
planet in their composite tenth house is like a lightning rod for new
information, hunches and suppositions. They may be the first ones in their
community to get excited about a new idea sweeping through the Zeitgeist,
and to share that idea with others. They may be the first household on their
block to get broadband Internet access. They may be the ones who help
their less computer-literate neighbors sort through the cyber-maze. Or they
may be the first to learn about the proposal to install a toxic waste dump
entirely too close to their community for comfort, and circulate flyers to the
neighbors. In any case, a couple with composite Mercury in the tenth house
has a Mercurial gift to share. Their ability to process ideas and information,
to teach and learn, to read and write, to tell stories and listen to them, needs
an outlet and an audience in the outside world.
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN THE ELEVENTH HOUSE
In the birthchart, the eleventh house represents plans and dreams for the
future, and the people who can be helpful in fulfilling those plans. The
composite eleventh house symbolizes the goals and plans of the
relationship, and the allies who can help them meet those goals.
What does this couple want to have accomplished by the time they’re in
their fifties? Their sixties? Their seventies, eighties and nineties? With
Mercury in the eleventh house, some of those goals will be mental, some
intellectual and some experiential. Ideally, they should strive to have a
interesting life, to learn everything they want to learn, and to keep on
learning.
Perhaps they want to write a book together, or to learn Swahili before
they visit Africa. Maybe they want to start a school, or teach seminars, or
buy a recreational vehicle and tour the U.S. when they retire. They would
be wise to live near a college or a university, to keep feeding that hunger for
intriguing experiences and a colorful life. Long range planning for these
dreams will require ongoing attention, logic and an ability to handle details:
all Mercury traits.
Their natural allies are fellow Mercurial folk: quick-witted, curious,
lively, articulate, and devoted to using whatever intelligence they possess to
explore the world and discuss it with their fellow human beings. Such
people don’t necessarily always make decisions based on the most logical
or rational thing to do, although such a mental approach to life may be a
feature of their characters. They are rather likely to make decisions based
on what would be the most interesting thing to do.
A word to the wise here: couples with composite Mercury in the eleventh
house will require stimulating experiences for quite a long time. Therefore,
since poor health and limited finances can restrict one’s options, it’s wise
for such couples to have a goal of keeping their minds, bodies and finances
in reasonably good shape.
COMPOSITE MERCURY IN THE TWELFTH HOUSE
In the birthchart, the twelfth house is the house of mysticism, a house that
might also be called The Temple or The Veil. The twelfth house is where
we recognize that the totality of our being is something far more vast and
mysterious than what CNN or the local Department of Motor Vehicles
might consider us. We recognize that we have an inner life, a soul, a spirit.
Planets in this house function like our inner gurus, our guides and teachers.
Sometimes a guru helps us evolve by providing us with mystical, numinous
experiences, and sometimes a guru helps us evolve by rubbing our noses in
the facts that we have an ego, and that we can trip over that ego in
embarrassing ways.
In the composite chart, the twelfth house represents the visionary,
transcendent function of the relationship. Couples don’t have a shared soul,
but couples can and do have opportunities to learn metaphysical lessons and
grow spiritually. With composite Mercury in the twelfth house, such
opportunities come to the relationship on a Mercurial wavelength.
Imagine that this couple’s guru is Mercury. What sort of advice would he
or she have? “Use your heads” would probably be high on the list. Blind
faith is not a good option here. These partners must apply their intellects to
the process of growing in spirit. What does that mean? Discussing that
process, both with one another and with others. Studying about it, perhaps
on their own, perhaps with a group. Deciding that it is not rational
(Mercury) for them to operate in a world where they don’t seek to grow in
spirit.
If Mercury pulls the rug out from under their egos, what form might that
take? Rationalizations. Nervousness. Taking such a stubbornly “logical”
approach to everything that they choke the heart out of the relationship.
There’s a line from a song by Thomas Dolby: “She blinded me with
Science.” In the case of a couple with a less than optimal response to
composite Mercury in the twelfth house, that line might read: “They
bludgeoned each other with Reason.”
Chapter 9
The Composite Venus
N ewly in love, we’re quick to forgive. Even the worst faults of our
partner glow appealingly in the compassionate light of humor, charity,
and good will. Later, of course, we’ll probably appoint ourselves that
person’s judge, jury, critic, personal coach, long-suffering spiritual advisor
and criminal psychologist. Going through that stuff is part of love too. But
we long for those Edenic days when love was all easy surrender. We long
for those days when the elixir of Venus ran through our veins like thin,
sweet syrup.
If love were all Venusian magic, if the planetary gods of war and
boundaries and fierce truth never made themselves felt, then we’d be living
in a fool’s paradise. Love would take us nowhere; it would have no
evolutionary purpose. There would be no wild ocean crashing and smashing
our jagged stones into roundness. Love, after a while, would bore us.
For these reasons, it is imperative in modern evolutionary astrology to
see every planet as a god or goddess of love, not just Venus. We love with
our human wholeness, not just with this single symbol. So what purpose
does Venus serve in the composite chart? We go back to that simple,
innocent longing inside us—that hunger to be held in someone’s heart
without any second thoughts, to be understood, forgiven, and viewed
always in the light of our inherent goodness, positive intentions and
innocence. And our parallel longing to offer those same supportive
sentiments to another. That charitable territory—and the healing it can
create—are elemental to our understanding of the composite Venus. When
it is prominent in the composite chart, that level of kindness and affection is
generally prominent in the relationship too.
Unsurprisingly, one of the most reliable patterns in a survey of composite
charts is the presence of a “big” Venus in long-lasting romances and
friendships. Perhaps it rules the Ascendant. Maybe it’s in Libra or Taurus,
where it’s extra-strong through rulership. Very commonly, you’ll find Venus
conjunct the Sun—that observation, in fact, is one of those potential
“statistical proofs” of astrology just waiting for someone to run the
numbers.
Long-lasting desire and passion are connected to a prominent composite
Venus, but softer language conveys the actual feeling more effectively—
fondness, tenderness, simply liking each other. Courtesy too—both within
the relationship and toward other human beings, which creates an aura of
magnetism around the couple in whose composite chart the planet is shining
brightly.
Wherever the composite Venus lies, it offers insights into how to keep the
magic alive. It teaches us about the care and feeding of that precious
romantic spark, so sweet in and of itself—but so invaluable in terms of
helping a couple recover from hurt, failure and mutual disappointment.
To see Venus playing a central role in a composite chart is an
encouraging indication, but we must recognize the pivotal role of
consciousness and intention here too. A big Venus can sweep too much
truth under the carpet, leading to a crushing debt of unresolved issues in a
relationship. And even a modest Venus, with proper attention and care in
terms of its development, can be made radiant. How? Read on.
COMPOSITE VENUS IN ARIES
The Goddess of Love in the sign of the Warrior! Venus is about
reconciliation, compromise and harmony, while Aries is about the
development of will, spirit and courage. Think of Aries as the Pioneer, the
Daredevil, the Survivor. Venus prefers mellowness, but Aries thrives on
challenges and needs an active, dynamic, exciting environment.
Such environments are often stressful. Is stress always a negative thing?
Not necessarily. It all depends on how we subjectively experience that
stress. Imagine you’re swimming. You’ve been swimming a long time.
Reach, pull, breathe to one side. Reach, pull, breathe to the other side. The
world has dwindled to the water and your movement through it. You’re
kicking slowly, to conserve your strength, but you’re still swimming as fast
as you can. You don’t know how much longer you can keep up this speed.
Another swimming figure looms behind you. It draws closer. Soon it will be
level with you. Determination fills you: you will stay ahead, no matter how
tired you are. Tapping into some deep and unimagined reserves, you swim
faster.
Now think about the paragraph you just read in two different ways.
In the first scenario, you love to swim; you’re participating at a swim
meet, and the trophy’s at stake. In the second scenario, you’ve survived a
shipwreck only to be chased by a shark.
In both scenes, you are exerting willpower and effort. You are releasing
adrenalin. You are facing a challenge, and you feel tremendously alive and
fully present in those moments. Which scene would you rather be in? Not a
difficult question, right?
Now imagine a third scenario: the approaching swimmer is your partner
in a relay race, and you’re putting on that extra burst of speed to help your
team get ahead.
This composite Venus sign is not for the faint-hearted. There can be a lot
of spark and sass and freewheeling verbal by-play, both in and out of bed. A
couple with composite Venus in Aries has a deep capacity for shared
adventure. More than with any other composite Venus sign, these two can
support each other’s strength and risk-taking abilities. They can encourage
each other to victories and accomplishments that neither of them might
have achieved alone. They can “guard each other’s backs” with fierce,
unquestioned loyalty and devotion.
And, if they don’t have challenges to share, if this couple tries to avoid
all conflicts, challenges and jousting matches large and small, they can turn
into sharks and attack one another from sheer pent-up Arian energy, even if
their individual charts are mild as a balmy midsummer’s evening. Or they
can be unwitting magnets for “shark attacks” from outside the relationship:
a never-ending stream of petty annoyances and major hassles alike.
How to fan the Venusian flame within this couple? Recognize that they
need to meet their need for brinkmanship in a conscious, intentional way, to
choose deliberately just how their adrenalin will be released, rather than
letting life choose for them. They should learn to deal with conflicts
quickly, constructively and in proportion to the importance of the issue,
rather than just blindly nuking one another. On the positive side, if their
thirst for adventure is met in a conscious, intentional way, these two can
experience a depth of devotion to one another and an ability to rely on each
other that, at its best, can assume almost the mythic proportions of the
Knights of the Round Table.
COMPOSITE VENUS IN TAURUS
Since Venus rules Taurus, this placement assumes extra prominence in the
composite chart. This sign has a great need for simplicity, stability, peace,
honesty and naturalness. Taurus is learning to be comfortable in the body
and on the planet, to reclaim the physical, instinctual side of life. Like a
member of an “uncivilized” indigenous culture, Taurus needs to live as
much as possible according to nature’s rhythms. Sensuality is strong here;
this sign needs to touch and to be touched with unselfconscious earthiness.
If Taurus were a pair of cats, they would be big, fluffy, affectionate, lazy,
easy-going and comfort-seeking lap cats, quick to lounge on their owner’s
knee, clean their plates, sun their bellies on the lawn, wash each other’s
ears, or curl up together for a nap in the most comfy spot in the house.
A couple with composite Venus in Taurus needs just as cozy, cuddly,
instinctual, uncomplicated and unembarrassed an existence together as that
pair of lap cats. They can help one another truly relax, remind each other of
what’s most important in life, and get down to the bare bones essentials of
existence in a human body. “Don’t sweat the small stuff,” is the motto here.
But, unlike the popular saying, it isn’t all small stuff. Relationships make
our deepest and most shadowy wounds surface. Relationships involve
negotiations and compromises, and some conflicts must be processed if the
relationship is to remain vital and alive. The ability to let little things go is
one of the great blessings of a composite Venus in Taurus. But the need for
serenity here is so great that this couple runs the risk of avoiding even
necessary and constructive conflicts, of trying to ignore the mountains as
well as the molehills. If those mountains are left unacknowledged, they can
turn into the Continental Divide. The need for security here is so great that
this couple may smother themselves with retirement plans, predictability,
and perpetual defensiveness about any sort of risk or change.
To keep this composite Venus sign healthy, this couple needs to
understand that disagreements are part of the natural order too—even those
lap cats have been known to clout each other on the nose from time to time
—and that it’s realistic and reasonable to learn to process important
conflicts. These partners also need a big daily dose of pure Taurus food:
affection, comfort and sensory pleasures. Music nourishes Taurus. So does
the outdoors. So do friendly pets, good meals and quiet time together.
Psychoanalyzing one another’s every facial expression and passing remark
will kill this relationship. So will drama-mongering friends or relatives, a
lifestyle that’s too fast-paced, an overly phony, stilted or artificial
environment, and too much time spent overriding or denying the needs of
the body.
At its best, a composite Venus in Taurus can make each partner feel as if
their relationship is something they can trust the way they trust gravity,
something “fixed and constant as the Northern Star,” a timeless source of
comfort and peace. They can love with the mind, the heart, the body, the
limbic system, the reptile brain, the ancient inner Cro Magnon man and
woman. There is no endless questioning and chivvying of the relationship,
only a deepening appreciation, bordering on reverence, for it.
COMPOSITE VENUS IN GEMINI
Put on your thinking caps and your hiking boots and stay alert, folks. If you
feed a composite Venus in Gemini, it will keep you busier and demand
faster reflexes than a game of racquetball played with a Superball, while
wearing jet-propelled sneakers on your feet. This is the sign of the
Observer, the Perceiver, the Journalist, the Communicator. Gemini energy
needs a colorful, variegated, fast-paced life, and an attitude of perpetual
curiosity and wonder. For Gemini, life is not about finding the Answer; it is
about asking ever more intriguing questions. A couple with composite
Venus in Gemini needs as fascinating a life as they can possibly lead
together. When healthy, this composite Venus sign can help make the
partners’ lives far more interesting together than they would be apart. All
the synapses are firing here. No other composite Venus sign beats Gemini
for the capacity for communication and sheer mental stimulation in a
relationship. Nor does this occur purely on an intellectual level: Gemini
needs fascinating experiences just as much as fascinating thoughts.
What are the risks here? Overextension, so fast a pace that both partners
do a 360 degree spin, then crash and burn. Endless chatter. Flightiness. A
tendency to rationalize issues or emotions rather than dealing with them.
How to avoid such scenarios? Communication is everything, and
communication is a two-way street. This couple’s potential for mental
rapport and good communication is almost limitless, a great strength that
should be promoted. Each partner should listen as well as he or she talks,
and talk as well as he or she listens. They should strive to communicate
what they’re feeling as well as what they’re thinking. If it’s too hard to
conduct a charged conversation without interrupting each other, then they
might write each other letters—and write each other letters when they’re
happy, too. They may find they are more eloquent with one another in
mediums other than speech, so they do well to learn to communicate in as
many ways as possible.
Encouragement of each other’s interests can be another great boon to this
relationship, and those interests may evolve into new ones shared as a
couple. Lesley is a director with a passion for theatre history. Jack may not
be equally drawn to it, but he can ask why Lesley finds it so compelling. If
his own interest is in fine woodworking, perhaps Lesley can tell him
something about the sixteenth century stage, and ask him how those stages
were built differently than they are today. Maybe they’ll construct a
miniature replica of the Globe Theatre together, or a set of marionettes for
puppet shows. Perhaps they’ll get so interested in the Commedia del Arte
that they vacation in Italy next summer. In Rome they are smitten with love
for Italian food, and when they return, they attend gourmet cooking classes.
Soon they’re designing kitchens together. Next thing their friends know,
they’ve opened a dinner theatre that’s a big hit. He does the sets, she directs,
and they both supervise the cooking. All because they supported each
other’s interests!
What would have happened instead, if, when Jack met Lesley, he
dismissed her as a pointy-headed intellectual, and if Lesley decided that
Jack was as dull as his T square and saw? If neither one of them had talked
to each other and drawn each other out, if neither one of them had made an
effort to listen? Probably nothing, right? No connection, no spark. In an
already established relationship with Venus in Gemini, preconceived
opinions of one another and failure to communicate will kill the relationship
about as fast as boredom will.
A healthy Venus in Gemini leads to a couple who are never bored,
individually or together. There’s always something to wonder about,
something to explore, something to talk about, something to do. They can—
and should—keep surprising one another on into their nineties.
COMPOSITE VENUS IN CANCER
The combination of Venus and Cancer is full of tensions and contradictions.
Venus is about connection with others, but Cancer turns inward, toward the
interior life. Cancer the Crab, Cancer the Healer, Cancer the Sensitive. It is
perhaps the most introspective of the signs. A deep exploration of the inner
world of feeling is Cancer’s primary goal. Certainly it is the most
emotionally and psychologically sensitive of the signs, and accompanying
that sensitivity is a profound vulnerability.
Therefore, if they’re brave enough to overcome their own self-protective
reflexes, a couple with composite Venus in Cancer has a capacity for an
infinitely nurturing and supportive tenderness with one another, for carrying
balm into the most hidden and wounded places in one another’s psyches.
Yet if they don’t make that journey into one another’s inner lives on tiptoe,
they also have a correspondingly heightened capacity to hurt one another.
Even a few emotional body-blows will make this couple so hesitant to risk
further injury that they will raise the drawbridge between them just when it
most needs to be lowered.
Let’s emphasize here that, with composite Venus in Cancer, this
heightened need for caution and gentleness may not be apparent in the
personalities of the individuals. They might both be very robust, lay-it-on-
the-line types. That’s always the trick with understanding composite charts
in general: what’s good for the entity formed by the pair often operates
quite independently of what might seem best for the two personalities.
How best to protect and encourage that marvelous mutual susceptibility
and desire to care for one another? Both partners must continue to feel safe
enough to reveal themselves to one another. The magic depends on
respecting each other’s vulnerabilities, and practicing more gentleness than
we would use to tend a frightened baby bird.
A big part of feeling safe includes maintaining the Cancerian “shell” of
the relationship: the partners don’t, for example, indiscriminately discuss
each other’s darkest secrets with people outside of their bond. It depends
upon proceeding slowly, and stopping instantly whenever either mate needs
a time out. Reciprocity is vital, so that one partner is not constantly opening
his or her heart and getting support, while the other nods wisely, speaks
soothingly and receives nothing in return. The compassionate sharing of all
of one’s feelings, sublime and ridiculous, clear and murky, welcome and
turbulent, and without fear of hurtful repercussions, is the Holy Grail here.
When this composite Venus sign is being expressed in a healthy way,
each partner feels that no one else has ever been so supportive of him or
her, so kind, so understanding, forgiving, sympathetic and tender. The
relationship feels like a giant safety net, always there, ready to break the
pratfalls and cushion the inevitable bumps and bruises of life together and
life in the world.
COMPOSITE VENUS IN LEO
A match made in heaven. The love of my life. Soulmates. To some people,
romantic expressions such as those are hype—inflated, sappy goofiness. To
others, they are statements of fact, at least of subjective facts. Let’s not try
to settle such questions, and instead think about the psychological impact
upon a relationship of a couple using such language to describe their
connection. Raising the relationship to mythic status that way sets a high
standard, but it also frames the relationship in bigger-than-life terms. The
bond is infused with preciousness and specialness. And that is essence of
composite Venus in Leo—the couple must believe extravagantly in itself.
Leo is the sign of royalty and Venus is the goddess of love. Put the two
symbols together, and you are looking at the “Aristocracy of Romance.” It
represents nothing less than the best there is.
Temper all this with a dose of reality. Even with composite Venus in Leo,
these are two flesh and blood human beings. Maybe they have a terrific
relationship. Maybe not. But given the realities of life, they of course
trouble and vex each other from time to time. They’ll surely fall short of
that Leo “gold standard” on a regular basis. The key is that if they believe
in themselves in a big way, they’ll have what it takes to get through those
difficult moments. With composite Venus in Leo, faith in their specialness
is everything. If they don’t believe that it is cosmically right for them to be
together, their bond won’t last. If it’s not the “romance of the century,” the
spirit goes out of their connection.
How does a couple with composite Venus in Leo maintain that kind of
magic, given life’s realities? There are several secrets. Near the top of the
list is that they need to celebrate their relationship at every opportunity.
Most couples have an anniversary of some sort—a wedding date, the day
they first met, whatever it might be. These two need at least half a dozen of
them! And they need to remember them, and use those dates as an excuse to
dress up and go out. They need to act as if they’re falling in love, paying
each other that deeper kind of attention new lovers naturally offer. Even
when they are alone together, it’s beneficial for them to pay attention to
presenting themselves attractively to each other—and complimenting each
other on appearance, style, sexual glories, and other gifts. Poetry and
flowers help, as do respectful language and attention. Everything that
supports the idea that this relationship is precious plays a pivotal role in the
formula.
Being seen publicly as an attractive couple is useful for composite Venus
in Leo too. Obviously, the core of love between them in their own secret
world is the key. But an enviable public image is helpful. Leo is a
performer, and performers need applause. We can imagine this couple
dancing at a party. They’re looking good and moving well together, as if
their bodies have a God-given harmony. People look at them a bit wistfully,
like orphans gazing at the mansion on the hill—and our heroes know it! The
aim isn’t to make others feel badly about themselves or their relationships.
It is simply the natural function of the Leo-as-Royalty dimension of the
archetype: to be seen, to be held as an ideal or a standard against which
others measure themselves. They’ve got to believe that themselves, and if
they can get a few others to believe it too, that’s a huge support.
COMPOSITE VENUS IN VIRGO
Perfection is an impossible standard in love or elsewhere. Still, with their
composite Venus in Virgo, this couple needs to make constant progress in
that direction. They’ll never arrive at that particular North Star, but like a
sailor at sea, they’ll benefit a lot from knowing where it lies. The vitality of
this configuration depends on constant evolution, constant growth, constant
improvement. No matter how wonderful—or how dreadful—the
relationship feels at any given moment, the key to maintaining the romantic
bond between these two people lies in pressing endlessly toward perfection.
Facing seemingly insurmountable issues, they’ll be fine—so long as they
are both slogging away at them. And doing very well together, apart from a
few niggling, minor grievances, they’ll quickly be in trouble if they let
those grievances slide. Some people say, “If it ain’t broken, don’t fix it.”
But with composite Venus in Virgo, it’s more like, “If it ain’t growing, it’s
broken.”
A high maintenance relationship? Yes indeed. Does that make it a bad
one? That really depends on the values of the two people involved.
Individuals with a lot of evolutionary momentum will find this kind of
relationship stimulating. Lazier ones will find it exhausting and crazy-
making. And in either case, worrying the relationship to death is a threat.
Fear of trusting and surrendering can masquerade as yet another “serious
talk” about the impact upon the relationship of one person’s tendency to
overcook the vegetables.
Life’s details are Virgo’s domain. With composite Venus there, this
couple needs to handle them efficaciously. Much of that comes down taking
their clearly-defined responsibilities to the relationship seriously. In other
words, if it has been agreed that one of them does the dishes while the other
one does the grocery shopping, then there had better be food in the
refrigerator and no “science projects” growing in the sink! With Venus in
Virgo, love is expressed partly through responsibility. All the tenderness in
the world evaporates when love can’t “walk its talk.”
Clear agreements about the nature of each person’s responsibilities
toward the other are pivotal. Always, the dark side of Virgo lies in
evolutionary intensity mutating into discontent and criticism. Anyone can
commit to making sure the refrigerator is full—but no one can commit to
making sure that anyone else’s soul is full. A feeling of emptiness in either
person, if misinterpreted as the other one’s “fault,” can translate into
argument, slights and pickiness. Making sure that reasonable expectations
are defined—and discussed—is effective medicine here.
COMPOSITE VENUS IN LIBRA
Venus is the planet of love and is said to rule Libra, so on the face of it the
omens are auspicious for a couple with their composite Venus in this sign.
Certainly, having a strong Venus in a composite chart is a helpful indicator.
It correlates with feelings of warmth, affection, and tenderness between two
people, with an outward aura of being a “plausible” couple—others will
believe in their relationship and take it seriously, and that’s a useful support
for anyone. To go deeper in our understanding, we need to get past the
simpleminded astrological ideas of “good” and “bad,” and instead
understand the actual nature of the Venusian energy that binds these two
together.
Libra is all about harmony, and a meditation upon the joys and
challenges of that word is our key here. Everyone loves the notion of
harmony in a relationship, but it’s an elusive condition, especially as people
individuate. The more we know ourselves, the more unique we become—
and the longer the odds grow against our ever finding anyone exactly like
ourselves. That’s basically a good thing, but it does make harmony a lot
more slippery. Positively, there are two pieces of the puzzle here. First,
these two need to make a concerted effort to see to it that their differences
are negotiated in a fair way. The slightest feeling of inequity in either of
them can undercut their Venusian feelings toward each other, which means
an erosion of their sexual and romantic responses to each other. Second,
where there are “irreconcilable differences” between them, they need to do
a kind of alchemical transformation of their attitude. They need to turn the
potential of polarization into a sense of complementarity. What that means
is that they must find a way to appreciate that differences can make them
stronger, not weaker, as couple. Maybe one of them is extraverted while the
other is introverted. Obviously, that could trigger a lot of mutual vexation.
But it can also be framed as something helpful. Life requires both
introverted and extraverted skills. As they learn to appreciate each other’s
differences and depend on them, they’ve graduated to the Libran Ph.D.
program!
Given that people are different and ultimate harmony is an impossibility,
this alchemical transformation of attitude is critical to the couple with
composite Venus in Libra. Otherwise, they’ll “make nice” until their
differences fester into an underlying loss of faith in their romance.
Let’s add that composite Venus in Libra suggests a refined, aesthetic
energy radiating from this couple. Together, they’ll likely be drawn to
artistic pleasures—performances, galleries, perhaps shared creativity. Given
time, paintings will hang in their home. Fresh flowers will catch the sun on
their kitchen table. And the accord they create between themselves will
shine out from them into the social world in the form of grace, mutual
respect, and palpable affection.
COMPOSITE VENUS IN SCORPIO
The sign of the scorpion—even without interpretation, the words invoke a
mood of mystery and danger, of taboo and occult peril. What is sweet Venus
doing in a place like that? The old astrologers asked that same question and
came up with the notion that there was something wrong with having Venus
in Scorpio. They said Venus was “in detriment” there—and tended to
correlate the configuration with trouble in love: storminess, conflict, and
secret affairs. That indeed accurately portrays the darker potentials of this
composite placement. But, as usual, it leaves out the higher ground.
Scorpio is fundamentally an astrological reference to honesty. And in
intimacy, where our hearts are so terribly vulnerable, honesty is a very
dangerous transaction. To understand composite Venus in Scorpio, it is
imperative that we not veer off into glib clichés and truisms about the
virtues of always “telling the truth.” We must recognize that honesty can
trigger truly primitive reactions in both lovers—just think for five seconds
about the kinds of explosive sexual jealousy, possessiveness and fear that
attractions outside a primary relationship can create.
The key here is that, for two people with their composite Venus in
Scorpio, the magic depends on that kind of searing, naked psychological
contact. The process is painful, volcanic, and exhausting, yet essential for
them. When healthy and functional, given a little time, these two human
beings will know in their hearts that they’ve never been known so well or
seen so clearly, warts and all, by anyone else on the planet. They will be
able to say to each other, in a spirit of gratitude, humility, and wonder, “No
one else could have hung in there with me the way you did. No one else
could have gone the distance.”
To support this kind of love, people with composite Venus in Scorpio
always need a lot of time alone together. They must have clear agreements
about the boundaries between their relationship and the rest of the world—
truths said in the bedroom go no further, under pain of death . . . or at least
of a scorpion’s sting. Sex is of course important for any couple, but it takes
on truly alchemical proportions with composite Venus in this sign. It’s the
core ritual; it’s the glue that binds them together, and which defines their
separation from the world. For this reason, sexual fidelity is particularly
pivotal with these two—as is, paradoxically, a willingness to be honest,
open and accepting regarding each other’s feelings of attraction outside the
relationship.
COMPOSITE VENUS IN SAGITTARIUS
Freedom—that’s the essence of Sagittarius. And love is hard on freedom.
Thus, the combination of Venus and Sagittarius has often been correlated
with instability in intimate relationships. The traditional idea is that they
begin with a bang and peter out, leaving a lot of idealistic, great-sounding
talk in their wake. That’s a decent description of the Sagittarian garbage
can, but how about the higher ground?
Sagittarius is, above all, about principles and ideals. With their composite
Venus in that sign, these two people need to make sure right from the
beginning that they are in philosophical accord about the “rules” of human
bonding. For one thing, the romantic, erotic dimensions of their relationship
simply thrive on such talk. A sure sign that their bond is healthy is that they
stay up too late on a work night talking enthusiastically about life’s big
themes. Little will destroy their connection more effectively than serious
differences, at the level of principle, over the ground rules of intimacy. And
many of the most pivotal discussions they’ll hold will revolve around
finding their own unique way of resolving the tension between love and
freedom.
If one of them tends to work long hours, that takes away something from
the relationship. Does he or she have a right to make that choice? Maybe
one of them enjoys loud music. Who is to say that he or she has no right to
enjoy that release? At 8:00 PM? What about at 1:00 AM? Maybe one
loudly espouses Buddhist philosophy in front of the other one’s
conservative Presbyterian parents—inappropriate behavior, or an expression
of one’s natural right to freedom of thought? None of these questions have
obvious, clear answers, but all of them represent the sorts of issues that
need to be unraveled at the level of principle for this relationship to prosper.
Sexuality is often the single most pressing area of debate for couples
with their composite Venus in Sagittarius. In addition to one’s partner, there
are usually lots of thoroughly beguiling people with whom intimacy could
be rewarding. Nonetheless, humans have generally found that commitment
is a very helpful support to lasting intimacy, so let’s assume that our couple
has agreed upon the principle of an exclusive sexual bond with each other.
Beyond that, there’s a lot of territory that needs to be explored at the level
of their shared beliefs and principles. How acceptable is flirtation to both
partners? What about non-sexual intimacy with other people, especially
ones who are attractive? Again, these are not questions with single answers.
The point is only that, with composite Venus in Sagittarius, these questions
need to be discussed. Ideally, they are considered early in the relationship
before commitments are even made.
Let’s add that some of the pressure for Sagittarian freedom in this couple
needs to be met through shared adventures. They benefit enormously from
traveling together. Ditto for taking classes together, meeting other couples,
especially exotic ones, and generally avoiding the stultifying “normalcy”
that so often arises once a couple settles down together.
COMPOSITE VENUS IN CAPRICORN
A nineteenth century woman is asked why she has chosen to become
engaged to a certain gentleman. She responds, “I have come to admire his
sterling moral character.”
Hearing a line like that today is like looking at the skeleton of a
prehistoric creature. The words sound quaint and antiquated. People don’t
speak or think that way any longer. “Psychology” has replaced “character,”
and sometimes it seems as if money, physical appearance, and social status
are about to replace psychology! But Capricorn represents the idea of
character. It is about integrity, virtue, and the ability to resist temptation.
Add one eternal truth, and we are on the road to grasping the meaning of
composite Venus in Capricorn: whether morality is in style or out of style,
relationships test our characters. And if we flunk the test, the relationship
either dies or becomes diseased.
With their composite Venus in Capricorn, the well-being of this couple
depends upon their not failing each other. They need to “walk their talk”
together, trying to behave like two honorable adults. When they hurt each
other, as they of course will, they need to accept that reality humbly and
apologize for it. Perfect, flawless behavior is an unreachable goal, but
honesty and endless striving toward integrity are not. For these two, their
erotic and romantic vitality depend on that effort.
Wait a minute! Honesty and integrity are great, but are they really sexy?
At first, this Capricornish principle might seem unrealistic. Probably, that
perspective is accurate in the early stages of relationship. Then, what turns
us on is generally a more primordial kind of stimuli. But Capricorn is
always about commitments over time. It’s about the long haul. And nothing
kills sex faster over the time frame of months and years than a loss of
respect for each other. And what do we respect in another person? Beauty?
Money? Not really. We respect character.
With composite Venus in Capricorn, issues about vows come up
compellingly and dramatically. Ultimately, these are vows of commitment
to the relationship itself. While no one should rush into such promises,
without them romance withers. Capricorn is never about “one day at a
time.” It’s about forever and always. And there are little vows too—like
promising to meet your partner on a certain street corner at 7:00 o’clock. If
you show up at 7:15, apologize! Why? Not because fifteen minutes matters,
but because your word matters.
All of this focus on virtue can cast a dark shadow. With composite Venus
in Capricorn, while we’ll stand by all we’ve written, these two also need to
remember to loosen up and cut each other some slack. It’s important that
they make time for play. After working so hard to ground their relationship
on lasting psychological bedrock, it would be sad if they forgot to enjoy it.
COMPOSITE VENUS IN AQUARIUS
Who makes the rules of love? Probably a few come straight from God, such
as the principle that cruelty and insensitivity aren’t ultimately very good
aphrodisiacs. But most of love’s “rules” are human fabrications. For
centuries, people assumed that women should obey their husbands, for
example. Not too many people in the western world view that as a relevant
notion nowadays.
What about the idea that making a home together is the ultimate and
highest expression of a sexual partnership? That’s still a widely-held
perspective—but is it true? Can’t we make a case that people are more
authentically open to each other at the emotional level if they don’t have to
see each other’s faces day in and day out? What about the idea that two
people need to be within a decade or so of being the same age? Who says
that? God? Or the idea that children are the natural desire and expression of
any heterosexual union? Or that couples are “naturally” formed of just two
people? Or that long-distance relationships don’t work? Or that sex is
essential to a marriage? Or that sex naturally becomes less exciting with the
passage of time?
With composite Venus in Aquarius, it’s not that this couple needs to
throw all those cultural assumptions out the window. Many of them will
very probably in fact have deep relevance to them. The point is only that
they need to question cultural assumptions and make sure that the answers
they accept are actually the result of their own independent processes of
thought and dialog. Why? Because at least a few of those social
assumptions about relationships just won’t work for these two people. If
they accept that indoctrination without question, their bond will be forced in
unnatural directions. Erotic joy will leach out of their time together, and for
no reason except an unconscious desire to play by the life-eating rules they
learned from their parents and peers! In a nutshell, these two people have
to re-invent the rules of intimacy. Their relationship needs to be their own
creation. The more they succeed in that intimate individuation process, the
happier they will be—and the stranger they will look to the neighbors!
COMPOSITE VENUS IN PISCES
Pisces is the mystical sign, and with composite Venus there, this
relationship must contain a consciously spiritual dimension. However hot
the connection feels at first, in the long run if their souls aren’t touching,
soon enough their hearts and their physical bodies follow suit.
So what do we mean by a consciously spiritual dimension? It’s
potentially a slippery concept, so let’s start out by saying what we don’t
mean by the term. It has nothing to do with sharing a religious affiliation—
the world is full of sincere Buddhist couples, or Jewish or Christian ones
who never experience each other spiritually, in spite of their theological
agreements. Similarly, it’s not about holding a common philosophy.
Ultimately, it’s not even about both people believing in God. What it comes
down to is that they take the time to see each other’s souls. They may not
even use the word “soul.” That’s all right. The words don’t matter. But there
is an eternal place that lovers can go. When they are there, they have the
feeling of looking into each other rather than at each other. They are no
longer objects. They are no longer even personalities. There is a feeling of
melting and surrendering, and a feeling of the grip this three-dimensional
world has on them becoming a little looser. For some reason, it’s easier to
get there in dim light—candles, moonlight, firelight. For some reason, eye
contact provides an easy doorway into that spiritual space. No one can force
it or do it on schedule. It cannot be rushed. It’s not an idea or something to
understand—it is an experience or a perception. And if it is shared
consciously, for a couple with their composite Venus in Pisces, it is like life-
giving magic. Their faith in their bond is fed by it. Their sexual life roars.
Their troubles and vexations with each other slip into the background
scenery—and in the foreground there is a sex-sustaining, love-feeding
feeling of extraordinary, undeniable specialness to their connection.
Meditation classes may help them. So will sitting quietly on a deck in the
falling light of evening. Even though Pisces isn’t ultimately about religion,
shared religious practice may help them too—provided it’s more than ritual.
Mostly, what this couple needs is unstructured, unthreatened private time.
With that and a little attention to each other, these processes launch
themselves rather automatically. That makes it sound easy. But the key here
is realizing that Pisces, in common with the rest of the signs, has a potential
dark side. Mystics tend to give things up—even things they need. A
composite Venus in Pisces may go hang itself on a cross, pointlessly. That
life-giving quiet time together may be sacrificed—because the
acquaintances of some acquaintances are in town and need a free bed
tonight. Mom might call two minutes after the candles are lit. With
composite Venus in Pisces, these two need to learn to surrender to each
other—not to surrender their relationship to the demands of the outer world.
COMPOSITE VENUS IN THE FIRST HOUSE
Any planet in the composite first house is in the spotlight. It shines forth
into the world vividly in their social behavior, and it plays a big role in the
inner life of the couple too. Having Venus strongly placed in a composite
chart is always an encouraging sign for a relationship. This is the goddess
of love, after all—and if loving each other is the point, then it’s good to see
this planet making a bold statement in the chart. Still, as in all things
astrological, there are evolutionary challenges here as well.
Above all, the first house is about choices. We have freedom to respond
creatively to any placement of the composite Venus, but nowhere is taking
personal responsibility so critical as in the first house. These two must
choose to love—and to follow the spiritual path of lovers. When we first
meet someone to whom we are attracted, that’s hardly a challenge! But as
time passes and familiarity breeds numbness, staying on that road becomes
an act of will. What comes naturally at first must be locked in intentionally,
and maintained with the same vigilance that a parachutist might bring to
maintaining his parachute. Falling out of love might not be quite as bad as
falling out of the sky, but it’s best to avoid both experiences—especially for
these two, with the stakes so high and something so precious held between
them.
New lovers bring a quality of deep attention to each other. They are
interested in each other. They don’t interrupt each other or assume that they
already know what the other one will say. In every move they make, they
convey mutual respect, along with fascination, tenderness, and support.
When they know they are going to see each other, they prepare—they make
themselves attractive, taking care with their clothing and with the state of
their physical bodies. For the couple with composite Venus in the first
house, the aim lies in willfully, consciously continuing those behaviors—
choosing to remain in love, instead of imagining that lasting love is a bit of
random luck the gods give some people and withhold from others. To
behave like lovers is the key, even when anger, disappointment, and
frustration are in the air.
Outwardly, these two have a Venusian air about them. They look good
together, regardless of how attractive they are as separate individuals.
Probably, they are attractive socially too—people want to invite them to
parties. They just seem well-suited to each other, and a kind of warm
magnetic field surrounds them. If they were to break up, their friends would
be surprised. Mostly, this appeal is a good thing—those social expectations
actually support their deeper evolutionary work: having others believe in
them helps them believe in themselves. But carrying the flag as the wonder-
couple has its debits too: these two need to be careful of social over-
extension, and even more careful of becoming so emotionally identified
with the role of the happy couple that their muckier psychological selves
creep up on them unawares.
COMPOSITE VENUS IN THE SECOND HOUSE
With the possible exceptions of bed and dinner, are we ever truly ready for
anything? Who in the history of the world has ever been “ready” for
marriage, or for the birth of their first child, or for their big professional
promotion? It’s an inescapable fact that when we start something new, we
are significantly ignorant of it. That’s just the nature of beginnings.
Inevitably, we make mistakes—and hopefully we learn from them. Part of
us understands this principle, and feels a well-founded, characteristic
insecurity when we start something new or escalate a responsibility or a
commitment. That self-questioning part of us, astrologically, is called the
second house. With composite Venus there, these natural doubts and
trepidations are exaggerated in this couple. The danger for them is that they
may simply not believe in their own relationship sufficiently to invest in it,
trust it and grow it. One classic illustration of the down side of this
configuration would be the couple who date for ten years, but never quite
get up the nerve to take the next step.
Traditionally, the second house is correlated with money and movable
possessions. A better word might be “resources.” If we have enough
resources of the appropriate sort, our insecurities in life are lessened—just
think, for example, of how you react to your car making disconcerting
noises when you have plenty of money in the bank, versus when you are
feeling poor. The key, with composite Venus in the second house, is for this
couple to acquire the resources that allow them to believe in their love.
What might those resources be? Sometimes they are relationship skills
which can be acquired through seeking counsel: a good psychotherapist
who models communication skills, or dear friends who’ve been together in
intimacy for ten years and are willing to offer insight and support. Many
times a public ritual of commitment makes a real difference—there can be a
kind of pride and dignity connected with being married, which might be the
needed confidence-booster.
While it is a misleading to think of the second house in narrowly
materialistic terms, it does have a natural linkage to physical objects and
our psychological relationship with them. Thus, the exchange of rings can
be profoundly important for a couple with a second house composite Venus.
Or an exchange of flowers! Knowing that each partner is carrying a
photograph of the other one can make a difference. As a relationship
escalates into the “living under one roof” stage, issues around financial trust
and interdependency become pressingly central—potentially problematic,
but also potentially healing. What might appear overtly to be a
disagreement over money is typically an issue around trust. Going deeper,
that issue of trust often is not actually a question of whether each partner
trusts the other; instead it is about whether, together, they trust their
relationship.
In the end, with composite Venus in the second house, a couple can prove
themselves to themselves. As they gain faith in their love through the
ancient device of betting on themselves and burning bridges behind them,
they build trust, adult interdependency, and faith from the ground up—and
may, in the end, prove far more resilient than their love-at-first-sight
cousins.
COMPOSITE VENUS IN THE THIRD HOUSE
Knowing the right words to say is one of life’s sweeter skills. Rabbits and
foxes don’t worry much about it, but for we humans, how we say something
is often even more important than what we say. Language is the glue that
holds social reality together. With their composite Venus in the third house,
this couple is probably well-spoken together. Their metaphors are
complementary. Their rhythms of speech, their senses of humor, their
vocabularies flow together in an appealing and harmonious way. Together,
they’re a great team when it comes to composing letters in emotionally-
trying circumstances—letters of sympathy and condolence to grieving
people, for example. They can function effectively as mediators, should
they find themselves in situations of conflict involving families or
organizations in which they are members. Given half a chance, they could
probably write poetry together.
Within the deeper evolutionary logic of the relationship, composite
Venus in the third house emphasizes the pressing need to communicate
gracefully with each other. At a simple level, there is a certain ambience of
dignity that arises when two people living in intimacy strive to practice
some degree of courtesy and politeness with each other. “Please” and
“thank you” are part of it. Saying “excuse me” instead of nudging each
other out of the way. Knocking on the door if a partner has closed himself
or herself in a room. Stiffness and formality are far from the point—180
degrees opposite the point, actually. The aim is to be comfortable together
in that most fractious of circumstances: deep and unrelenting intimacy.
Anyone who has shared life with another person for more than a few
months understands how near the surface the Shadow comes after a while.
The slightest flaws in another’s character are magnified out of all
proportion. Lapses that wouldn’t call for a second thought were a friend to
be guilty of them become grounds for assassination. The sheer mutual
abrasiveness of two humans in close proximity is the great enemy of
sympathy, sweetness, and romance. Courtesy—and its crown jewel, the
careful use of language—are the best hedges against that kind of erosion.
With their composite Venus in the third house, these two need to practice
those skills.
Sooner or later, every couple must bash their way through frank
negotiations regarding some dimension of their relationship. Even in purely
practical matters—financial decisions, for example—differences between
people can fuel strong emotions, especially if one of them feels insecure in
his or her knowledge. And of course every human pairing will quickly
encounter the eternal dilemmas: each other’s families, attractions to other
people, and so on. Inevitably, such imbroglios are hooked into their
unresolved psychological issues, defense mechanisms and blind spots. A
history of courtesy, gentleness, and respectful listening go a long way
toward getting such talks off on a good foot, and those tactful, diplomatic
qualities are pivotal when it comes to keeping them on track. As the saying
goes, “war is the failure of diplomacy.” That’s true in intimacy as much as
it’s true on a geopolitical scale. With their composite Venus in the third
house, this couple has what it takes to avoid those painful private wars that
can kill even a deep love. To fulfill their evolutionary intentions together,
they also need to practice those skills actively.
COMPOSITE VENUS IN THE FOURTH HOUSE
Peel away the layers of the onion, and right in the center you find the fourth
house. Physically, it’s beneath our feet—where the Sun is around midnight.
Similarly, it refers to energies that lie deep down in the core of what we are.
With their composite Venus in the fourth house, peel away the surface, and
the underlying feeling with these two people is love. Of course, like anyone
else, they’ll get angry with each other, question the relationship, maybe
even part ways—but their love won’t go away. It’s too fundamental for that
to happen, whatever other emotions get into the stew. Love is in their bones.
Composite Venus in this house is one of the most basic foundation stones of
lasting warmth, intimacy, and commitment.
Traditionally, the fourth house correlates with home. With their
composite Venus there, these two are very drawn to the domestic
environment. Even early in their relationship, we’ll see each of them
expressing interest in where—and how—the other one lives. It’s common to
see such a couple, two weeks after they’ve met, deciding to skip the
restaurant and spend the evening at one of their homes eating pizza and
watching a movie, cuddled on the sofa as if they’ve known each other a
long time. This pleasant feeling of domestic naturalness is one of the
cornerstones of their bond.
As their relationship develops, these two quickly feel a pull toward
creating a home. Venus is seductive, and so some hesitation about moving
too rapidly into that kind of entanglement is appropriate. Still, if the rest of
the relationship is reasonably harmonious, the gravitational pull toward
sharing a domestic environment is strong, and well-supported
astrologically. Once they’ve decided to take that step, some critical choices
loom. With their composite Venus in the fourth house, these people need a
beautiful place to live. For what it’s worth, they’ll probably be lucky in
terms of finding such a place, but most of what we’re considering here lies
in the realm of choices they can control themselves. Large piles of money
are of course a great advantage here, as elsewhere in life. But there are
many expensive living spaces that have little beauty in any sense—and
many inexpensive ones that do. Sunlight streaming through a clean kitchen
window, glistening on the funky wine-bottle vase and catching the red veins
in a rose’s petals: that kind of loveliness feeds a fourth house Venus, even in
a ghetto. Whatever their finances, having art on the walls, a place
sufficiently orderly to convey a feeling of peace and ease, a music
collection that actually gets played—all these are pieces of the Venus
puzzle. All of them support this couple’s evolutionary aims. The intent is to
create a gracious, serene incubator in which their love can grow in dignity,
humor and mutual appreciation. For these two, the aesthetics of their
physical domestic environment, for better or worse, set the tone of their
romance. A quiet place to live breeds quiet in their hearts. Lovely paintings
on the wall support erotic appreciation of each other’s charms. Music on the
stereo encourages harmonious conversations and negotiations. The home is
a metaphor for the heart.
COMPOSITE VENUS IN THE FIFTH HOUSE
These two people shine when they’re together. They seem bigger than life.
They may not be flamboyant or even extroverted, but there is a certain
subtle magnetism that radiates from them. And it is infectious. They walk
into the room, and everyone feels a little more elegant, a bit more witty, and
a lot better-looking. The fifth house relates strongly to the notion that all the
world’s a stage. It is the most theatrical part of the chart. With their
composite Venus there, these two naturally express their Venusian energy—
their attractiveness and grace. They put it forward. That’s just part of the
chemistry they trigger in each other.
Traditionally, one of the meanings of the fifth house is “love affairs.”
Part of the evolutionary intention of this couple is to keep their relationship
feeling as much like a love affair as they can, given the realities of ongoing
intimacy. Obviously, the sweet bubble of romantic illusion bursts sooner or
later—but that doesn’t have to put an end to reading poetry to each other,
surprising each other with flowers, or enjoying oysters and champagne in
candlelight!
“Love affairs,” astrologically, are not always sexual relationships—in the
fifth house sense, they actually refer to any kind of emotionally close
human connection, so long as it doesn’t last very long. With their composite
Venus in this house, this couple’s destiny includes a bit of a revolving door
in terms of the people and couples they befriend. There’s no reason they
can’t have lasting relationships with friends—that’s another issue entirely.
Metaphysically, this configuration tells us that, together, they’re finishing
up a lot of “business” with other souls—and when the business is finished,
those people tend to move on, making way for others.
Creativity is central to the logic of the fifth house. Together, these two
have a tremendous potential for expressing themselves artistically. If they
were to play music together or perform theatrically together on stage,
they’d cast a spell over the audience. Depending on the rest of the
composite chart, maybe their creativity is drawn in other, less “arty”
directions. Maybe they take up landscaping or gardening. Perhaps they
decorate their home in a uniquely self-expressive way. And the fifth house
is also simply about the human need for pleasure: creating a beautiful, tasty
dinner for a few friends and laughing together until the wee hours is an art,
too!
Children are joint creative products as well—and classically the fifth
house is the house of children. Not all couples are in a position to have kids
even if they want them, and certainly it would be narrow to read the house
strictly in parental terms. Still, if there is a desire to have children on the
part of these two people, likely they will get their wish—and probably their
offspring will grow up to become their good friends.
COMPOSITE VENUS IN THE SIXTH HOUSE
Put two naïve children, male and female, alone on a desert island. Come
back in a century or two, and you’ll probably be greeted by a crowd. Sex is
basically instinctual. Even given no “advanced training,” people tend to
figure out the elements of the operation. But for how long will that sex be
good? And what about the relationship? For how long will those two people
care for each other? How long will they want each other? Those are harder
questions. Sexual instincts and reflexes may be part of our hard-wiring as
members of homo sapiens, but making love last is an art. And like most
arts, its skills can be learned, remembered, and passed down to the next
generation. With their composite Venus in the sixth house, this couple is
part of such a lineage of lovers. To fulfill what they’ve come together to
accomplish, they must seek instruction and guidance from people more
advanced on love’s path than themselves. If they succeed in that and their
own love lasts, they will feel the call to return the favor to others.
Early in this relationship, these two people benefit from putting their
“radar” out there. What they are seeking are happy, stable couples. And
such couples will be there, waiting—that’s the law of synchronicity in
action. We can go further: let’s say our couple with composite Venus in the
sixth house are passionate, independent types, doubtful about whether
they’re cut out for a committed relationship. Then the mentors they should
seek are similarly passionate and independent. What our couple faces, these
mentors have already faced. That is the whole point. They’ve been down
that road, made mistakes and learned from them. Both our sixth house
Venus couple and these mentors will feel drawn toward each other. They’ll
enjoy each other’s company. Nobody really even needs to understand that
anything important is passing between them.
For the couple with their composite Venus in the sixth house, humility
enters the equations at this point. They need to accept a simple fact, one that
should entail no humiliation at all: love is difficult! No one would try to
perform brain surgery without some training, and making love last is
probably even harder—if you doubt that, just ask your friendly local brain
surgeon. They need healthy relationship behaviors modeled for them by
lovers who’ve gone down that road before them. They also need to ask
direct questions whenever mere watching isn’t enough. Probably the
relationship these mentors have with each other will be Venusian in tone.
That means they’ll be romantic types, attentive and probably sexy with each
other. They’ll flirt with each other even if they are ninety years old. And
there’s a good chance they’ll be artistic in disposition, if not literally artists
of some sort.
Once our couple with composite Venus in the sixth house has found
these teachers, and hung out with them for a while, something deep,
precious, and ancient is transferred directly from the teachers into our
couple’s cells—and as our lovers mature, one of their own profoundest joys
will lie in passing on that cherished flame.
COMPOSITE VENUS IN THE SEVENTH HOUSE
The Goddess of Love in the House of Marriage—with their composite
Venus in the seventh house, these two people are off to a good start! There’s
really no simpler way to spell L-O-V-E astrologically. At least initially, the
building blocks of a lasting connection abound for them. They simply like
each other a lot.
To appreciate their natural affection most clearly, view it against this
backdrop: when two human beings come together, they almost always have
to take a while getting comfortable with each other. Even if the attraction
between them is compelling, they simply still don’t know each other very
well. There’s a little bit of awkwardness and politeness at first—and, more
often than not, various tensions, frictions and misunderstandings quickly
arise, especially if the strangers have moved precipitously into the
emotional cauldron of love and sexuality. With these two, those pitfalls are
not so deep: the “fairy dust” is strong enough to bridge that gap between
just having met and actually becoming intimately familiar with each other.
The easy linking of the two personalities is fundamentally a precious
thing, and lots of people who stay together happily for decades have
composite Venus in the seventh house. With that positive thought in mind,
let’s keep perspective: nothing astrological can guarantee a relationship
working. There’s nothing that lacks a potential dark side—and nothing so
sour it can’t be made to work! The risk with composite Venus in the seventh
house lies in disillusionment. The level of trust, commitment and
vulnerability can escalate very rapidly here. That’s fine, but when the
Shadow makes itself felt, it can feel like a shocking betrayal. The rose-
colored glasses can shatter, leaving pain and anger. For these two people,
there needs to be a lot of emphasis, especially early in their romance, on
keeping their dialogue honest. That honesty is not simply about refraining
from lies—it’s about actively searching for truth. It’s about warning each
other, in advance, about the minefields that lie ahead.
As the traditional “House of Marriage,” the seventh house is always
about relationships. With a composite chart, we need to be careful in our
thinking, and make sure we include a piece of the puzzle that even
astrologers often miss. This relationship has relationships! These two
people—together—have soul-mates. These soul-mates may be other
individuals or other couples. They’re not teachers. They’re more like
friends or co-counselors. The critical point is that our couple cannot
succeed without the perspective, support, and help they get from these other
people. Most of the time, it boils down to that ancient reality: couples
benefit from the support of other couples. Just like artists, athletes, and
stamp-collectors are helped by their peers, so are lovers. With composite
Venus in the seventh house, this couple is supported in maintaining faith in
their path together by their friends—and the universe will be generous with
them in that department!
COMPOSITE VENUS IN THE EIGHTH HOUSE
People sometimes try to think of sex as a biological need, like our need for
food. But nobody has yet died from a lack of sex! Others try to spiritualize
it and make it something almost otherworldly. That’s closer to the spirit of
Skymates, but let’s stay grounded: sex is very down-to-earth and physical
too. Like eating, it links us very directly and undeniably with our heritage
as creatures on this planet. Birds do it and bees do it . . . et cetera. The point
is that sexuality is probably the single most complex dimension of human
experience in that it requires the integration of almost every aspect of our
humanity: body, mind, emotions, language, soul, rhythm, surrender, force.
If any piece is chronically left out, we feel that something is missing. We
come away from sex feeling hungry, and probably sad or angry.
Astrologically, the eighth house describes the deepest elements of our
sexuality. Any planet there gives us a lot of insight into what part of the
psyche absolutely must be engaged if we are going to be able to sustain any
kind of sexual response in a relationship. With their composite Venus in the
eighth house, maintaining a romantic feeling is central for this couple.
Without it, sex, however orgasmic or gymnastic, would collapse. Sex can
exist without love. That’s not always a pretty sight, but it’s a common
enough situation in the adult world. Not for these two, though.
These romantic, sexual feelings abound automatically at the beginning of
a partnership with this composite Venus. From the beginning, these two
make love, rather than other activities that might superficially resemble it.
Tenderness and sweetness and care flow like a tide between them, washing
the shores of the two alien continents, bringing them closer together. Once
sexuality is expressed, the bonding process is kick-started. Caution and
mistrust are bypassed. The mating bond, with all its instinctual needs and
fears, gets established quickly. This is a beautiful thing—but it requires a lot
of care and feeding. Always, the stability of this connection depends on
satisfying the Goddess of Love, and not unduly offending her. She likes to
see people treat each other as lovers, which means never taking each other
for granted or behaving dismissively or crassly. Venus wants people to
seduce each other from time to time—even if they’ve shared a bed for thirty
years. She wants music playing and candles burning. She’s fine about
earthy language—Aphrodite isn’t prim!—but she never tolerates anyone
being objectified. She knows that the most erogenous zone of our
multidimensional “bodies” is the soul.
In a nutshell, with composite Venus in the eighth house, these two have
been given a priceless gift from the gods and goddesses. Their task is to
take care of it!
COMPOSITE VENUS IN THE NINTH HOUSE
One traditional association for this house is “long journeys over water.” In
times gone by, a long journey over water was an adventuresome
undertaking. It would carry you into a new culture, with a different
language, customs and expectations. Such journeys were not taken lightly.
Often, one went in search of something: a better life; safety from
repression; education; financial fortune.
These same goals still underlie the ninth house: a need to experience
newness, to break up stale old routines, to step outside of the more ordinary
and mundane aspects of daily life. The motifs of the quest and the
pilgrimage figure prominently here. And these are not merely outer
journeys. In fantasy literature, a group of characters may go on a quest and
accomplish an outer goal—in The Lord of the Rings, Frodo throws the Ring
into the cracks of Mount Doom; Samwise meets the Elves—but they also
make some discoveries about themselves and their inner lives. Frodo
discovers his own courage, Sam his capacity for loyalty. In parallel fashion,
this house also has to do with one’s philosophy of life, what makes life most
meaningful, one’s personal Holy Grail.
To keep their love alive, a couple with composite Venus in the ninth
house needs to be wary of sameness and predictability settling into their
relationship. If there are never any mornings when they wake up not
knowing what will happen to them the rest of that day, their love may grow
flat. The too-vanilla flavor of their life together gets translated into boredom
with one another.
Such a couple also needs to honor one another’s belief systems, religion,
politics and world views—that’s ninth house territory too. Sharing
perspectives about these topics is a relationship-enhancing plus. If there are
honest differences in these areas, the partners need to accept and respect
them, rather than embark on a campaign to proselytize one another.
How to maintain the romantic Venusian magic? Such a couple thrives on
shared journeys—literally traveling together. Whether it’s a trip to Fiji or
just to the nearest campground, they’re sure to discover something
important about the relationship and about one another on the way. But
inward journeys matter too: they might attend a marriage enrichment
seminar or a dream workshop together. So do journeys of the mind, such as
attending a course on ancient Sumerian culture or classical Pompeii. Last
but not least are intuitive journeys which seek to understand and interpret
reality rather than just explore it. Depending on their theological
predilections, these two might relish a Tibetan Buddhist lecture series, or
church-hopping every weekend. Above all, they need newness: to share
new places, new experiences, and ideas they’ve never thought about before.
With composite Venus in the ninth house, constantly changing perspectives
keep love refreshed and alive.
COMPOSITE VENUS IN THE TENTH HOUSE
“Career” is the usual meaning of the tenth house, and maybe these two will
share their professional destinies as well as their personal ones. Most
couples don’t actually work together, though. We’ll have to spread our nets
a little more widely to be sure we catch the meaning of their composite
Venus. The tenth house correlates with our social role. It’s connected with
questions of reputation, status and public image every bit as much as it is
linked to work. As this relationship develops, increasingly we’ll see this
couple drawn toward playing a Venusian role in their community.
At the simplest level, a Venusian role involves embodying the collective
mythologies of beauty and love. People who really don’t know these two
will probably tend to think that they have a great relationship. This doesn’t
mean that the opposite is necessarily true! But the curious part is that people
who hold this high opinion of them don’t really know them—they’re just
making an assumption. Based on what? In essence, it’s on how the couple
looks to them. They just seem right together. More deeply, they seem to
reflect the ideal values of a certain stratum of the community—and here’s a
place where the angels start laughing! If our couple with composite Venus
in the tenth house is in Hollywood, they probably look chic. If they’re
young and fashionable, they probably look cool. Republican golfers?
Respectable. Hippies? Hip. Conservative Christians? Decent. New Agers?
Sensitive. Feminists? Egalitarian. Each subculture has a set of ideals about
love; whatever subculture these two are part of, they’ve got the credentials.
This task of carrying the ideals of the group is actually serious. At the
deepest level, with composite Venus in the tenth house, these two have
taken on a serious mission: that of helping their community restore and
maintain its faith in the possibility of human love and commitment. They
didn’t ask for this job, either—it was assigned to them!
On a more concrete level, we may see this couple drawn to the arts
together. Perhaps they perform together somehow, or are simply often seen
together at concerts and gallery openings. Given time, if they choose to live
together, their home will probably blossom into a showplace. It’s easy to
imagine paintings hanging on the walls and a piano gracing the living room.
We’ll very likely also see them playing a counseling role among their
friends—they are the ones to whom people turn when their own
relationships are shaky. That counseling role, by the way, is often the
practical way in which they accomplish their mission in the community.
If they do work together professionally, they’ll be happiest and most
successful in a Venusian profession. It could be counseling, or at least
something that involves their people skills. It’s also easy to see them
teaming up in a role that involves aesthetic decisions: art and creativity,
decoration, or design.
COMPOSITE VENUS IN THE ELEVENTH HOUSE
Every couple pays lip service to the idea of prioritizing the relationship. But
in practical terms, the subtle work of keeping a bond fresh and alive often
gets sidetracked by daily distractions: social activities, domestic
responsibilities, paying the bills. With composite Venus in the eleventh
house, these two need to keep clear perspective. This house refers to
strategy—taking the long view. They need to decide what is truly important
in the context of years and decades together.
Love may blossom out of a clear blue sky, but maintaining and growing a
relationship never happens automatically. It’s the product of a systematic set
of choices. To be sound, those choices must always be guided by a set of
values and a sense of priorities. If their love is going to last, these two need
to act as if making it last were an important consideration. What feeds their
bond? Do they need to make sure they have a long vacation, far away from
family, every year? Are evenings alone together at home more important
than keeping up with a wide circle of friends? Or the opposite? Should they
systematically scrimp so they can afford a big, comfortable house—or
should they live simply and save their money for a trip to South America?
There aren’t any universal right answers to these kinds of questions, but
they illustrate the core meaning of a healthy composite Venus in the
eleventh house: strategic, long range thinking about what deepens and
supports their love for each other. Their life together shouldn’t “just happen
to them.” It needs to be something they create jointly and consciously: an
incubator for love.
Anything in the Eleventh House tends to gain power and momentum as
time passes. With Venus in this position, there are excellent prospects for
the long-term growth and deepening of this relationship. But that
blossoming in turn depends upon the two of them visualizing a happy future
together. They benefit from trying to see themselves as two old people
together, holding hands. That’s not just about positive thinking, either. More
centrally, it’s about knowing what they want, agreeing to it, and working
methodically toward building it. With every intention that they realize, with
every successful manifestation of their determination, their love grows
richer.
“Friends” are a traditional meaning of the eleventh house, although the
word can be a little slippery. This house is not really about intimacy so
much as teamwork, networking, and collective enterprises. Probably, this
couple finds itself engaged with a fair amount of social activity. Many times
that public focus arises out of their values and interests more than out of
simple extraversion. Maybe they become involved in an astrological society
or a religious organization. Maybe it’s a dart-throwing league! Maybe it’s
just a big social circle. With Venus’s natural orientation toward aesthetics,
these two may find themselves engaged in group activity linked to the arts,
or surrounded by creative friends. Likely, these associations are pleasant—
that’s in the nature of Venus too. But these two also need to keep their eye
on the prize: social over-extension can drain and divert them unless it’s
helping them fulfill their long-term intentions.
COMPOSITE VENUS IN THE TWELFTH HOUSE
Falling in love, many couples describe their relationship as “spiritual.” That
lofty notion has been widely institutionalized in marriage and commitment
ceremonies all over the world: most of them employ language that makes
reference to God. But even when those words are heartfelt, the reality for
most couples is that their relationship isn’t truly about spirituality. For most,
it quickly becomes centered on the mundane foundations of psychology,
practicality, and partnership. And many a bond does just fine on that basis.
But not for these two! With their composite Venus in the twelfth house,
their romantic and sexual feelings toward each other are very dependent
upon the constant renewal of their shared spirituality. It’s as if Aphrodite
were their guru, offering rewards and punishments according to their
behavior.
Is sex spiritual? In many of the older religious traditions, the answer was
a resounding No. Sex was for procreation only. It should not be enjoyed,
lest the souls become entangled in corruption. Many of us have begun to
look upon those kinds of attitudes with suspicion, although they continue to
thrive in certain quarters. The opposite notion—that sex is sacred—is more
attractive and real to most of us nowadays. But even there, we need to stay
grounded. The sexual reality for most couples is probably more emotional
and playful than “spiritual.”
Before we go any further, let’s define exactly what we mean by
“spiritual” in this context. It’s simple: keeping a sense of the other person’s
soul in the forefront of your own consciousness right through the point of
orgasm. That’s it. Much of it has to do with the nature of the eye contact
between the lovers. A lot of it is connected with tolerating the incredible
sense of psychological nakedness that deep love-making creates. Why do
people often close their eyes in sexual situations? Why is fantasy about
other lovers so common? So much of this has to do with our fear of that
undefended, wide-open vulnerability. With their composite Venus in the
twelfth house, these two people need to conquer that fear. They need to use
sexual energy in a conscious way. They need to see Spirit in each other’s
eyes.
To accomplish these mystical aims, this couple needs a big dose of the
same thing mystics all over the world crave: time alone, away from the
“madding crowd” and the distractions of everyday life. If they don’t defend
that territory, we’ll see the darker face of the twelfth house: they’ll fall into
a pattern of escapism together—television, baby talk, alcohol, drugs. To
avoid that, it is imperative that they develop the custom of withdrawing into
their secret world: door locked, answering machine turned on, and supplies
in the refrigerator. Shared meditation practice can be helpful—but we need
to remember always that for them, sex is a meditation. Their individual
religions, practices or spiritual philosophies are not the point: since this is
the composite Venus, the only issue that matters here is what they do
together, as a couple. And the less public that magic is, the deeper it will
become.
Chapter 10
The Composite Mars
H ere’s a dirty little astronomical secret: Mars, the fabled “red planet,” is
actually more the color of a dusty old terra cotta garden pot. One look
and you can see it—the right description would be “orange,” not “red.” Yet
everyone—even the most rigorously cerebral of planetary astronomers—
persists in calling it red. Why?
Well, we’re all astrologers, whether we know it or not. And Mars feels
red to us, despite the contrary evidence of our senses. Red: the color of
passion. The color of heat and blood. The color that underlies the skin of
our faces when we feel rage, sexual fire, the physical extremes of athletic
extension or the ragged edges of adventure. Among the old astrologers,
Mars got a bum rap. It was called “the lesser malefic,” and equated with
conflict and trouble. Those associations are valid, but let’s make sure we
preserve the glories of the red planet too. Who’d want to live a life without
any passion?
As we’ve seen, the principles of the composite chart apply to all kinds of
human interactions, not just sexual ones. But in this book, we’re focusing
primarily on the realities of committed physical relationships. And Mars,
the god of war, is also the god of sex. Earlier, we recognized that Venus, the
goddess of love, didn’t actually tell us everything we needed to know about
love—the rest of the composite chart filled out the three-dimensional
human picture. Sex is similarly complex; Mars hasn’t cornered the market
on the subject. Like Venus, it simply provides a kind of focused window
through which we can enter a big terrain. Every couple knows that
sometimes the term “love-making” is quite apt; sex can be a tender
expression of affection and surrender. But most couples also understand that
sexual love has another face: something primordial and wild needs to be
released between them from time to time too. That’s the territory of Mars,
and its condition in the composite chart gives us a lot of insight into how to
maintain that precious spark.
Teens, with the fires of puberty’s biochemical onslaught burning in their
veins, have little way of understanding how fragile a jewel physical passion
between adults can be. “Common sense” marriage-mythology often
assumes that romantic hunger is a passing phase. But the composite Mars
may disagree! And in doing so, it carries us directly into the more
traditional domain of the war god: anger.
Anger: the world’s worst aphrodisiac. Nothing kills the ability to feel
sexual impulses toward another human being faster than unprocessed rage.
And rage comes from hurt. And, in love, hurt is inevitable. Thus, the ability
to express anger and to resolve it is the absolute epicenter of sustainable
sexuality. Where Mars lies in the composite chart, we get insights into the
most effective conflict resolution skills for the couple. We may also learn
something about certain “hot button” areas where conflict is probable—and
where the price of the damage can be crushing, if the issues are not
addressed skillfully and directly.
COMPOSITE MARS IN ARIES
How would Warriors or Daredevils make love? With Mars in its own sign,
the natural erotic style of this couple is forthright, immediate, and full of
vitality and fervor. Even if their individual Mars signatures are milder, this
couple thrives on a level of heat, adventurousness and directness that may
seem blunt at times. If this sounds off-putting, remember that Aries is the
sign of the Hero too, and that these partners can view each other as prizes to
be won, treasured and protected. They may enjoy a renewed courtship ritual
of “wooing” one another, pressing their suits with ardent expectations. Love
should be an Event engaging one’s total attention, a Triumph not taken for
granted.
An evolutionary intent is to claim the mate, to dare to love, not letting
anything stand in their way. Perhaps they take an occasional weekend alone
together, defend that time vigorously, and woe betide anyone who suggests
other plans.
Think of warriors: shared challenges and adventures build this bond.
They may tease each other mercilessly but leap to one another’s defense if
anyone else ventures jests or criticisms. Like warriors, they may growl at
each other a lot too. More than with perhaps any composite Mars sign but
Scorpio, unprocessed anger weakens their erotic bond. Not all anger
requires a therapist to mediate—some spats come just from being two
animals sharing turf, much the way two cats in the same home sometimes
get on each other’s nerves and cuff each other. Once this pair understands
that they need to blow off steam and process petty annoyances quickly,
rather than letting them fester, they may even enjoy sparring with one
another in a way that might puzzle or alarm their more soft-spoken friends.
Of course, major issues need to be dealt with too, and the sooner the better.
Bear in mind that one hair-trigger dynamic here can be any perceived
disloyalty on the part of the partner. An evolutionary intent is to learn that
the expression of anger can be a safe, healthy and relationship-building
process—shunning such expression can eat away at the passionate heart of
their connection.
COMPOSITE MARS IN TAURUS
Some people would rather talk about sex than actually experience it. Before
we go one word further, let’s say that with composite Mars in Taurus, the
odds are long against that being the issue with these two! Taurus is the most
physical and sensual of the signs. Typically, a couple with the red planet in
this position will have an earthy, natural, and accepting attitude toward the
appetites of the body.
Still, talking about sex can be profoundly interesting. Doubtless, it will
still be a major topic of conversation centuries from now, on star ships
exploring our galaxy. Nothing so reveals our humanity, and no other human
interaction is half as complex or multi-dimensional. Sex is physical, of
course. But it’s also deeply psychological. And if it’s going to last, it had
better be spiritual too. It’s about generosity—and need. In taking, we give.
In giving, we take. It brings out the best and the worst in all of us. Nothing
makes so crazy or so sane. No wonder we tie ourselves in knots about it!
The evolutionary intention behind a couple with composite Mars in
Taurus lies in either avoiding those knots or in untangling them. Together,
they share a soul-hunger to return to a primordial sexual simplicity. To say
they “shouldn’t talk about sex” would be going too far—but they need to
recognize that too much talking or thinking can get them in trouble. There
are deep, wordless wisdoms in the cells of our bodies. For composite Mars
in Taurus, these silent wisdoms are the true teachers.
And what do they teach? Simple things, easily forgotten by people
who’ve gnarled their instincts in webs of theory, chatter, “sophistication,”
and unnatural cultural stimuli. Things like this: how beautiful we are naked.
How lovely our varied bodies can be. How much we need simple touch.
How much more comfortable it is to share a bed with someone you know
and trust. How long it takes to learn one another’s bodies, and how
delicious it is be to be with someone who’s taken time to know yours. How
vulnerable sex makes us. How rare and precious is true, sustainable passion
between people. How elegantly we age, and how our sense of beauty
changes with the passing years. How easily sex can put us back in synch
with a partner. How readily the lack of it can exaggerate our reaction to
petty annoyances.
With composite Mars in Taurus, this couple is trying to return to these
body-wisdoms. The enemies of their sexuality lurk in the seductive
disguises of civilization. One of these enemies is “Puritanism.” By that, we
mean the cultural repression and shaming of the body, anything that makes
the body the enemy of God or family. This couple should beware of any
belief system that discourages the unabashed expression of the body’s heat.
Those belief systems obviously include certain religious perspectives, but
let’s quickly add three modern “religions” to our list: The First Church of
Thinness! The Holy Temple of Youth! The High Tabernacle of Rich and
Famous!
Another force the couple with composite Mars in Taurus needs to resist
is the distorted hyper-sexualization created by the media, advertising, and
entertainment industries—the distortions that enter our sexual imaginations
whenever we are, for example, staring wide-eyed at sexy movie stars on a
screen. What messages are we internalizing then? Are we saying that, with
composite Mars in Taurus, a couple should avoid the movies? Heaven
forbid! The issue lies in self-awareness—when we resort to fantasy life for
the fulfillment of intimate needs, we’ve moved away from sensual,
immediate Taurean reality. A little self-scrutiny can quickly reveal whether
our self-confidence or our bond with our partner has been diminished.
Let’s add the “psychology industry” to the list too: insight can be
precious but if we aren’t careful, we can drown instinct in insight. Taurus
benefits more from simply trusting instinct than from all the in-depth
analyses in the world.
For these two, taking time away from all those “civilized” influences and
returning to the Garden is the heart of what keeps them yearning for each
other.
COMPOSITE MARS IN GEMINI
With this composite Mars, the mind is the first and most important of the
erogenous zones. Sweet nothings are important here. So is an open-minded,
accepting, endless curiosity about one another. If the act of love is viewed
as, among other things, an ongoing, fascinating, funny and discussion-
worthy experiment, so much the better.
Gemini when healthy is youthful, active, quick, verbal, inquisitive,
perceptive and restless. It likes stimulation. Regardless of how placid these
partners are as individuals, this composite Mars prefers activity to stillness,
variety to boredom, questions to answers. This couple may exchange jokes,
cards, email, text messages, phone calls, faxes, and concert and theatre
tickets. Keeping each other interested can involve keeping each other
guessing, in and out of bed. But a key to this composite Mars sign is
communication with content. Learning each other’s erogenous zones is part
of it. So is not judging one another—within the context of loving rather
than hurtful or distasteful behavior, there is no “right” and “wrong” way to
make love. It’s essential to make sure that communication works both ways,
rather than getting stuck in the roles of lecturer and listener. Indeed, not
getting stuck in any kind of rut is paramount here.
One evolutionary intent is to avoid the sort of stultifying routines that
deaden lovers’ responses to one another or blind them to each other’s
infinite mystery. Another is to communicate about a variety of forms of
loving, without passing judgment on them or on each other. Perhaps this
couple is undoing the effects of having been brainwashed, religiously or
sociologically or in some other way, about there being one and only one
appropriate type of love.
If tension builds up between this couple and isn’t resolved, conversations
can quickly turn into disagreements. What should have been friendly
debates can take on a bitter or cutting edge, particularly deadly because this
couple is so articulate. Nervous chatter about nothing, verbal sniping or,
worse yet, stony silences may replace honest dialogue. If they find they
can’t talk about the weather without arguing, it’s high time they addressed
the genuine conflicts between them.
COMPOSITE MARS IN CANCER
“Try a little tenderness,” advises an old soul song. When this composite
Mars is working well, these partners understand that advice very well
indeed.
Even if their individual birthcharts say more about Stormy Passion, the
natural expression of this couple’s sexuality is warm, nurturing, giving, and
caring, with a marked sweetness. They may seem to fuss over each other:
“Are you comfortable? Are you happy? Are you warm enough?” The
underlying message is, “Have all your needs been met? Let me take care of
you. Are you hurting? Let me heal you.” Cancer is the sign of the Sensitive,
and few partners can be so exquisitely tuned in to each other. Few can so
well build a protective “nest” from their relationship. A fundamental
evolutionary intention is to treat each other kindly and provide a safe and
nurturing environment for the development of a very tender sexuality.
Yet that very sensitivity can be a double-edged sword. If one partner is
getting all the nurturing, with the other one having tacit permission to
behave in less than fully adult ways, the reciprocity that every relationship
needs will suffer. Also, sooner or later, “baby” may rebel against
“Mommy,” and they’ll both get hurt and angry.
Cancer is also the sign of the Crab, but it could as well have been called
the Turtle or the Clam. If they feel hurt or angry, these partners need to
guard against clamming up or retreating into their shells. If tension builds
up and isn’t resolved, they may sulk, become passive-aggressive or clingy,
or come up with a barrage of irrational complaints that are smokescreens
for the real issues.
All that glorious tenderness won’t unfold and blossom unless they both
feel safe. Their very Cancerian attunement to each other may make them
more hypersensitive together than either might have been with someone
else. Is that good news or bad news? Neither, but there are wise and unwise
ways to deal with that heightened mutual susceptibility. Each partner must
respect the other’s sensitivity, rather than coddle it. They should tread
lightly in potentially charged topics, rather than totally avoiding them.
Saying “I don’t feel safe enough to talk about that right now” is a better bet
than “I won’t talk about that.” If pain has been caused, sincere apologies are
in order—and so are acceptance and forgiveness.
COMPOSITE MARS IN LEO
Some couples enjoy getting dressed up. Others don’t. Which side of that
line we fall on isn’t the essence of composite Mars in Leo, but it’s a
doorway. Making an effort to look our best is, among other things, a
celebration of our sexuality. Unless we’ve been terribly mistreated, we
generally appreciate being noticed that way. We like to feel attractive, and
to elicit an interested response from others. Sexuality, in the broadest sense
of the word, underlies the whole fashion industry. And from the perspective
of a healthy composite Mars in Leo, let’s add one more word: Hallelujah!
Leo, at its best, is loose and unabashed. It celebrates itself. With Mars in
this sign, the natural expression of a couple’s sexuality has those
uninhibited qualities. In public, they present themselves, if not
flamboyantly, at least in ways that suggest self-confidence and an
appreciation of their physicality. They support and encourage those more
theatrical qualities in each other. They probably buy each other clothing.
Maybe they enjoy shopping together; certainly they compliment each other,
express attraction to each other, flirt with each other, and offer reflective
comments on each other’s “best colors” and so forth. One gets the sense
that each one is proud to have “caught” the other. In private, the same logic
is extended: sexual confidence, and even bravado, are supported,
appreciated, and rewarded in the time-honored way.
If any of this sounds silly or superficial, think again: there’s likely no
more fundamental source of rage than suppressed sexuality. With composite
Mars in Leo, speaking positively, we recognize that the encouragement and
enhancement of the couple’s erotic self-actualization is a basic evolutionary
intention and that, if effective, it purges the relationship of an elemental
barrier between these souls: anger. One result of this reality is that any
perceived suppression of each other’s sexuality tends to be greeted initially
with exaggerated rage or hurt. If suppression persists, the rage and hurt tend
to morph into iciness, pettiness and defensiveness.
Cutting to the bottom line, the defining moments for a couple with
composite Mars in Leo relate to how they handle one basic issue: learning
one another’s sexual needs, preferences and styles. People have differing
levels of appreciation for graphic language. They like different ways of
kissing. Some want more frequent sex than others. Dealing honestly with
such questions is of course imperative for all couples. But with composite
Mars in Leo, that honesty must be informed by diplomacy, a non-
judgmental attitude, and complimentary, encouraging, and appreciative
language.
COMPOSITE MARS IN VIRGO
The evolutionary intent for this couple is to experience and express their
sexuality as it is: to be whole, not perfect. Their shared physical love should
be conducted with mutual acceptance, a recognition that healthy people
have natural sexual instincts—Virgo is an Earth sign—and an attempt to
attune themselves to those instincts without shame, criticism or
performance issues.
On the other hand, with composite Mars in the sign of the craftsperson,
this couple is well aware that lovemaking is, among other things, both an art
and a skill, and they can share a desire to improve at it. Lovers become
“better” as they become more attuned to each other over time and with
attentive practice. The natural fastidiousness of Virgo should be taken into
account, which means avoiding crudeness or vulgarity, even if both
partners’ birthcharts suggest proclivities for mud wrestling and roller
derbies. Different tastes and different drives should be discussed—Mercury
rules Virgo—in an atmosphere of positive and nonjudgmental mutual
regard and support. If Virgo’s innate sense of detail, ability to spot where
improvement could happen, and desire to be helpful are all used sensitively,
rather than allowed to run amok, the outcome can be fortuitous indeed.
Comments and requests should be offered—and accepted—as suggestions
or what-ifs, not demands or complaints.
Above all, potentially hurtful critiques should be avoided. Sexuality is an
area where everyone’s ego is fragile, sometimes far more fragile than we
think, until the damage has been done.
If unresolved tensions build up in this relationship, a pattern of criticism,
sexual and otherwise, can arise. Nitpicking over details. (“If your trouser
hems were longer, your legs wouldn’t look as short.”). Pointless
“observations” that are actually subtle digs. (“Your head moves a lot when
you sing.”) Disparaging of one another’s hobbies. (“I can’t understand why
anyone would be interested in that.”) Invalidation of each other’s efforts.
(“Do I have to be responsible for that, too?”) The accumulated meaning is
“You’re not okay. You’re never good enough.” Give this dynamic some
time, and the criticism can become overt, sarcastic, hostile and incredibly
wounding. Either or both partners may start to feel that they can’t do
anything right. This pattern can be particularly painful for people with low
self-esteem, who are more likely to take it to heart than to shrug it off, at
least at first.
How to keep the relationship from self-destructing? Avoid unsolicited
advice. Whenever possible, be supportive rather than critical. Praise rather
than blame. And when issues do need to be discussed, keep it gentle, focus
on the issue at hand, and on improving or changing the behavior or the
relationship, not the partner. With that accomplished, this couple has a
potentially vast reserve of attentive, detailed, growth-oriented mutual
support, and that’s a treasure.
COMPOSITE MARS IN LIBRA
With this placement, no matter how wild or earthy either partner may be as
an individual, their shared physical love is best conducted as a highly
civilized art. Graciousness is essential. Style cannot be neglected. Courtesy
matters. So can flowers, candlelight, music, cologne, poetry, scented oil,
lingerie, jacuzzis. And clean sheets and clean fingernails. Don’t roll your
eyes! With composite Mars in the sign of the Artist, the aesthetic
component of lovemaking, and unhesitating recourse to anything that
heightens that aesthetic component, are vitally important. The need here is
to make the act of physical love as full of Beauty as possible. With that
need satisfied, the full expression of composite Mars in the sign of the
Lover becomes possible. Libra always centers on awareness of the other
person as a separate being with needs that are not the same as one’s own.
Therefore, the inevitable differences in this couple’s erotic styles need to
explored, and mutually agreeable compromises worked out. All of that
negotiation needs to be done with as much elegance, civilized pleasure, and
sophistication as the couple might use in choosing among several five star
restaurants. Furthermore, erotic styles evolve over time, and what worked
yesterday or last year may not work next week. Maintaining the Libran
balance between these partner’s needs should be treated as a work-of-art-in-
progress.
This couple’s evolutionary intent is to achieve a harmonious give-and-
take in the erotic expression of their love, and to avoid crassness, crudity or
selfishness with each other. If that goal is attained, they will have learned a
great deal about how to handle intimate conflict outside of the bedroom,
too. Therefore, any attempt to suppress, minimize or ignore differences in
their sexuality can provoke rage or hurt in one or both partners, seemingly
all out of proportion to the seriousness of the offense. If the tiff isn’t dealt
with promptly, fairly and honestly, this couple may retreat into icy
formality. They may even go through the outer forms of sophisticated
lovemaking, but without the empathic aim of truly trying to please one
another. If this dynamic degenerates into something approaching “I like to
do this, so we’ll do it whether you like it or not,” then this couple is in
trouble. How to break the logjam? With a healthy influx of Libran energy:
listen openly and sensitively to one another, then treat each other with
romance, courtesy and focused empathy, and bring as much sheer beauty
into the experience as possible.
COMPOSITE MARS IN SCORPIO
With composite Mars here, this couple’s natural style of love-making is
intense, passionate, revealing and full of profound closeness. This is a
potentially white-hot placement for Mars, not just physically but also
emotionally and psychologically. The evolutionary intent is to establish and
maintain a bond that is searingly honest and transformatively deep for both
partners.
Healthy catharsis is the goal here. Probing and revelatory conversation.
Previously untold secrets may be traded, dreams and nightmares shared,
fantasies and needs unveiled. There can be prolonged eye contact—and soul
contact. Absolute frankness is desired. A sense of extreme closeness is
deemed absolutely necessary. There are expectations of a willingness to
keep forging an ever stronger bond, one that gets past the surface, past the
defenses, under the skin and straight to the gut. These partners are lovers
who don’t hide from one another—who perhaps can’t hide—and who are
naked in every sense of the word.
Are you thinking that sounds like scary stuff? You’re right, even if the
individual charts also show an elevated appetite for intimacy. This couple
has broadband access to each other’s shadows, to each other’s damaged,
wounded, underdeveloped sides, and knowledge is power, sometimes
dangerous power. Yet that access goes hand in hand with the passion here:
you don’t get one without the other.
In the early stages of the relationship, while the hormonal fog is still
thick, this degree of closeness can seem like manna from heaven.
Confession feels good for the soul. Being so fully seen and met and
partnered feels like absolution, not just recognition. But as time goes on and
the couple knows one another better and better, it’s entirely understandable
that one or both of them could get nervous about this level of intimacy.
“When I think of all the crappy things she knows about me, I cringe. Why
did I tell her that? And at this rate, what else might I tell her? Who might
she be talking to about all this? Uh oh.”
In short, it’s hard to maintain this type of physical or emotional intensity
all the time. Sometimes these partners need a breather, and that need should
not be interpreted as shallowness, indifference or betrayal, any more than
sleeping every night should be interpreted as running away from living.
Imagine that your longtime psychoanalyst got absolutely furious at you
and was unprofessional enough both to attack you and to use his or her
extensive knowledge of you to do so. How badly could that hurt? The
potential for hurt is even greater here, because sexuality is involved here. If
this couple’s natural expression of sexuality is thwarted or suppressed, they
may go through some devastating fights, precisely because they know each
other’s underbellies so well. Each partner knows exactly where to twist the
knife. They should refrain from using their mental maps of each other’s
weak spots as weapons. They should respect the seal of the emotional
confessional that their relationship promotes, and not betray each other’s
secrets or confidences. If they seem to be having obsessive arguments about
a non-issue, they should try to address what’s really bothering them—
chances are it isn’t the color of the carpet.
COMPOSITE MARS IN SAGITTARIUS
Here we have the God of War in the sign of the Gypsy, the Scholar, the
Philosopher and the Pilgrim. Sagittarius hungers for new experiences. It
likes freedom and dislikes restrictions. Yet it reaches its highest expression
when it chooses to operate ethically and not to transgress natural laws—
which is its evolutionary intent.
Partners with composite Mars here need to express their sexuality
robustly and enthusiastically. There is probably an appetite for variety and
experimentation. Humor is appreciated, along with frankness and
unabashed zeal. Physical love is an adventure. Anything that adds some
spark of freshness and innovation is valued—new clothing, trips out of
town, or even a weekend in a fine hotel in their own town. This couple
doesn’t have to memorize the Kama Sutra, but they are happiest if they feel
that there are still unexplored erotic possibilities between them.
Furthermore, if they’re bored with their lives in other ways, that boredom
may start to creep into the bedroom. Leading as interesting a life together as
possible—something new to experience, something new to talk about—can
only make them more alive to one another and therefore help the natural
expression of their sexuality.
This composite Mars placement may be difficult for more retiring souls.
Yet what works for the couple is a freewheeling, saucy openness, a
celebration of Eros in their relationship, in their lives and in the world.
Insecure partners may need some extra reassurance, since the warmth and
looseness that this couple inspires in one another may be taken for
flirtatiousness or even come-ons by others.
It’s vital for these partners to feel that each one understands and honors
the ethical parameters of their relationship. If something feels ethically
wrong in their behavior with one another or with others, the spark between
them can go out pretty quickly. Yet if either partner feels squelched or
censored in a fearful, prudish kind of way, then rage can build up and
eroticism fade. Conflict may be handled in a more and more self-righteous
way, moral aspersions cast, and holier-than-thou claims wielded like
weapons. Therefore, it’s important that those ethical parameters be
something that the couple has worked out together and freely chosen, rather
than something imposed from without, or imposed by one partner upon the
other.
COMPOSITE MARS IN CAPRICORN
Capricorn is about a Great Work. With composite Mars in this sign, part of
the Great Work is sustaining and maintaining the erotic heat between these
partners. We forget who first joked, “A Capricorn is a repressed Scorpio,”
but there was definitely a kernel of truth in that one-liner. Capricorn is an
Earth sign and there’s plenty of heat here; it’s just expressed with more
reserve.
The evolutionary intentions here are to behave with integrity and self-
restraint, and to accomplish something significant together, to create some
sort of “structure” in the world that’s indicative of this couple’s inner values
and hard work—Capricorn rules manifestation on the physical plane.
To that end, this composite Mars sign probably operates better within the
context of a commitment. This couple needs to make promises, to trust
them—and to keep them. Those promises might consist of showing up on
time, getting the bills paid, sharing the upbringing of a child, living within
their means, or exchanging marriage vows. Whatever the promises are, they
should be honored. To paraphrase the psychologist M. Scott Peck, “Love is
responsible actions sustained over time.” Shared projects feed the
relationship too. Only then, with such a track record behind them, can these
partners trust one another enough to tap into the earthy core of potential
eroticism between them. That mutual trust has to be earned, but the rewards
are worth it. There is deep sensuality here. Combined with surprising
flashes of Capricorn whimsy and humor—where do we get our words
“capricious” and “Saturnalia”?—it can be a heady mix.
Yet Capricorn is not the most emotionally expressive of the signs. Rather
than making assumptions or trying to read cues, these partners may need to
learn to ask one another directly such questions as “Are you just tired, or
are you angry at me?” or “Do you want to have sex with me, but maybe just
not right now?” Otherwise they may feel hurt or rejected when that wasn’t
the partner’s intention at all. Such erroneous assumptions can cause a lot of
damage and, in a vicious circle, make it still harder to ask questions and
express feelings. Another trigger for hurt and anger is either partner’s
failure to fulfill his or her responsibilities, or a lack of respect. Such issues
need to be talked about, or one or both partners may retreat behind an icy
wall of Capricornishly correct behavior, “doing right by each other,” and
honoring the mere forms of the relationship and not its spirit.
COMPOSITE MARS IN AQUARIUS
The God of War in the house of the Rebel! This composite Mars placement
doesn’t necessarily refer to on-the-fringes sexual experimentation. It does
mean that this couple needs to ignore all of the how-to articles in women’s
(and men’s!) magazines about keeping sex steamy. Reading them might be
amusing, but taking them as guidelines won’t work here.
Every culture has its sexual icons, from Jean Harlow to Twiggy to Farah
Fawcett to J-Lo, from Rudolph Valentino to Sean Connery to Harrison Ford
to Johnny Depp. Those are individual icons, but we have relationship icons
too, and they vary not only from generation to generation but within a
generation. Napoleon and Josephine. Bonnie and Clyde. Lucy and Desi.
John and Yoko. Ronald and Nancy. Courtney and Kurt. Antonio and
Melanie. Brad and Jennifer. Not all of those couples are still together, or
still alive, and not all of those relationships were happy ones, yet their
stories have all influenced the popular culture of their heydays, and its
contemporary mythology and “rules” about relating.
We have lots of rules. Can you spot (only!) some of them in the
examples below? The man should be older than the woman. Money mates
with beauty. Beauty mates with power. Bubbly, air-headed women are
forgiven anything if they’re attractive enough. Live fast, die young and
leave a good-looking corpse. Women must have children. Some
relationships are doomed no matter what. Tragic figures are romantic. Here
are the conditions for a storybook romance. Here is how passionate lovers
behave. Men are redeemed by good women. All you need is love.
Unless we live on desert islands with no TV, movies, radio or magazines,
it’s hard for modern Westerners to avoid such influences. Human beings are
creatures of habit, and the less individuated we are, the more we
unquestioningly tend to imitate the patterns we see all around us.
And blind imitation of those iconic patterns or of any other relationship
“rules” is the kiss of death for the healthy sexuality of a couple with
composite Mars in Aquarius. The evolutionary intent here is to encourage
the couple’s physicality to be exactly what it truly is, avoiding surrender to
social pressure. Forget the Kinsey or the Hite reports. These two are making
it up as they go along. Getting past societal and parental influences is one
step. Getting past their own preconceived notions, or beliefs left over from
past relationships, is another one. It’s hard to describe the natural physical
expression of such a couple, because when, where and how often they
“should” have sex, what does and does not turn them on, even the
importance of sex itself in the relationship, should all be entirely of their
own conscious choosing.
The more these two allow themselves to be affected by outside
influences, the more they can feel as if they’re merely going through the
motions and not truly participating. One or both of them may then become
reflexively contrary. “You say yes, I’ll say no. You say black, I’ll say
white.” One or both of them may simply withdraw, physically and/or
emotionally, or anger and resentment may be shown by acting out in sudden
and unexpected ways.
COMPOSITE MARS IN PISCES
Pisces is the sign of mysticism, of visionary and transcendent experiences,
of merging with something larger than the mere ego. What is that larger
something? Spirit. The relationship. One’s country. One’s religion. The
universe. The soul. Art, music, creativity. This couple should not
“transcend” sex, but sex between them could be a high and transcendent
experience.
In Skymates: Love, Sex and Evolutionary Astrology, we quoted Rodney
Collin from his book, The Theory of Celestial Influence:

The key to the understanding of sex is the knowledge that sexual


energy is the finest and subtlest naturally produced by the human
organism. This sexual energy can be turned to any purpose, can
express itself on any level. It contains the potentiality of the highest
forms of creation, and it also contains the possibility of destroying a
man, and wrecking him, physically, morally and emotionally. It can
combine with his most bestial side, with criminal impulses of cruelty,
hatred, and fear, or it can combine with his most refined aspirations
and keenest sensibilities. And in either case it will immensely heighten
the tendency to which it becomes attached . . .

For no composite Mars sign are Collins’s words more true than for
composite Mars in Pisces.
At best, there can be great sweetness, generosity and mutual soul-
honoring here. This couple’s natural physicality is expressed, however
passionately, with sensitivity and with a sense of a flowing interchange of
emotions, of merging on more than just a physical level. Shared interests in
spirituality are helpful but not necessary.
Anything that helps make the act of love an otherworldly as well as a
sensual experience is appreciated: soft light, candles, music, a warm fire,
satin sheets, bubble baths, and the ringer on the phone turned off. Although
this may be bewildering for more earthy individuals, crudeness is the
opposite of an aphrodisiac for this couple.
Darker possibilities are available here, too. When Pisces doesn’t step
beyond the boundaries of the self in meditative or mystical ways, it can turn
to less healthy ways to reach that altered or otherworldly state. This couple
may need to be careful not to get too dependent upon champagne as an aid
to eroticism, for example. Such substances may seem to enhance things at
first, but if used in excess they can often blunt reactions later, besides
carrying dangers of their own. Moreover, sex itself could potentially used as
a way to avoid conflict, or to avoid facing various realities that the couple
needs to face and work through together.
A late, great North Carolina band, The Red Clay Ramblers, did a song
called “I Was Making Love, But You Were Only Fucking.” If either of these
partners gets a similar feeling about the relationship, resentment will start to
build. If left unresolved, that resentment could show up as avoidance of
intimacy, denial that there’s anything wrong, various forms of numbing
oneself, co-dependence, or passive aggression: getting “sick,” being late,
breaking promises, “forgetting” things, etc.
COMPOSITE MARS IN THE FIRST HOUSE
Anything in the first house is in the spotlight. It looms large in the
relationship, and everyone around sees it vividly too. For these two, with
their composite Mars in the First, we are talking about the “god of war,” so
stand back! The bond promises to be colorful and intense. Conflictual? Yes,
very probably. Passionate? Again, likely yes. And the interaction of those
ideas—conflict and passion—is the crux of the matter. With Mars this
strong, you can’t have one without the other.
No one in his right mind enjoys intimate conflict. It’s painful and awful,
unless we are sadists or masochists. But the alternative, given the
inescapable fact that lasting intimacy is challenging, is to bottle up the
tensions. That may work in terms of suppressing the expression of conflict,
but it really solves nothing. Resentments build up. Armed truces and painful
détentes are emotionally costly. Armed and fortified borders begin to exist
between the two—and all of these unfortunate images are warning signs for
a couple with their composite Mars in the first house! They could go down
that road. It’s not their doom, but it is the lower possibility. Before we
attend to the higher ground, let’s take one more step. Armed and fortified
borders—imagine two people in bed with that kind of energy between them.
Sexy? Of course not. Unresolved, unexpressed conflict kills passion. That is
an elemental principle with the planet Mars. And these two have it strongly
in their chemistry.
So what about that higher ground? The prize is passion that lasts. And
the road there is one of conscious, honest, fair conflict. It is essential that
these two recognize that “war” is part of love, as two jagged human stones
are gradually smashed into smoothness in the tireless, battering waves of
intimacy. There must be no taboo on anger here.
And it helps if there’s also been a “Geneva convention!” These two must
agree on the methods and rules of conflict. Can one person veto discussing
a conflict for an evening if he or she is feeling too tired to do good a job of
it? Can we agree that conundrums with my parents are my territory, and
conundrums with your parents are your territory? Are there particular words
we both agree not to use? None of these questions necessarily have obvious
answers. The couple must figure out what works for them, to create a
framework within which their battles can unfold with minimum mutual
destruction, and maximum potential for positive, acceptable resolution.
With Mars energy so strong for these two, it is beneficial if sometimes
they arrange to be pitted together against some external threat that is bigger
than either one of them. Maybe they take up sailing, and depend on each
other in the face of the primal might of wind and wave. Maybe they go to
Italy and face figuring out the subways of Milan. The point is that not all
this Mars force needs to be aimed at each other. Together, these two are a
team. The “warrior archetype” is powerful with them. It’s good for them to
be on the same side sometimes. That keeps the other processes in
perspective, and forges a deep mutual respect and interdependency.
COMPOSITE MARS IN THE SECOND HOUSE
Here’s a very simple traditional reading of composite Mars in the second
house: conflict and trouble over money. Of course common sense and
universal human experience do suggest that financial disagreements and
stresses are a common source of intimate friction, so the interpretation is a
plausible one. On top of that, sometimes as fate or karma would have it, we
observe couples with this configuration running into nasty “random” issues
with domestic finances: job losses, accidents, fires, even theft. Such
eventualities can indeed lead to trouble between these two as they attempt
to survive the adversity.
But we also see conflicts over money that are less directly linked to “real
world” challenges, and more reflective of dynamics within the relationship:
trouble over the perception that one person is paying less than his or her fair
share, for example. Or petty, dispiriting scenes over who paid for dinner last
time.
Cutting to the chase, with Mars the issue is always the appropriate
expression of force—courage, entrepreneurial spirit, and energy. Imagine a
couple with this configuration struggling to “make ends meet” after the
birth of a child. Should he give up his costly poker night with his buddies?
Or should she not attend her expensive art class? Perhaps they are fighting
over who will get the short end of the stick—when up above their guardian
angels are saying just go make some more money! A shared underlying
commitment to a fear-based view of survival, and hence of finance, is the
evolutionary issue here. These two need to develop confidence, force, and
focus as a couple, and money is the school house for that work. An
exaggerated love of money—simple materialism—isn’t the point, of course.
That helps no one. But they have a right to survive and to thrive. As they
awaken their shared Mars energy, these two can really forge themselves into
a team, setting goals and attaining them. If they were a Paleolithic couple,
they might have been born into a famine generated by climate change. They
could try to live on lichen and moss—or they could bravely get up and go
where the mastodons had gone. Nowadays, our “mastodons” are a little
more abstract. They take the form of the money that buys us food, shelter,
and certain material joys.
These two need to “go hunting” together.
COMPOSITE MARS IN THE THIRD HOUSE
The God of War in the house of speech! What does that phrase conjure up
for you? Lively conversations? Heated words, stinging repartee, ruffled
feathers, flying crockery? Well, all of the above may be possible. Even
more so than most couples, this one needs to learn to fight fair. Keep in
mind, as you read the paragraphs below, that speech is only one of the many
ways we communicate, and that the following concepts can also be applied
to this couple’s tones of voice, facial expressions, body language, eye
contact, letters and email.
For sexual heat to remain in this bond, as many lines of communication
need to be kept open as possible. Attaining that goal depends largely on
how those things are said. Honestly, yes. Directly, yes. Forthrightly, yes.
With the aims of communicating erotic and non-erotic needs, and of
expressing pleasure and displeasure, yes. All of those processes will help
keep passion alive. But communicating sarcastically? With mockery,
grandstanding, or teasing? Dangerous—because they’re too good at it!
Words have power in this relationship. Immense power, as if they were
spells. Power to thrill and arouse, to infuse new energy into this bond, to
clear the air—and power to wound.
Remember, also, that this is the house of perception, the house of
questions, the house of wonder. If this couple is bored with their lives,
individually or together, they may mistake that boredom for having tired of
one another. Therefore, attention paid to maintaining an interesting, fast-
paced life is attention well spent.
Yet “interesting” may also mean “stressful.” Where Mars lives, stress is
frequently a fellow tenant. Communication, the life of the mind, and a full
and colorful life can be joyous things, but Mars may draw a bit too much
third house activity to this couple for comfort, particularly if they are milder
individuals. Their schedules may fill to bursting, leaving them pleading for
an unstructured night off together. They need to be Martial enough to claim
such a night, not merely long for it! Computers may break down, phone and
Internet lines be subject to annoying and inexplicable interference, the mail
fall prey to mysterious delivery problems, and cars malfunction as if
possessed by minor demons. Such hassles can become trigger points for
conflicts and flare-ups. (“You’re driving both of us crazy! Can we just slow
down?”) If these conflicts are allowed to fester, both partners will be too
tired and irritable to maintain a healthy sexual connection. If handled with
humor, frequent double-checking of details, and the twin resolutions not to
overextend themselves and not to schedule engagements for one another
without asking first, then the resolution of such conflicts can draw them
closer together and teach them more about good boundaries, verbal and
otherwise.
COMPOSITE MARS IN THE FOURTH HOUSE
There is a deep core of passionate heat in this couple. With composite Mars
in the fourth house, the fires can burn for a lifetime. But to do so, they need
the right incubator: a safe place. A Hobbit-hole. A home. In modern
astrological practice, there is a tendency to ignore something that was
profoundly obvious to our forebears in the field: that the fourth house is
ultimately the most relationship-oriented of the twelve houses. We still
often call it the “house of the home,” but then we tend to think of mere
buildings, relating fourth house issues to questions of geographical moves
and interior design. This view misses that most proverbial of observations:
a house is not a home. A home is, above all, a set of relationships
characterized by stability, loyalty, permanence, and an unquestioning pledge
of mutual aid and assistance. And for the couple with composite Mars in the
fourth, the full blossoming of their sexuality can only occur in that
particular hothouse.
And “hot” it will be—in every sense. Where Mars lies, stress tends to
follow. Home, ideally, is a place where one can relax. But with Mars in the
fourth, the couple tends to magnetize hassles into their home. They may
have more than their fair share of simple mechanical or existential
misfortune there—burst pipes, leaky roofs, evil landlords, noisy or scary
neighbors. Maybe they work at home, with all the demonology that entails.
Perhaps they have to fight a protracted battle to get the kind of place they
want and need. There may be knotty issues around different lifestyle needs.
Any or all of these kinds of problems are likely to be epicenters of anger in
the coupling process. Handled well, they bring the two people closer.
Handled poorly, and we see the classic dark Mars scenario: a repression of
sexual response within the relationship, followed inevitably by the fire and
ice of rage.
Of all the potential stressors connected with home life for a couple with
composite Mars in the fourth house, number one is typically that classic
fourth house correlate: the family of origin. Demanding parents or in-laws
can become a sore point, and that remains true regardless of whether their
demands are groundless, insensitive and self-indulgent (“Thou shalt come
to our house every Sunday for dinner”), or real (“I am penniless, sick, and
have nowhere else to turn”). Digging deeper, the core anger-triggering issue
here lies in the unresolved parental projections of either or both of the
lovers with this configuration. The tendency to confuse one’s partner with
one’s parent is of course one of the shibboleths of modern psychology. In
this case, we look specifically at Mars-energy in that regard: unexpressed,
unresolved anger at a parent, or repressed childhood hurt as a result of
inappropriate anger or violence on the part of a parent.
As always with Mars, handling these questions poorly kills sex. And
handling them well preserves and intensifies it.
COMPOSITE MARS IN THE FIFTH HOUSE
There’s fire in the chemistry these two generate together. It needs to be
released. If it backs up between them, it will only generate tension that
quickly explodes into the sort of conflict that has the dramatic visuals of
World War Three and the content of a scuffle in a kindergarten playground.
Far better to release this energy in more enjoyable ways.
Mars loves the kinds of release that make us all sweaty and red in the
face. Does that bring any creative possibilities to mind? We thought so.
Sexuality promises to be a renewing, sustaining force in this relationship.
Approaching lovemaking with imagination and daring is crucial: those
qualities are intrinsic to any positive response to the fifth house. It’s helpful
to remember that one of the oldest associations with this house is “love
affairs” or simply “courtship.” So what is sex like between new lovers? The
word “enthusiastic” comes quickly to mind. And most of us, upon
reflection, realize that a big part of the enthusiasm comes from the sheer
newness and freshness of the relationship. So, with composite Mars in the
fifth house, newness and freshness become key concepts here. For these
two, even after long years together, it helps channel this Mars fire for them
to seize sexual opportunities as new lovers would: opportunities might arise
to have sex out of doors, for example.
The fifth house isn’t all about sex. We just can’t get it right without a
right relationship to Eros, that’s all. With that kind of verve and spontaneity
in place, the couple can move forward into two more areas of significance
for them. One is sports. The other is shared creativity.
“Sports” must be defined broadly here: basically we are again back to
anything that gets them all sweaty and red in the face. It doesn’t have to be
competitive, although tennis will do it. So could kayaking or hiking
together. Or dancing—which leads us to think of the other fifth house pillar:
shared creativity. A couple dancing together is engaged in an activity with
many of the attributes of a sport, but they are also expressing something
primal about who they are together as bodies and as souls. We can stretch
our imaginations outward and see these two people drumming together—or
nervously awaiting their cues to go on stage in a dramatic performance.
The fifth is often called the house of children, and some astrologers
would predict trouble through kids here because of the association of Mars
with conflict. That could be the case, but here’s a creative way to frame it: if
these two have trouble releasing their own “inner children” as we have been
describing above, then they’ll surely have trouble with real-life kids too.
Fortunately, the formula works the other way too: if they make peace with
their own bumptious, rambunctious, noisy, playful, hell-raising inner
children, they’ll get along fine with any children who come into the world
through them or who fall into the orbit of their care.
COMPOSITE MARS IN THE SIXTH HOUSE
Stressful work and stressful responsibilities wear people down. Given a
long run of that kind of pressure, two individuals will tend to get snappish,
even cold and brutal. With composite Mars in the sixth house, there is a
tendency for this couple to attract that kind of pressure into their lives,
especially as their relationship develops over time. Given long exposure, it
could even have an adverse impact upon their physical health.
This is about as far as the fortune-telling astrologer would go: there is a
tendency to think of Mars as “bad,” and to relate the sixth house to our
duties. From the evolutionary perspective, the prospects are far less gloomy.
There, Mars is always a challenge to our fierceness. Can you two growl?
Can you set boundaries—and, more to the point, can you defend them?
Where Mars lies, you will be Hunter or you will be Prey. Take your pick,
but it will surely be one or the other.
So, we ask this couple: to whom have you given the right to set the
agenda of your responsibilities? And why? You probably must work—but
you don’t need to sacrifice your health or your relationship on that altar. An
impossible, soul-eating job? There are other jobs. Find one. Or set
boundaries at work and courageously let the chips fall where they may.
Demanding families? Once again, Just Say No. Life is hard sometimes, and
ethical imperatives do bind us. But with composite Mars in the sixth house,
without these fair and honorable boundaries your relationship will be
devoured.
How can you learn to do this gracefully? One answer lies in a largely
forgotten dimension of sixth house symbolism: mentors. Typically these are
people sufficiently older than yourselves that you notice the age difference.
They may not be inherently wiser than you, but experience has tempered
their intelligence into an understanding greater than yours. You can profit
from their mistakes—and they’ll be happy to put those mistakes to that
good use. How do you recognize these mentors? They’ll have a strong
Mars-signature in their energy and behavior: something appealing to you,
but edgy and penetrating. You sense immediately that it won’t work for you
to behave foolishly around them. They will call you on it. And if you don’t
like that, they shrug their shoulders and walk away.
Taking it a step further, let’s recognize that intimate conflict can be
handled skillfully. There are techniques that work better than others. These
mentors may help you two come to terms with how to handle your own
more heated negotiations. For example, the mentors may teach you, through
demonstration and example, that conflict is fine—nothing to worry too
much about! And then they might show you how it goes better if you keep
it specific: “It bothers me that you left your underpants on the bedroom
floor again,” rather than, “You are always such a pig!”
Seek these Teachers. Your composite chart promises that they exist. As
this relationship moves into greater seriousness, you will encounter them.
And eventually, you two will pass the gift they offer you on to others.
COMPOSITE MARS IN THE SEVENTH HOUSE
The God of War in the House of Marriage? Yikes! It sounds pretty grim—
but Fear Not. For one thing, the seventh house always refers to “other
people.” In your personal birthchart, it signifies your partner or your close
friends. But here we are talking about a composite Mars in the seventh
house, and in the composite chart, the seventh refers to relationships that
you have as a couple. It is these relationships, not necessarily your own,
that are characterized by Mars energy.
That probably feels a little better than thinking of your own primary
bond as doomed to endless war, but it is still daunting to think of a promise
of ongoing conflict with others. Here we come to the heart of the matter:
conflict with others is a real possibility, but there is higher ground too.
Wherever Mars lies in a composite chart, the couple must practice the
“yoga” of fierceness. Boundaries must be set—and defended. It is highly
probable that early in the relationship you will encounter people—possibly
couples—who seem hellbent on sabotaging your trust for each other or your
faith in your relationship. These may be individuals whom you have trusted
in the past. But there is something about you two together that pushes their
buttons. The challenge here is to stand up to them, proudly and confidently.
They can accept your love for each other and respect it, or they can kiss you
goodbye. It’s their call. And something steely and loyal is forged between
the two of you in that encounter.
On a more simply positive note, with Mars in the seventh house the right
friendships must be established to support the primary bond. These will be
with Martial people. That means honest, direct folks, people who don’t
mince words with you, but upon whom you can count when the fur starts
flying. If they are other couples, they’ll probably tend to be rather frank
with you about their sexuality and about their conflicts. You’ll sense deep
loyalty to each other, but no undue respect—they’ll tease and challenge
each other, much in the fashion of warriors with a flagon or three of ale
under their belts.
In the seventh house, we are always learning something that we really
need to know, but that we can only learn from others. The couple with
composite Mars in their seventh house is learning something about the right
channeling of heat, passion, anger, and friction within the context of an
ongoing bond of radical, die-with-your-boots-on commitment: we trust
slowly and we choose our friends carefully, testing their honesty and their
loyalty.
But once chosen, we don’t look back.
COMPOSITE MARS IN THE EIGHTH HOUSE
Any fool can fall in love, but it takes a lot of courage to stay there!
Eternally, everything seems rosy at love’s outset—and just as eternally,
everything tends to get very complicated within about six weeks. Nothing is
so effective as love at bringing our scariest, most emotionally-charged
issues bubbling up to the surface. The eighth house is traditional astrology’s
house of death—and the title gets us in the right mood! Something always
has to die here, and usually it’s connected with our pride, our defenses, or
our attachments. With their composite Mars—the war god—in the eighth
house, this couple has signed up to face their fears, individually and
together. They bring those fears out in each other.
At first, it doesn’t feel that way. The universe really wants this
relationship to come into being, so it uses one of its most effective and
cunning tricks to accomplish that end: steam rises in the space between
these two! It fills the atmosphere. There is a deep feeling of wanting each
other. And of course, provided the usual existential green lights are
reasonably in place, the majority of us find that kind of juice quite
magnetic. In we rush.
That’s not necessarily a mistake. But beneath the initial pulse of passion
there lurks the war god. There is a wall of fire here. Its mortar is anger. And
its bricks are every hurt, every insult, every shaming word that either of
them has ever endured. Whatever gender attracts us, there is an excellent
chance we’ve been wounded grievously by one of its representatives. These
damaging experiences don’t evaporate, even after we’ve stopped planning
grisly passages into the Next World for our former beloved. They lurk
inside us, waiting for the right trigger. And that trigger is typically not
simply sexual energy—it is mating energy. We can be turned on erotically
or romantically by a fairly large number of people, but with how many
could we actually, potentially, form a life-long bond? It’s a rare experience,
and a precious one. But once we have approached that borderline, our
deeper unresolved tensions and fears make themselves felt. And with
composite Mars in the eighth house, these tensions and fears have teeth.
The low road here is a familiar story: a relationship that begins in a blaze
of passion—and flames out before the VISA bill arrives for that first fancy
French dinner.
To follow the higher road, these two must think like warriors.
Strategically. Patiently. And courageously. Like warriors, they need to be
able to trust each other—loyalty is central here, and thus some degree of
commitment must arise early in this process. A minimum bet is a
commitment to honesty, demonstrated and made believable by emotional
risks in that department. As they see this kind of emotional courage in each
other, that wonderful initial passion sees a City of Gold on the far horizon: a
passion that survives the years. But it lies on the other side of a dark valley,
populated with all the monsters that have been hiding under the bed for
each of them.
COMPOSITE MARS IN THE NINTH HOUSE
Stretching the horizons: that’s the ninth house in a nutshell. We can do it
literally by traveling. We can do it mentally, through learning and
education. We can do it by letting our hearts and intuitions reach outward in
an attempt to feel the meaning of life in our bones. And above all we can do
it by simply opening ourselves up to new experience in every way.
Now put Mars into the equation: the war god isn’t necessarily as bloody-
minded as his name implies, but he does like a certain edge on those new
experiences. Not just “travel,” but adventure. Not just “education,” but a
brave commitment to pioneering radical and controversial new thoughts.
Not just some safe armchair philosophy, but a robust belief in the virtue of
diving into everything head first. For this couple, with their composite Mars
in the ninth house, those are the formulas for a healthy thrust of passion in
the life they share.
Picture them emerging from the mountains after a four-day hike. They’ve
experienced some dangers. They’ve comforted each other with touch when
they both thought there was a bear outside the tent. They’ve come through
heroically for each other, in other words. And the soul of the bond is deeper
for it.
Not everyone is physically or mentally equipped for an adventure as
physical as that one. Each couple must adjust the metaphor to their own
reality, but always the core remains: something grows stronger in these two
when they test the limits of their shared courage.
At a more intellectual level, composite Mars in the ninth house loves to
explore controversial beliefs and bodies of knowledge—astrology is an
excellent example! There is a distinct potential in this couple of actually
moving such a body of knowledge forward—pioneering a new technique or
theory.
A “warrior religion” arises naturally between these two—and that
doesn’t mean they are likely to start practicing human sacrifice in their
backyard. By “religion” we mean a set of values by which they guide their
lives and interpret their experience. Warriors admire courage, loyalty, and
taking personal responsibility for one’s actions and one’s fate. Such an
attitude toward the relationship is natural and appropriate for this couple:
they can make it what they want it to be. They can be brave enough to keep
it honest. They can show the courage it takes to ask for what they need and
say what they see. They can fear the ragged edges of anger, but never let
that fear silence them. And they can commit to defending each other with a
do-or-die fierceness.
COMPOSITE MARS IN THE TENTH HOUSE
Something precious needs protection, and it’s up to this couple to take care
of it. That’s their mission in this world. As befits the nature of Mars, that
mission is warrior-work. They are likely to make enemies in the process.
Furthermore, with their composite Mars in the tenth house, this battle
promises to be public. The community will witness it. Before we start
sounding like this relationship is based on the script of an Arnold
Schwarzenegger film, let’s add a few subtleties: some battles are fought
quietly, just by holding the space for some truth or principle. Some weapons
don’t explode or have sharp bloody edges; words are a good example. And
there are no enemies we have to hate. It is enough simply to defeat them.
Not everyone is comfortable with this kind of language, even after we
extract some of the canine teeth from our language. But Mars is part of life,
and thus competition is intrinsic to the way of nature—even if we would
prefer to avoid it.
Perhaps these two bring an astrological lecturer to their town. Before
they know it, they’ve upset a group of Fundamentalists. Maybe they
become involved in an attempt to establish a greenbelt around their
community—and incidentally protect a few innocent birds and squirrels.
Suddenly, some housing developers are up in arms. We could imagine them
starting a yoga studio—and finding, to their surprise and dismay, that
they’ve made enemies of the people who run another yoga studio a couple
of miles away. Competition wasn’t their goal, but it’s the perception—and,
arguably, the reality, even if they are not specifically motivated to compete.
Perhaps they become involved in a soccer league so their kids can get some
healthy exercise, and it turns out that some of the other parents are treating
the games like a World War.
In none of these situations did our couple ask for trouble! But sometimes
trouble finds them, and sometimes walking away is not the best answer: the
principles involved are in fact worth a little adrenalin and lost sleep. And
whenever that is the case, we’re back to square one: it is because there is
something at stake that is under attack and worth protecting.
Not every couple with a composite planet in the tenth house actually
winds up working professionally together, but it is a distinct possibility.
Together, these two are simply a terrific team. Pressure may not “comfort”
them, but it does bring out the steel in their bond. As a unit, they
complement each other’s skills and can be effective joint competitors in any
area that excites and stimulates them both.
One side effect of having composite Mars in the tenth house is fairly
obvious from all we’ve said so far: not everyone will feel positively toward
these two. They’ll come to be identified publicly with a rather distinct
“position,” and that position will certainly have its detractors. Spiritually,
their inner challenge is to avoid hatred—and to make sure that the position
they are defending reflects their deepest values. And outwardly, their
challenge is to win. The issue is bigger than they are.
COMPOSITE MARS IN THE ELEVENTH HOUSE
Like Merlin the Wizard ageing backwards, the sexual passion in this
relationship gathers momentum over time. That’s if they play their cards
right! Most of us naturally assume the opposite: that we’re hottest at the
beginning, then settle down into a more mellow expression of body heat.
But sex is a tremendous mystery and deeply affected by human
individuality, even at the physical level. Speaking strictly of the body, we
can recognize that there’s always a learning curve with a new lover—and a
“teaching curve” too. Over time, people can learn what works erotically for
each other. They can also learn the deeper levels of physical trust that allow
sex, even in its most “gymnastic” expressions, to blossom. That is part of
what is going on with these two people—again, if they play their cards
right.
So how might they play them wrong? Repressed, contained frustration
with another human being is a terrible aphrodisiac. When we are angry with
someone, we usually don’t want them even touching us. With their
composite Mars in the eleventh house, the risk is that these kinds of
tensions just build and build, with a catastrophic impact upon, among other
things, their sex lives. The key then lies in working skillfully with anger and
frustration as soon as they arise, finding reasonable accommodations and
compromises, and making sure that every inevitable episode of vexation has
a net effect of deepening their trust in each other. That’s a tall order, and
they don’t have to nail it every time! But that is really the key. Either way,
that Mars energy is going to grow between them—that’s the nature of the
eleventh house. Will it be sex or will it be rage? That’s the big question, and
they answer it a little bit with every passing day.
Naturally, in the darker scenarios, there is a significant chance that the
relationship simply blows up before too many seasons have gone by. And if
they are getting it wrong, that is probably a blessing for them—not to
mention for the neighbors.
In the happier, higher scenario, we can add another piece to the puzzle.
Sex pervades life, but sexual expression is different between post-pubescent
kids kissing at a birthday party and two seventy-year-olds who’ve just met
and are exploring a relationship. With composite Mars in the eleventh
house, there is something about the natural sexual chemistry between these
two people that improves with age. Their needs, styles, and appetites
between the sheets all tend to converge over time, creating unexpected
delights in their later years . . . assuming, of course, that they do their early
work around the dance of anger.
COMPOSITE MARS IN THE TWELFTH HOUSE
Many a traditional astrologer would cast a nervous glance at Mars in the
twelfth house, viewing it as portending secret enemies, surprise attacks, and
injury. That view is unnecessarily grim, although we will integrate it—
optionally!—into our evolutionary perspective before we are done. The key
here is the realization that edgy, extreme experiences often strip us down to
the bones, spiritually speaking. A near-miss in an automobile, for example,
can lead a person to think profound thoughts about the ultimate direction
and purpose of life. Illness has often brought new, more vigorous existential
engagement to someone who survives it. The familiar cliché about there
being “no atheists in foxholes” summarizes the point quite succinctly: when
the chips are down, we turn to the eternal.
With their composite Mars in the twelfth house, these two people have
signed up for a fierce path. Any planet in that house operates much like a
guru—whether we like it or not. And Mars is a demanding one, especially if
we resist it. That is the critical point: this couple can voluntarily go out and
meet the extreme edges, or those edges can come and find them.
Volunteering is not only the higher ground; it is also a lot more pleasant.
What might that look like? Always, it is about taking chances based on
faith. Imagine these two people camping on a mountaintop. It’s late at night.
They are isolated. Various carnivorous beasts lurk in the shadows—and
overhead the stars have never looked so transcendentally glorious. They lie
on their backs, holding each other, content to know this might be their last
night on earth. That phrase is perhaps too dramatic, but it makes the point.
The edge of fear, the sense of our smallness and fragility, the brevity of our
physical lives in this vast, hard universe—all these forces come together in
the perfection of that moment.
And their war-god guru gazes down upon them, respectfully and
satisfied.
Of course if they decided they would rather spend their vacation safely in
front of the television set, that’s when the house catches fire! That’s when
thieves strike.
The point here is not all about magic moments on mountaintops,
although that imagery is quite appropriate. Let’s also recognize that there
are chances based on faith that we take in the framework of the relationship
itself: the scary interpersonal subject we bring up, the confession we make
for the sake of keeping the relationship honest, the sexual fantasy or need
we overcome embarrassment and fear to express. Those spooky paths can
lead us to other kinds of mountaintops as well—and, as we have seen,
mountaintops are the safest place in the world for these two souls.
Chapter 11
The Composite Jupiter
J upiter, in the astrological literature, is commonly related to beliefs and to
the idea of religion. That’s valid, but we have to be careful with the
notion or it can mislead us. In the core of the planet’s spirit is a quality of
sheer exuberance: an enthusiasm for life, and an appetite for it. The terms
“beliefs” and “religion” convey a kind of heady, cerebral dryness, like a set
of reasoned position papers on the questions of life. And that’s not Jupiter!
It may be related indirectly to those kinds of attitudes, processes and views.
But the direct relationship is with the emotions they trigger in us, at least if
the attitudes and views are the products of authentic experience. Those
emotions are profoundly life-affirming. They are happy. They make us want
to clap our hands, laugh until the tears run down and then laugh some more.
Jupiter is the part of us that believes in life. It’s more about the feeling we
call “faith” than it is about the intellectual views we call our “beliefs.”
In intimacy, the composite Jupiter has everything to do with the capacity
of the couple to have faith in their union. It carries the feeling that there is a
cosmic, transcendent or theological reason for our being together. And that
feeling is absolutely precious when it comes to weathering the hard times
love sometimes presents. The simplest illustration would be a traditional
marriage between two conventional people, performed under religious
auspices—they believe that marriage is a sacrament, that God has brought
them together, and that it would be a grievous violation of the laws of the
universe for them to fail each other. We might question their belief-system,
but that’s not the point. The point is the sheer power of those beliefs in
terms of keeping their union intact. And the key is that under Jupiter we see
the evolutionary need for an external, transcendent framework which gives
meaning and support to the process of loving.
Where do we find it? How can two people locate such a powerful
foundation for this simple faith in their partnership? We look to the position
of the composite Jupiter for the answer. In this area of their lives together,
the couple must look for signs, omens and miracles. They must expect
them. And here’s the fun part: they must prime the pump by behaving in a
way that is “pleasing unto Lord Jupiter.” And, happily, that means blowing
it out sometimes. That means investing in themselves. It means taking risks,
being wise fools, celebrating. The great yoga of faith is a willingness to be
alive, to embrace our appetites, and never to settle for anything less than the
best. “Let’s go to France this summer. We’ll pay for it somehow . . . ”
Paradoxically, where the composite Jupiter lies is often an area where the
couple is vulnerable to short-changing themselves. Under the banners of
“realism,” “common sense,” and “humility,” they may fail to sit at Jupiter’s
feasting table. They may fail to see the possibilities that lie before them.
Underlying this self-limiting behavior is a karmic wound—and hence the
evolutionary perspective on the configuration. In a prior life together, there
was an adaptation to limitation and lack in terms of the sign and house
composite Jupiter occupies. A great dose of grayness was swallowed.
And now, the time has come to eat a rainbow.
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN ARIES
Aries is the cosmic Warrior. It is about courage and fire and the kinds of
virtues that are forged in flames. With their composite Jupiter in this sign,
the bond between these two people grows deeper and stronger when they
stand their ground for each other in stressful situations. Like soldiers who
have risked their lives for each other, the loyalty that links them can be
fierce and lifelong. Iron needs fire in order to become steel, and that is the
principle that gives these two faith in their relationship.
At a mechanical level of interpretation, we can safely predict adventures
for this couple. Perhaps they share interest in a physical sport. Maybe they
play tennis. It is easy to imagine them mountaineering or flying a plane. We
can picture them in a sports car, top down and taking a curve with a certain
élan—and perhaps discussing that interest in speed a few moments later
with a traffic cop!
At a more evolutionary and open level of interpretation, it is better to
suggest those kinds of vigorous activity. These two need adventure. They
need edge. Why? Because in order to have faith in their bond, they need to
come through for each other. Each one needs to see the other in warrior-
glory. That isn’t about violence; it’s about honor, courage, and steady
nerves. The more they take risks together and learn to count on each other,
the deeper their love grows.
Not all these shared risks are physical. Composite Jupiter in Aries also
manifests positively when one of them takes an emotional risk with the
other. In any relationship, there are subjects people are afraid to bring up.
Should one take such a risk, it’s very helpful if the other partner takes a
moment simply to say “Thank you for your courage,” before responding to
the content. Warriors may be profoundly loyal to each other, willing even to
die for each other. But they also need to express respect and dignity toward
each other, or their swords will be drawn. And that is the essence of
composite Jupiter in Aries—this fire needs to be directed into forging the
bond between them, or the relationship will start to look like one of those
explosion-a-minute movies they make for pubescent boys.
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN TAURUS
We humans complicate relationships enormously. We have therapists and
books and astrological techniques, all to help us do something that penguins
and mourning doves do without much apparent intellectual challenge! All
the complexities of our psychological lives aside, there is ultimately
something very simple about intimacy. And that simplicity is the heart of
Taurus. With their composite Jupiter there, this couple’s ability to have faith
in their love depends upon tapping into it.
Let’s boil human sexual love down to its bones. First, there are three
items on the sexual menu: celibacy, endless dating, or trying to make a
relationship work. Any permanent takers for choices one or two? We didn’t
think so. That leaves choice three. So how do we do it? Choose someone
who “smells right”—you’ve got to trust your instincts. Be kind to each
other. Accept each others’ imperfections. Make love. Go ahead and
entangle your lives. Fight when you need to, and always forgive each other.
Share a home once you’ve danced around each other successfully for a year
or so. It’s chicken-soup simple.
Well, if it were really that simple, we wouldn’t be writing these words!
But for this couple with their composite Jupiter in Taurus, the more they can
take that grounded, instinctual attitude toward their bond, the deeper their
faith in it grows. They need to feel that animal-instinct of rightness about
their relationship. How can they maximize that? Always, the answer lies in
simple things. It is enormously beneficial for them to make time to just hold
each other: touch is elemental to Taurus, as is the simple, physical comfort
of familiar intimacy. Eating long, slow delicious meals together helps. So
does spending time in nature, away from the mental complications of urban
life. One of the wisest moves they can make is to invite animal-friends into
their relationship: they need cats or dogs or horses to help keep them aware
of what is really, ultimately important. Their home needs to reflect these
Taurean values too. Expensive luxuries may be part of it: a hot tub, a king-
size bed, a sensual sofa upon which to flop. But spending money isn’t the
issue; most of us can actually relax a lot more naturally and effectively at
home than in an expensive hotel. And with composite Jupiter in Taurus, that
relaxation is the heart of the process. In calm, in simplicity, in naturalness,
their love shines through.
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN GEMINI
Good communication skills are the foundation of any healthy relationship.
That insight isn’t going to win any prizes, of course! Everyone with an IQ
above the price of dinner for two has said it a million times. Gemini is the
sign of language, and so with their composite Jupiter there, it’s easy for us
to roll out clichés about the importance of talking everything out. With
these two people, that’s a truth—and maybe a “truer truth” for them than for
couples in general. But it’s still beside the point. The real point is that a
witty, fascinating meeting of two intelligences is the heart of what gives
them faith in their bond. To believe in themselves as a couple, they need
laughter and verbal play. And they are probably good at it! They also need
to interest each other consistently. If one of them has a wild idea, it’s a
delight to get it on the table. Even if it’s completely wrongheaded, just the
sheer zaniness and novelty can trigger speculation, new insight, lively
exchanges—the soul of composite Jupiter in Gemini. It follows that each of
them feeds their relationship when they independently feed their own
minds. One of them may have a nose in a book or magazine and not be
saying anything. That’s just gathering grist for the mill. Give it a little while
and that new information will be drawing interest in the endless dialog.
Gemini is easily bored. With composite Jupiter in Gemini, there is a risk
of the relationship feeling predictable and stultifying, given the reality that
after a while two people have heard each other’s stories a few times. What
gets our merry couple through that challenge is not patient, stoic endurance
—it’s the quest for more amazement and wonder. When in doubt, they need
to attend a lecture together. Or go to a new restaurant. Or plan a trip to
somewhere they’ve never been. Or look through a telescope. Life is not
inherently boring. Relationships get boring because people do—and a sad
truth is that people in relationships often settle into predictable, dull patterns
that single people wisely avoid. If these two let that happen, they’re risking
losing touch with the basis of believing in themselves as a couple.
One final note: with composite Jupiter in Gemini, our two heroes need to
be very wary of television, the Internet, and similar media. Certainly, they
can be wonderful sources of stimulating ideas, and thus they flow naturally
into everything this configuration needs and wants. The danger is the way
those kinds of media can be isolating and soporific; the key here is mental
engagement with each other—not just private sensory stimuli.
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN CANCER
Go to the movies and there’s plenty of sex. But when was the last time you
saw a juicy kissing scene between two people who’d known each other
longer than a week or two? We romanticize the process of falling in love,
but as a culture we seem to ignore it beyond the horizon of a brief affair.
That’s sad, because there is potentially a lot more love—and, actually, even
better sex—a little further down the road, if we survive its many potholes!
Celebrating this idea is the heart of understanding what sustains a couple
with their composite Jupiter in Cancer.
Cancer is about home and hearth. It’s about the deep, sweet familiarity
that can arise between two people who’ve truly gone beyond courtship into
the more profound territory of being bonded to each other. It’s about a
nurturing feeling of comfort that those two movie-lovers might glimpse
after a year or two, if they survive the bumps. With composite Jupiter in
Cancer, these two can draw tremendous faith in their love from
experiencing that kind of commitment.
It can’t be rushed. When we see this configuration in the charts of new
lovers, we know that the stakes are high. There is nothing casual about this
relationship—or, better said, if it is casual it will also be brief. And that’s
fine. In either case, they should savor the processes of getting to know each
other and of coming to trust and appreciate each other. Passion is fast, but
Cancer-bonding is patient and slow. The first time they sit quietly together,
comfortable and connected despite having nothing to say, they’ve passed
the first hurdle.
After a while, with composite Jupiter in Cancer, finding a home together
will become pivotally important. It need not be fancy or expensive, but it
does need to be a safe, nurturing kind of Hobbit-hole. Ideally, it will have
the kind of kitchen that naturally draws people to congregate there. And the
bedroom needs soft light and a sense of being separate from the buzzing
world. Once this archetypal Cancerian reality starts to take hold, these two
will increasingly feel the joy and freedom that come with safety and
security in a relationship. Within that context, sexuality can blossom into
the kind of natural tenderness and comfort they never show in the movies.
Given a little while, another Cancer territory will open up for our heroes,
one that can further cement their ability to feel the rightness of their bond:
nurturing others. Children are a natural expression of this energy, but we
can also see their urge to care for other beings manifesting with a lucky
menagerie of pets they gather—or broken-hearted friends sipping tea in that
famous, mellow, consoling kitchen of theirs.
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN LEO
Leo is a performer. Even if it’s shy, it needs some applause. Jupiter is about
a couple having faith in themselves as a unit and simply feeling happy
about being in the relationship. With composite Jupiter in Leo, we add two
and two and realize that this couple needs to strut a bit. They need other
people to believe in them. They need to look good to their community and
they need to hear about it.
All this could make these two sound incredibly shallow! Why isn’t their
own faith in themselves sufficient? To answer that question, we really need
to get past our cultural obsession with steely-eyed self-sufficiency. Watch a
musician or a comedian blossom on stage when the audience is enthusiastic.
Or watch a lover light up in your own bed when you’ve helped him or her
feel beautiful and appreciated. None of us are really islands, whatever our
pretenses. A movie couple may thrive on an attitude of “you and me against
the world.” But that feeling isn’t really very likely to last in reality. If all our
friends believe we’re dating a dork, it takes a toll.
But what if everyone we love and trust believes that we’ve found a
match made in heaven? That we’ve found the person with whom we are
supposed to be? How precious that is! And this brings us right to the heart
of composite Jupiter in Leo: these two benefit enormously from being seen
in a supportive way. Part of the energy that sustains them must arise from
outside their relationship, in the hearts and minds of their community.
How can they invoke that kind support? Start by asking yourself what
qualities might distinguish a “lucky couple.” Those are the answers. They
are kind and attentive to each other in public, always treating each other
with respect and affection. They compliment each other. They often behave
as if they’ve just met and are falling in love: they dress up. They are seen
engaged in private conversation in restaurants. They attend cultural events
together. They hold hands. They dance. Their relationship progresses
through the natural escalation of commitment and life-sharing that unfolds
as people love more deeply.
Any of those behaviors can be faked, of course. But why? Should a
couple with composite Jupiter in Leo come to a place where it’s just bad
theater, they should probably part. But if those kinds of emotions are
sincere, they need to recognize that expressing them publicly produces an
outpouring of energy from their community—and, like a rocket booster,
that energy can carry them into deeper joy, pleasure, and faith.
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN VIRGO
People in stable relationships live longer, healthier lives than singles do.
Why? Some of it is probably simply a greater level of happiness. And love
is very high on everyone’s list of reasons to live. Most of us have
discovered that it’s harder to get motivated to prepare a healthy meal if
we’re eating alone. That probably has something to do with it too. No
matter what the nature of our composite chart, these observations reflect
reality. But for this couple with their composite Jupiter in Virgo, they take
on great force. Virgo is linked to all the routines that help us maintain our
well-being. For these two, a lot of joy and faith in their bond comes from
fully appreciating how much better their bodies feel as a result of their love.
Noticing the better physical feeling is only the first step. With their
composite Jupiter in Virgo, these two benefit enormously from actively
pursuing a healthier style of living: to commit to eating a more conscious
diet, to exercising together, to reducing stress. And to supporting each other
in those regimens: we all know it’s easier, for example, to exercise
consistently if we have a buddy helping us remember to do it. Such changes
bring many unintended, indirect gifts in terms of enlisting the partners’
bodies in the belief that this relationship is good for them.
Even physical health is partly the result of mental and spiritual attitudes.
Many are the magnificent gym-rats who are as insane as drunken Senators!
In the long run, mental health counts too—for our daily well-being as well
as our longevity. People in relationships generally report greater levels of
happiness than do single people, but most of us can affirm that love has also
brought us our worst moments too. There’s nothing more dispiriting than a
bad relationship. With their composite Jupiter in Virgo, these two need to
practice good “relationship hygiene” along with their improved physical
habits. What are the routines that support a thriving relationship? For each
couple, the answers are probably somewhat different, but we can offer a
few guidelines. Everyone is too busy nowadays; that takes a toll on love.
An example of a healthy relationship routine is to establish a regular hour or
two of intimate time—the answering machine is on, the time is sacred and
special and protected. Anniversaries are remembered and celebrated.
Certain restaurants or vacation spots are visited regularly, and woven into
the mythology of the bond. Sex is rarely allowed to become perfunctory;
time is taken so it can sustain the relationship rather than simply providing
the release of a physical tension. Shared quiet, meditative time, perhaps
within the context of a spiritual practice, is integrated into the weekly or
daily cycle of events.
As these healthy mental habits synergize the life-affirming physical
advantages of intimacy, the joy and meaning of this relationship enters the
cells and synapses of this couple. Their composite Jupiter in Virgo is
offering its merry gift.
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN LIBRA
Here are some joyful Libran concepts: soulmates, a marriage made in
heaven, two people who are supposed to be together. And the all-time
classic: “they lived happily ever after.” Try them on. Try to do it innocently,
without cynicism, without looking for any tricks. Sometimes love works out
great for people. Sometimes it’s the sweetest thing in the world.
For the couple with composite Jupiter in Libra, the evolutionary
challenge lies in believing that those happy notions can have direct
relevance to them. They need to make a myth of their love. And then they
need to do their best to live that myth. To modern ears, this might sound
dangerously unrealistic. We all know nowadays how hard love can be, how
many broken hearts there are in this lonely world. For the couple with this
configuration, there is room for all those painful truths. They can be
annoyed and frustrated with each other; they can fail and disappoint each
other. But everything painful is interpreted in the context of this overriding
faith in the goodness and rightness of their love.
It’s a tall order, but composite Jupiter in Libra supplies a method for
getting it right. That method is centered on an exuberant, extravagant
claiming of all things Libran in the relationship. One of the core principles
in this sign is aesthetic and artistic experience. Let’s start with that. The
ballet is coming to town. It’s expensive of course—so let’s get front row
seats! And, sweetie, you’ve got some beautiful clothes, but why don’t you
surprise me by wearing something new and special that night? Money is no
object—why do you think God made the VISA card?
The last few lines sound fun, but slightly silly. And yet they represent a
very pure distillation of Jupiter’s over-the-top embracing of life in the
context of the natural Libran attraction to all things civilized, elegant, and
lovely. What might it mean to a couple to have an evening exactly as
described? Might it not profoundly enhance their sense that there is
something magical and special about their love, that it has roots in a higher
world than this mundane one? Just watch them reach for each other’s hands
as the ballerina pirouettes across center stage.
Extending our imagery, we recognize the importance of the couple’s
prioritizing the beauty of their home—and that has as much to do with
getting rid of yesterday’s newspaper as it does with spending serious money
on decorating or art. We see the pivotal role played by that other bulwark of
Libran consciousness: courtesy. Intimacy always has its rough edges, but
two people can still treat each other with at least the same dignity and
respect they would afford a stranger. A “please,” a “thank you,” and an
“excuse me” don’t make a relationship stiff or uptight. They just make it
civilized.
All these methods we’ve described draw their significance from the
larger meaning of the Libran composite Jupiter: they enhance and support
the notion that this precious love is higher than the world. And that feeds
back directly into faith and happiness.
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN SCORPIO
Scorpio, in any relationship context, is always about the exchange of strong
energies. With Jupiter there in the composite chart, for these two people
such exchanges are the soul of their faith in themselves as a couple. So what
exactly do we mean by “strong energies?”
Right at the top of list is sexual heat. Very likely, these two are blessed in
that department. Adults enjoy sex: that’s a fairly reliable principle. But for
some couples it comes more naturally than for others. Certain people “fit”
better than others—physically, but also in terms of erotic tastes and styles.
Often the initial burst of passion that characterizes the beginning of most
relationships obscures underlying dysfunctions and incompatibilities. What
we are looking at here, everything else being equal, is a solid foundation for
lasting passion. And if two people still want each other after a year or more
has passed, they’ve got something precious: a basis for a fire that won’t
fade. It’s far easier for such a couple to believe viscerally in the innate
rightness of their connection than it is for a couple who’ve lost that lovin’
feeling, however committed they may be to each other in principle.
There are strong energies other than sex, and they are part of the
composite Jupiter in Scorpio picture too. It’s fine when people “officially”
love each other, but there’s something very intense and real about looking
straight into a partner’s eyes and saying the words. In some ways, it’s even
hotter if no words are said at all—just stark naked humanity staring back at
you.
Relationships always stir up darker layers of the psychic stew, and facing
that material is part of having composite Jupiter in Scorpio as well. Only
masochists like to fight, but accepting that conflict is part of intimacy is
only realistic. Having this configuration doesn’t suggest that these two
people enjoy bashing each other! But it does suggest that they can take a
very legitimate and healthy pride in their ability to be honest with each
other, and to face the dark together. In the short run, those Scorpio skills are
about having faith in the bond—but in the long run, they’re also about joy
and happiness, since nothing leaches those qualities out of a relationship
faster than harbored resentments.
All of these processes, from sex to deep levels of psychic communion,
require time, privacy, and peace. The more these two lovers with their
composite Jupiter in Scorpio provide themselves with those three treasures,
the more primordial their bond will grow. Given time, they will be as
inseparable as a pair of mourning doves: mated, down to their cells, at the
instinctual level.
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN SAGITTARIUS
Jupiter, in the old traditions, was a fortunate planet. Sagittarius was its
favorite sign. So the combination was a lucky one. We can say deeper
things than that about our couple with their composite Jupiter in Sagittarius,
but simple luck is a real phenomenon. We’d be remiss if we didn’t suggest
that these two should enter contests! Their composite Jupiter supports their
winning more often than chance would imply. And “contests” are really just
a metaphor for other gambles life offers—many of them with far better odds
than the typical lottery. For example, we might imagine these two deciding
that they are tired of living in Arkansas and that they want to try their luck
in a big city. Their friends are full of baleful predictions—within a month,
they’ll be living behind a smelly dumpster drinking cheap wine out of paper
bags. And in fact, as a result of their bold geographic gamble, they wind up
prosperous, glamorous and happy.
Behind this silly image is a basic principle of the universe: life rewards
faith. And that is essence of Jupiter in Sagittarius. This is the part of the
Infinite that doesn’t want any of us to lead ordinary lives. With their
composite Jupiter in this sign, for these two to maintain faith in their bond,
they need to stretch beyond the confines of the predictable and the safe.
They need bigness in their experience—and it’s theirs by divine right, if
they are bold enough to reach for it.
One way to prime the pump is travel. Nothing pleases Sagittarius like a
place it’s never seen before. It’s the part of us that loves to see the sun rising
over the open highway. Should these two fall into a bare patch on love’s
road, it would be helpful for them to plan a trip. Just to get away from their
familiar scene will help them break free of their familiar patterns of conflict
or frustration with each other. Returning from a trip, especially one that
takes us out of our own country, we feel a little more dashing and colorful.
We stand taller and our eyes are brighter. We feel more confident that
strangers will find us interesting. We’ve done something unusual; that gives
us points in the social calculus. For this couple, those attitudes translate into
more faith that their relationship is something special. And that is the
essence of Jupiter’s gift: faith in their bond.
Having composite Jupiter in Sagittarius generally correlates with a rather
philosophical spirit in a relationship. We have to be careful with that word,
though—it doesn’t mean they watch the world from an ivory tower. What it
does suggest is that they are inclined to think together at the level of
principle: to have serious discussions about what is right and what is wrong.
There is also a compelling desire to learn. By the time they’re old, they will
know a lot of things that don’t make them money. And that too is part of the
river of joy that flows into the ocean of their love.
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN CAPRICORN
Partners who’ve loved each deeply for thirty years meet their youngest
child’s fiancé. The young couple is well-matched, but both of them are a
little breathless about their relationship. They are certain their marriage will
be perfect. They are the luckiest people in the world. Before them lies a
future out of a fairytale—bright, flowing and untroubled. The older couple
smiles a lot—a bit mysteriously from the perspective of the younger duo.
Having been down the road of life, the older partners have a clearer sense of
the nature of love’s alchemy. They know it is far harder than the young ones
imagine, and better too.
A couple with their composite Jupiter in Capricorn, whatever their age,
has a lot of common ground with the older couple. There is something
tempered and mature about this bond. It’s as if, right from the beginning,
they can see themselves with some of the wisdom that thirty years of love
can create. Right from their first meeting, they’ve got their eyes on the long
term perspective.
When we meet someone new and the chemistry feels right, we want to
break out in song. We can’t wait to see each other. It’s a thoroughly
wonderful condition. But imagine our older couple celebrating their
thirtieth anniversary together—and add to the equations the idea that they
still truly love each other and aren’t staying together for dull reasons of a
social or practical nature. What do they feel? A lot of emotions, but the one
toward which we want to direct your attention now is pride. It is an
accomplishment to make love work for that long. That’s why we say
“congratulations” at such a time. With their composite Jupiter in Capricorn,
these two people draw faith in their relationship from those sorts of
feelings. Thus, anniversaries are particularly important to them. It would be
a waste not to celebrate them seriously.
Long before there are any anniversaries, couples go through formal
stages of escalation in their level of commitment: Capricorn soul-food! An
agreement to be exclusively committed to each other. An engagement, in
some form. Buying a home together. Starting a family. In all cases, again
the social custom is to offer our congratulations—and that’s because the
couple has navigated another milestone. For Capricorn, such milestones are
the basis of dignity and self-respect.
Thus, for this couple, the basis of lasting faith in their bond lies in
endlessly building it. The bigger their collection of milestones, the more
they will believe in themselves and the more precious their bond will feel to
them.
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN AQUARIUS
There’s a rebel pride in breaking the rules. That’s the soul of a composite
Jupiter in Aquarius. For this couple, the road before them is one less-
traveled. They need to celebrate everything that distinguishes them from
other people’s expectations. Cultures always have scripts for couples. After
a certain amount of time, commitment or breakup is expected. Heterosexual
marriages are expected to produce children. Monogamy, financial planning,
relations with the in-laws—it’s all down pat in the unwritten cultural
rulebook. Different subgroups frame the details in their own unique way—
what is expected of a couple in the Young Republicans club is not exactly
the same as what’s expected among rock music’s night people. But the
principle stands: relationships are not nearly the private, personal business
we pretend they are. They are a cultural transaction, governed by custom.
For a couple with the composite Jupiter in Aquarius, those rules are
made to be broken. The hook is that to break them you have to recognize
them. And that’s not always easy, since they’ve been with us about as long
as gravity has. We’ve internalized those assumptions, so the real battle is
within the individuals, and only later does it manifest as an outward battle
against those who might judge them as “weird.”
For these two people, the basis of their dignity and faith in themselves as
a unit depends on their exercising a kind of creativity few people even
imagine. If it’s a man and a woman, maybe the woman works and man is a
house-husband. Maybe they blow off solid careers in order to go live in the
south of France for a year. Maybe they’ve got a sensory deprivation tank in
their house. Maybe they commit to handling all their arguments by email,
never speaking face to face in anger. Maybe they paint their living room
chartreuse.
Quirks? Yes indeed! But they are symbolic quirks that defend their
elemental right to navigate the eternal questions of intimacy in their own
unique way.
Most couples sooner or later celebrate their commitment to each other. It
may be a marriage ceremony in the legal sense, or it may be less formal. In
any case, it’s an ancient social instinct—to stand before the community and
speak the words of a vow. For a couple with composite Jupiter in Aquarius,
a very effective barometer of their psychological health as a couple is just
how “weird” that ceremony is! The point isn’t simply to shock people—
that’s easy to do, and doesn’t really take much individuality. The point is
that they’ve made this most primal expression of their love for each other
something uniquely their own. That would be a most excellent omen for
their future happiness.
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN PISCES
Unless we’re Marxists or existentialists, marriages and commitment
ceremonies generally involve prayer, meditation and references to the
Divinity. It’s an old, almost universal, human instinct. No matter what our
cultural orientation, something inside us all senses that we need cosmic help
if we are going to make a success of such a difficult undertaking. We also
sense that beneath the practical, procreative and sexual dimensions of
human love, something deeper is going on: two souls have entered into an
evolutionary contract with each other. These are mysterious parts of life: the
open secret that everyone knows and no one can really say—although we
pay various kinds of priests to take a stab at phrasing it for us. With their
composite Jupiter in Pisces, this couple has an inside track regarding those
soul-sustaining points of contact with the next dimension. Their ability to
believe in themselves hinges upon their using those contacts.
They’ve almost surely had experiences of psychic communication—
maybe one of them sits bolt upright in the bed at the moment the other one
has an automobile accident on the other side of the country. Or, more
simply, one brings up the idea of going to a certain movie two seconds after
the same thought enters the other one’s head.
Probably, right at the beginning of their time together, there were omens
—visitations from the angelic realm. What we mean by that is the idea that
miracles of “chance” seemed to conspire to bring them together. The
universe bent over backwards to introduce them. Eerie parallels have
existed in their lives. Everything seemed to be pointing to the idea that they
had some kind of soul-business together.
Those early miracles are a gift from the angels. The deeper point is that
those miracles don’t have to stop, but sustaining them requires some effort
and openness on both of their parts. After the grace that comes at the
beginning of their bond, they’ve got to work at being receptive. Some of
that lies in being in the right places. Even if they have no formal religious
feelings, how beautiful it is for these two people to sit quietly in a cathedral
together! How much it feeds their souls to stand alone together in a canyon
that was sacred to Native Americans a thousand years before the Europeans
came. How sweet it is for them to say a simple grace before a meal. As they
cultivate this welcome to the Divinity, they experience a deeper sense of the
spiritual basis of their intimacy.
And that is the essence of composite Jupiter in Pisces: the basis of their
believing in themselves as a couple lies in their believing that their souls are
in communion and that some Higher Power is engaged with their process of
loving each other.
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN THE FIRST HOUSE
There is a magnetic, happy energy around these two. When they RSVP their
regrets about a party, the hosts are crestfallen—they know the party isn’t
going to be as much fun as they’d hoped it would be. It’s not necessarily
that this couple is always on an extraverted roll; whether they are shy or
ebullient is really more a question about their individual birthcharts. But,
quiet or loud, with their composite Jupiter in the first house, an expansive,
generous energy radiates from them. People feel affirmed and accepted.
They feel looser simply because these two are present, as if anything they
are likely to do is going to be fine.
Furthermore, this positive vibration extends to people’s interpretations of
the couple’s own relationship: unless they’re screaming bloody-minded
murder at each other and covered in bruises, the community around them
tends to imagine that they are a happy couple, and that they don’t have any
problems. One result is that they are likely to be drawn into leadership
positions, either overtly, or covertly as tone-setters for a group. This
generous interpretation of their relationship can actually isolate them from
support. Carrying a tribal ideal can render the people behind it invisible—
just as we might feel sorry for a beleaguered movie star signing autographs,
surrounded by fans.
None of this is meant to imply that these two have more than their fair
share of intimate issues—only that the people who can really see them with
insight and compassion are particularly rare and precious to them. Calling
any of this “good luck” seems a bit one-dimensional from the human
perspective, even though that is the traditional reading of this position for
Jupiter. And indeed, a trip to Las Vegas might prove lucrative for them! The
traditional reading is not entirely wrong, just not very deep.
Going into the deeper waters of the evolutionary perspective, Jupiter
always asks us, “Why not the best?” The challenge for this couple with
their composite Jupiter in the first house lies in living up to their own
legend. Mere appearances are insufficient. The aim here is really to live the
ideal of an enviable, delightful intimate bond. The rest of their composite
chart will describe the psychological and spiritual challenges they must face
and meet in order to get there. Jupiter simply invites them to settle for
nothing less—to ask each other, not for the impossible, but for the best they
have to offer. To press constantly toward the higher ground. Paradoxically,
to use hope—and hope’s constant companion, discontent—as a goad toward
constant improvement. On that path, they’ll have plenty of “luck.” The right
teachers appear at the right moments, money is available when it is needed,
and so on—but only if they are actually on that path. If they are going to
receive, they have to ask.
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN THE SECOND HOUSE
A simple reading of composite Jupiter in the traditional house of money
suggests prosperity. Often that’s an accurate prediction, provided we’re
careful not to go over the top with the idea. It doesn’t guarantee a Lifestyle
of the Rich and Famous, but it does imply that, together, these two are an
effective money-making team. If they set their minds to it, they can create
abundance—and not all of their success in the pocketbook department
comes from hard work and sound planning, although those are probably
necessary ingredients. But the universe seems eager to provide “matching
funds” as well. Most people would read that as simple luck. They’ll tend to
buy the right stocks. The value of their house will double overnight.
Obscure relatives die and leave them automobiles.
Underlying these merry outward predictions is an evolutionary drama.
The real meaning of the second house is self-confidence. Having a few
dollars in our wallets definitely helps us feel more capable of dealing with
life, but money is actually only a small part of it. The real issues are more
psychological. Above all, with their composite Jupiter in the second house,
these two are learning to believe in their relationship. For the bond to work
—and for that money-magic to start flowing—they’ve got to trust one core
idea: that they are good together.
What if they aren’t? That’s a fair question. Lots of people become
attracted to each other for perfectly honorable reasons and later learn that
the deeper harmonies just aren’t there. There’s no shame in that. Having
Jupiter in the second house doesn’t promise a good relationship. It only tells
us that for the bond to prosper, it must trust itself, invest in itself, and take
some risks.
Jupiter loves bigness. It loves extravagance. It is attracted to bold moves,
gambles and bright dreams. On a positive track, the manifestations of
composite Jupiter in the second might start early: for their first night out
together, these two hit a very expensive restaurant. Subliminally, they are
sending their inner selves a strong message: this relationship is significant;
it’s worth money; it’s important. As the wheels turn, perhaps they take a
fancy vacation and put it on a VISA card. It’s not irresponsible; they just
realized that they needed the message: trust this bond. Feed it, support it.
Later, we might find them hitting a bumpy patch in their courtship. They
decide to go into couples therapy. Why? Because they believe the
relationship is worth it!
So often these two find themselves facing that basic second house
equation: in our modern world, money and self-esteem are completely
entangled. If they doubt themselves, they’ll probably create poverty for
themselves—even if they have money in the bank. That poverty will be not
only financial. Conversely, if they invest in themselves, the money flows,
and their faith in themselves as a couple grows.
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN THE THIRD HOUSE
Listening to these two play off each other verbally is better than the movies.
They trigger word-play in each other, bringing out humor and a contagious
energy of fun. They are probably cuter and funnier than they know. It’s not
all about jokes, although they are probably skilled at making people laugh.
Together, they’re able to encourage and inspire, and not only to get ideas
across, but also to generate enthusiasm for those ideas. They can, in other
words, be very convincing. They could write political speeches or be
evangelists—or sell used cars to Mahi-Mahi off the Hawaiian coast.
Jupiter brings a gift from the gods, and in the third house it’s at least
partly the gift of gab. Since we’re talking about a composite chart, we need
to remember that this quality arises between these two people. Individually,
they may or may not have much of it themselves—obviously, if the
potential is in their individual makeups as well, stand back. But even if
these two are relatively silent or inarticulate as separate people, when they
get together, they have something to say and an ability to say it well.
Tweaking this concept a bit, let’s recognize that some people who can speak
in complete sentences and know a lot of impressive vocabulary are actually
boring and unconvincing, while an actor like Robert DeNiro can say “huh”
and make it persuasive and eloquent. There is a slippery art to effective
communication, and these two bring it out in each other.
Just making people laugh is a gift to us all in this harried world. But with
their composite Jupiter in the third, this couple can go further than that. It’s
easy to imagine them team-teaching, for example. Maybe one writes a letter
to the editor about some issue that concerns them both deeply. The other
one edits the letter—and the result is ten times more effective.
Within the secret world of the relationship, communication skills are
their ace in the hole. Being able to speak and listen to each other effectively
is one of the fundamental keys to helping a bond thrive. Again, that is not
always about grandstanding eloquence—the art here is more subtle, and it’s
at least half about knowing when to say nothing and simply listen. These
two have an instinct for those rhythms with each other. If they develop them
consciously, they become a treasure.
The only caution here is that, with their composite Jupiter in the third
house, this couple needs to recognize that fancy, complicated or comedic
words can become a barrier between souls if overdone. We can hide behind
endless talk. Or we can express our souls through it. That is their choice.
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN THE FOURTH HOUSE
Home and hearth—that’s fourth house territory. With composite Jupiter
there, the traditional view promises good fortune for those two people in
that department. Some astrologers might predict something as a simple as a
“nice house.” That prophecy often proves accurate with this configuration.
There is a definite tendency for a couple to luck out wherever Jupiter lies in
their composite chart, and these two can almost count on fortune smiling on
them in the real estate department. They attract good deals on desirable
places to live. If they ever buy a place, they’ll likely find themselves in that
happy paradox: if they sold it, they could make lots of money—but they
love it too much to sell it.
The fourth house goes way beyond real estate, however. A happy home
is more than an attractive building. Home is a feeling created by familiarity,
commitment and stability shared by creatures who love each other.
Domestic life promises to unfold sweetly for these two. Whatever else is
happening in their relationship, they probably have the blessing of simply
being able to live together well. Even early in the relationship, a “family”
feeling arises naturally between them. They seem to know each other more
broadly and subtly than their time together would seem to allow.
These good feelings can be fed and supported. First, we recognize that,
for most of us, the budget is full of tough trade-offs. If we want to take an
international trip every year or two, maybe that’s possible—but only if we
live more cheaply between journeys. For these two, prioritizing their home
is always a good choice. They should go ahead and spend the money on a
place they really love, even if that means tighter constraints in other areas.
For them, this is a smart compromise. It pays off in joy. Similarly, they
might tighten their belts for a few years, trying to amass a pile of money so
they can buy their dream house. Again, that’s a wise choice. It might not be
that for every couple, but for them, it definitely is the right use of resources.
One of the natural joys of domestic life, for many of us, is children. Kids
may be a reality for these two and bring them lots of happiness—but not all
relationships are suited for children. That’s fine—then they need a couple of
cats! Or dogs or horses or kinkajous. The point is that these two deepen
their joy together and their faith in their bond when they are nurturing other
beings in their home: that’s basic to the fourth house alchemy.
Jupiter nurtures people in less formal ways too. We envision parties here:
their house full of dear friends, with laughter and food and music playing,
and everyone feeling as if they are eating at the table of the King—and,
archetypally, they are.
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN THE FIFTH HOUSE
What if two people agree to fall in love forever? Not to be in love forever,
although that’s part of it. Really to fall in love forever . . . endless falling.
An endless beginning. The idea sounds hopelessly unrealistic, but if any
two people can pull it off, it’s these two. With their composite Jupiter in the
traditional house of love affairs, there is a feeling of celebration, discovery,
and freshness about this relationship. The expansive, buoyant, hopeful
energy of Jupiter is a heady catalyst for the playful, erotic spirit of the fifth
house. Put the two together, and it spells F-U-N.
Notice how lightweight that statement seems? But fun is a profoundly
serious need. Most of us have been in relationships, or phases in
relationships, where nothing looks better to us than our partner’s walking
out the door. Most of us have known times when relationship equaled pain
and vexation. Down that road, we reach a place where we don’t hope for
anything or expect anything. Our hearts become closed and defended.
Why? Because pain has outweighed joy and pleasure by too wide a margin.
Press this reasoning in the other direction, and you reach the heart of a
fifth house composite Jupiter. Say we have plenty of fun, joy and pleasure
in a relationship. What are its effects? We open like flowers. We expect joy,
so we drop our defenses. These two have the ability to stay in that Edenic
state longer than most of us, and, even better, return to it at will.
New lovers feel this openness deeply. Some of it may be illusion—
hormones and clear vision are opposites much of the time. But in that
glorious, trusting innocence, we also bond with each other. There’s a happy,
easy feeling of “sweet surrender.” Souls touch more deeply, without the
frightened ego getting in the way, setting conditions and planning escape
routes. This is the foundation upon which mature love must be built.
The evolutionary task these two people have taken on, with composite
Jupiter in the fifth house, is to practice the discipline of creating, exploring,
and exploiting that pleasure-bond. How? By continuing to do what nearly
every couple does automatically for the first few weeks: pay attention to
each other, express interest in each other, open up their own hearts and
share. The process is helped along by simple sweet nothings—bringing
each other flowers, remembering birthdays and anniversaries, eating dinner
by candlelight, saying “I love you.” Perhaps above all it is helped by
remembering that sex is a gift to celebrated, not a right to be claimed or a
bodily function to be serviced.
This wonderful, warm pattern is available to these two. If they commit
consciously to sustaining it, they’ll bridge across love’s darker challenges
with a lot more ease than most of us.
What if they don’t? What’s the dark side of composite Jupiter in the Fifth
House? If they don’t find that joy in each other, they’ll try to make up the
deficit in other ways, some of which may be destructive, such as the abuse
of food or mind-altering substances—or just plain dumb, such as spending a
lifetime keeping an eye on their TV to make sure it doesn’t run away.
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN THE SIXTH HOUSE
Jupiter is playful and expansive, and the sixth house is about duties and
responsibilities. Right away, we know that we are talking about a difficult
pair of energies to combine. When we think of work, we don’t
automatically free-associate to fun and games. Start by recognizing that in
the sixth house, we’re looking at everything we “have” to do. The daily
grind of making a living is part of it, but so is the rest of the life-sustaining
daily grind: shopping, cooking, keeping the house in a sufficiently hygienic
state to be consistent with longevity, and so on. Call it all work.
So, can work be pleasurable? Of course. With their composite Jupiter in
the sixth house, that is the task that lies before this couple: making their
duties as much fun as possible. The stakes are high because, should they
fail, expansive Jupiter will fill them with a burdened feeling that this
relationship is turning into a forced labor camp, with duties proliferating
and joy eroding.
Sometimes we find kinds of work that are inherently rewarding, usually
because we happen to be interested in them and are good at them. Perhaps
one person enjoys cooking. Rather than “dividing the cooking
responsibilities fairly,” let that be his or her task then—and the partner can
do the gardening or the shopping, if he or she gets some pleasure from those
activities. Maybe they both dread housecleaning, so they team up to do it,
put on some rock ‘n’ roll, and reward themselves with a fancy dinner in
town. Much of it comes down to responding creatively to the fact that,
while our daily duties aren’t ever going to make our socks go up and down,
with a little imagination and forethought, two people can adapt to them in
merrier ways.
Always with the sixth house, we need to be on the lookout for mentors—
people, usually a little older than ourselves, who have gone further down
the road we’re traveling and can maybe teach us a few hard-won tricks.
With their composite Jupiter there, these two are likely to find other couples
who’ve come up with low-impact ways of sharing the practical side of life.
How to recognize these mentors? By their smiles.
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN THE SEVENTH HOUSE
At first glance we might get quite merry contemplating this configuration—
don’t worry, we’re not going to say that the opposite is true! We’re looking
at “lucky” Jupiter in the house of relationships. Who could ask for more?
But remember that the composite chart itself is about the relationship—the
whole chart, not just the seventh house. In this context, the seventh house
means the relationships that this couple has with other people. In simple
terms, they’ll probably be fortunate there, and that positive support will
feed back helpfully into their own connection.
Think about the psychology of a wedding ceremony. In a nutshell, we get
everyone we know and love together, then bribe them with champagne and
free food in order to get them to express belief in us as a couple, and to
offer signs of encouragement and faith in us. It’s perhaps a cynical view, but
it’s not far off the mark psychologically. And it’s a sweet process when we
open our hearts to it. Relationships are scary and difficult. How wonderful it
is to have some encouragement! How valuable it is to have people who
believe in us! That is what Jupiter is about: faith, encouragement,
affirmation. With their composite Jupiter in the seventh house, these two
need friends who give them that boost. In evolutionary terms, this is the part
of the chart that tells us about the people whose input, support and help we
simply must have. They see things we don’t see. They have skills we lack.
This couple has such friends. Their task is to enjoy them and be vulnerable
to them.
Perhaps an opportunity to take a lucrative job in a distant city arises. Is it
worth leaving the friendships they have deepened and cultivated over the
years in their own community? This is a serious question. Most of us are
under a lot of time pressure nowadays. What happens if, in order to
conserve time, these two decide to spend less time with the people they
love? Very soon, their faith in their own relationship could begin to
dwindle.
Who are these dear souls? Some may be individuals. Some may be other
couples. All radiate warmth and an attitude of unconditional support for the
bond that this couple is trying to maintain. They smile and laugh easily.
Consistent with the nature of Jupiter, many of these people will have
manifested considerable success. Perhaps they have money. Perhaps they
have respect or name recognition in their communities. Very probably, they
are successful in that deeper sense: they are happy people. They have a
good relationship with life. And it’s catching.
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN THE EIGHTH HOUSE
Given modern western society’s social customs, most adults have had
sexual contact with at least a few people. It’s safe to say that not all of those
relationships worked out in the long run. No need even to lament that fact.
Exploration, breadth of experience, spreading our wings a bit in youth or in
the aftermath of a major break-up are significant rites of passage for most of
us. That kind of sexual expression has a place in life, but has almost nothing
to do with eighth house realities. Here, we go for the gold—deep,
instinctually-based bonding with another person. Mating. Nothing less.
A couple with composite Jupiter in the eighth has some aces in the hole
in that department. There is an excellent chance that they’re blessed, at least
initially, with a robust physical enthusiasm for each other. They carry a kind
of affirmation of looseness, of ease in the body and, particularly in bed, of a
natural appetite to receive what each would most naturally give. There’s an
undercurrent of good humor to their lovemaking—not a joking attitude, but
a smiling appreciation of the convergence of the sublime and the ridiculous
in human sexuality. All this comes together to produce a powerful support
for the mating and bonding processes.
Where are the challenges? They lie in actually using this merry tool for
its evolutionary purpose, which is to build an epochal sexual bond—to feast
in a hall of those pagan gods and goddesses whom many prim modern
people mistake for pornography.
The method with composite Jupiter always lies in investing
extravagantly in the relationship—giving it what it wants, regardless of cost
or practicality. With Jupiter in the eighth, we might start by asking
ourselves, “What do lovers want?” The answer generally boils down to
rather simple requirements: privacy; a safe, comfortable place to be
together; and above all, time. For lovers, hours go by as if they were
minutes. That’s almost a cliché, because it’s such a universal experience.
For the couple with composite Jupiter in the eighth, it’s imperative to claim
enough time together. That might mean taking a weekend away from their
responsibilities and heading to a romantic bed and breakfast. It will
certainly mean hiding behind the answering machine without hesitation. If
they have children, those kids will learn that when mommy and daddy’s
bedroom door is closed and Armageddon begins, they should knock softly
and wait. Supporting sexual joy, by the way, is rather obviously a big part of
all these prescriptions, but let’s emphasize that this eighth house bonding is
bigger than intercourse itself. Sleeping together is part of it. Lying in a bed
just holding each other is another part. With Jupiter in the composite eighth
house, this couple has a treasure available to them in all those areas. The
trick lies in believing in it—and in themselves—enough to claim it.
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN THE NINTH HOUSE
People fall in love and, after jumping successfully through courtship’s
hoops, settle down together. The phrase “settle down” is familiar, and so is
the reality it represents: you used to see them dancing, now you see them at
Wal-Mart. Once as sexy as movie stars, now they’re as sexy as dishrags.
Have they perhaps “settled” for too little? It’s a risk—there’s something
comforting about a solid relationship . . . maybe too comforting! People go
to sleep, get conservative, lose their edge. These aren’t laws of the universe,
but they are very real pitfalls. With their composite Jupiter in the ninth
house, we have two comments for this couple. First, the good news: they
have excellent immunity to this “fall-in-love-and-die” syndrome. Second, to
keep their relationship cooking, they’d better exercise that immunity
actively.
A fortune-teller might say, “I see them traveling.” The ninth house is
reliably correlated with travel and adventure, so the prophecy is probably
accurate. We prefer to say, “We suggest that they travel, that travel might be
to Peru, or to the new Peruvian restaurant in town.” Another fortune-teller
might predict they’ll take classes together. That’s a fine idea—although we
would equally recommend reading books or seeing documentaries that
stretch their minds, and then discussing them. The education doesn’t have
to be formal or official; it just has to be endless, ongoing and fascinating.
Traditionally, the ninth house is about religion. It’s quite possible that
“church,” in some sense of the word, will play an important, positive role in
their lives. More broadly, the ninth house is really about our whole
perspective on life: our values, our philosophy, the moral stars that guide us
through the complex negotiations and trade-offs that life entails. For these
two, the optimal attitude is one of optimism, hope, and a sense of
possibility. That positive, confident view seeps into the foundations of their
idea of themselves as a couple: they’re together for a meaningful purpose; it
is right that they are a couple, and with faith they can conquer any obstacles
that their egos, their personal processes, or their wounds might ever conjure
up.
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN THE TENTH HOUSE
Success! Money! Power! Cool friends! Be the envy of everyone—
everyone, that is, with insufficient imagination to recognize that these
things don’t necessarily spell happiness. Nor, we hasten to add, do they
necessarily spell misery. There are sad people in limousines and happy
people in ghettos. With their composite Jupiter in the tenth house, this
couple is dynamic. If they build their relationship on a sufficiently solid
foundation that it lasts for a while, they are very likely to experience what
will be perceived to be an improvement in their material circumstances and
social status. Together, they trigger a potential for climbing the hierarchical
ladder of their culture or subculture. Being invited to join the most
exclusive country club? Yes—if that reflects the pinnacle of the culture with
which they are identified. Given a different set of circumstances and values,
this composite Jupiter could just easily correlate with “hanging out with the
band” or even “sitting at the cool table in the high school cafeteria.”
We’re using dumb examples here to make a point—one of the dumbest
things about our human species is our tendency to overvalue a trivial
concern such as status. With their composite Jupiter in the tenth house,
these two will surely climb. The trick is to choose a mountain whose top
they admire.
Underlying the concept of social ascent is a fundamental evolutionary
perspective: together, these two have a mission of a Jupiter nature in their
community. First, it involves leadership in some form—Jupiter is, after all,
the king of the gods. Second, some fanfare—status, social connections with
powerful people, influence—is probably necessary for the execution of the
mission. They must be noticed, in other words. Third, the work has the
effect of giving hope, inspiration, and encouragement to people who need it.
In some sense these two are coaches or role models. And fourth, they have
to believe in themselves as a couple to attract this mission and be worthy of
it. How? The answer lies in the rest of their composite chart.
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN THE ELEVENTH HOUSE
Over time, loves smooths us out. It teaches us humility. It puts sweetness in
our hearts. We learn ways to see around our blind spots. We study
forgiveness and generosity. We learn about each other’s ragged edges,
coming to understand the fear behind the anger, the pain behind the
coldness. It follows that a relationship can become better and more precious
over time. And that’s the very phenomenon often reported at fiftieth
wedding anniversaries. With composite Jupiter in the future-oriented
eleventh house, this rosy scenario is available to this pair. Any planet in this
house looms larger as time passes, and Jupiter correlates with joy, faith and
gratitude. We say confidently that if this relationship lasts, it will improve.
The word “if” looms large in that sentence! We add that not every couple
really should stay together—most of us “see” a lot more people than we
ever “marry,” whatever that word means to us. That’s part of life’s journey.
The futuristic aspects of the eleventh house really don’t have much direct
meaning until a bond has been seasoned for a while, except in one way.
They give us hope. It is so helpful for these two to look to a brighter
tomorrow, to have faith that they can get there, and that the prize is worth
the effort. Without those Jupiter-feelings here and now, there won’t be a
tomorrow for them.
At a very concrete level, with their composite Jupiter in the eleventh,
these two support their faith in themselves by making plans. Perhaps
they’ve started with a summer romance. It’s helpful to talk about going
skiing together this winter. Perhaps they’re a young couple, fully committed
and sharing a rented home. They feed something primal in their bond by
designing their dream house, even if owning it is pure fantasy at this point.
The point is that positive images of the future help them attain that future.
Supporting this is a special skill they have as a team, even if they lack it as
individuals: they are good at strategy. They are good at making dreams
come true. They have that magic about them.
Many astrologers call the eleventh the “house of friends,” and would
predict that these two would have lots of them. It’s a fair guess. Generally
couples with this configuration have busy social lives. Friendships and a
sense of community are naturally desirable states, but there’s room for
higher and lower possibilities. A busy social life can be a joy or a
distraction. Much depends upon this couple’s becoming clear about the
nature of their own goals and aspirations, then choosing to network with a
“crowd” that shares those goals or otherwise supports them. If they want to
be in a committed relationship, we would be nervous to note that all their
friends are single. If they envision a childless future, they benefit from time
spent with other couples who have made that choice.
COMPOSITE JUPITER IN THE TWELFTH HOUSE
Angels watch over these two. They will get concrete demonstrations of that
seemingly flaky proposition. They survive a near-miss in an automobile, for
example—one that should have killed them, but left them without a scratch
(not to mention more faith in angels!). They take a risky job offer that
works beautifully for them—six months before their safe, secure job is
outsourced to New Delhi. They’ll miraculously miss a tornado by a hundred
feet. Caution, sense or wisdom have nothing to do with their salvation. All
we can say is “Thank God.” Or thank the guardian angels.
These gifts, these interventions from the spirit realm, are reminders, little
wake-up calls offered to remind this couple that the world we grasp with
our intellects is only a small part of something much larger, more
purposeful, and a thousand times more astonishing. With composite Jupiter
in the twelfth, these two are ready to stretch further into that expanded
vision. Together, they are closer to God than either of them is as an
individual. Their souls are like two elements in an achromatic lens—two
different kinds of glass married together in a way that focuses more clearly
than either could without the corrective properties of the other. The lens is
trained on the mysterious, multi-dimensional fabric underlying our three-
dimensional world.
If they heed the reminders, if they really listen to the call of the angels,
would they become religious? That’s certainly a possibility, but we
shouldn’t count on it. They might use different metaphors than the ones
heard in churches. Certainly they’d spend more time alone together. Almost
surely we would see evidence in their home of candles, oil lamps, or other
sources of soft light. If we knew what we were seeing, we would very likely
recognize objects there with spiritual or magical significance: the rock
picked up on that magical hike through a sacred canyon, the cup that once
held the Dalai Lama’s tea. Most centrally, we would feel an aura of
something spiritual around them—a certain peace, a feeling of
transcendence.
There is one more kind of angelic intervention we can see with this
configuration: the blessing of loss. Viewed simply, these phenomena often
appear to be simple misfortunes, perhaps tragedies. Given time, they turn
out to be the yeast in some very precious bread. Try this sentence: “Losing
that (fill in the blank) was the best thing that ever happened to me.” It’s
almost as if those angels not only loved us, but also that they’re smarter
than we are!
Chapter 12
The Composite Saturn
S inger Robbie Robertson says, “We grow up so slowly and grow old so
fast.” Just ten little words, but they hold a lot of truth about our lives.
Kids use the phrase “when I grow up” all the time. So do forty-year-olds.
The forty-year-olds are smiling though. They understand something the kids
miss—being “grown up” is an ever-receding Shangri-La, always near, never
truly attained. Most of us will do a whole lot of “growing up” on our death-
beds.
In traditional astrology, Saturn is generally represented in geriatric form:
Father Time or the Wise Old Crone. That’s good imagery, provided we
recognize the inner meaning of the message. Saturn governs the endless
process of maturation—an ongoing integration of reality as it actually is
into our consciousness. And a lot of that actual reality is hard to accept:
how fragile our lives are, how quickly they pass, how rare is the finish that
is worthy of the start. To the immature, those are depressing words. A
mature perspective is more likely to view life as more poignant and
precious for its transitoriness. Plastic flowers last longer than roses from the
garden, but which would you rather have on your table?
Every relationship, just like every individual, evolves over time.
Sometimes that’s beautiful news, while other times it’s a catastrophe. The
principle fits a relationship that’s more than a few months old as tightly as it
fits people one at a time. In the old days, we would honor a couple simply
because they had stayed together for fifty years. Nowadays, we may still
say the words, but we’re more likely to value a relationship more for its
loving qualities than for mere longevity. Love is not an endurance contest.
We all know that time can bring out the worst in two people as easily as it
can bring out the best. Maybe more easily.
Where Saturn lies in the composite chart, the couple is challenged to
mature. And the stakes are very high. If their response to Saturn is weak,
we’ll see the planet operating like a virus that gradually poisons everything
warm, forgiving or kind in the bond. If the couple’s response is strong, we’ll
see them moving ahead with dignity and grace, progressing toward a calm,
realistic, patient acceptance of each other.
Where Saturn lies in the composite chart, the two people are faced with
the challenge of a Great Work. Together, they are asked to climb a
mountain. It may be a joint project unfolding over years, such as raising a
family or building a business. It may involve some perceived misfortune to
which they can potentially rise with force and integrity. In every case, if
they face Saturn’s questions with discipline and commitment, their
relationship moves a step forward toward the kind of love only true Elders
know.
COMPOSITE SATURN IN ARIES
The world is full of things that can hurt us or eat us. Nature is inherently a
very competitive place, often without much evidence of mercy. If we lack
fierceness and tenacity, we can be blown away. Happily, there are gentler
aspects to existence, but Aries represents that fiery potential in all beings
which allows us to stand our ground and claim our right to live. With their
composite Saturn in Aries, this couple is learning the discipline of courage.
Imagine two people on a sailboat fifteen miles out into the ocean. An
unforecast storm has come up and the vessel is pitching wildly, threatening
to founder. Inwardly, both of them would like to just curl up and wish
fervently for a change in the weather. But of course if they do that, they’ll
be in serious trouble. They’ve got to steel themselves to fight the storm.
There are procedures to follow—reduce sail, fix their position, plot a course
that minimizes their peril. A few hours later, it’s all over. They’ve survived.
Each one did what needed to be done. Neither one failed the other. They
look at each other with renewed respect. Each knows the other one behaved
honorably and bravely under pressure. They don’t even need to discuss it;
any words would seem trivial. Welcome to composite Saturn in Aries.
Together, the inner warrior (Aries) in the heart of this relationship has taken
a giant step of maturation (Saturn).
Not all Saturn in Aries work unfolds under such dramatic physical
circumstances. Sometimes the battles are more psychological. A married
couple may be very involved with the husband’s family, under pressure to
spend every Sunday afternoon with the parents. The wife and the husband’s
father have different political views. He’s dogmatic and tyrannical,
constantly baiting the woman. Maybe the wife complains privately to her
husband about the situation—and he denies its existence! Maybe neither of
them ever mention it, electing just to “cope.” The anger grows like a cancer
between them. The unspoken, righteous defense never happens—and the
couple remain children under the thumb of an oppressive father. Their
unexpressed (Saturn) fury (Aries) manifests in petty bickering, depression,
and underlying tension.
There’s the dark side of composite Saturn in Aries: the miserable fruit of
colluding in cowardice. Perhaps that’s the end of the story. But perhaps one
day the couple awakens. They agree to stand together and face down that
ferocious father, claiming their right to their dignity—and their right to his
respect. They let him know that, if he wants their love, he’ll need to be
worthy of it. And they let the chips fall where they may.
Like our couple on the sailboat, these two now look at each other with
renewed respect, each knowing that the other behaved honorably and
bravely under pressure. Imagine the dignity and wisdom in a couple who’ve
walked the higher ground for twenty years. Now imagine the downcast
mood of shame and futility of the couple heading back for more abuse on
yet another interminable Sunday afternoon with that kitchen table tyrant. In
those two images, you see the evolutionary intention and the karmic
shadow of composite Saturn in Aries.
COMPOSITE SATURN IN TAURUS
Peace. Serenity of spirit. A grounded feeling of being at ease in our skins.
The comforts of simplicity. Security. These are the evolutionary goals of
Taurus. With their composite Saturn there, the great work of this couples’
life lies in creating that mood in their relationship.
What brings us a feeling of security? In our modern culture, it is difficult
to avoid immediately jumping from “security” to “financial security,” so
let’s be realistic and start there. If you are having a bad month money-wise
and your car starts making ominous noises, what do you do? Turn up the
radio, of course! But that fear still lingers subliminally. You don’t feel
peaceful or secure, and all the philosophy in the world isn’t going to calm
you.
Taurus always calls us back to the wisdom of the “inner animal.”
Animals don’t care about money, and neither would we—except for the fact
that money buys a lot of stuff that our inner animals need in order to feel
safe: food, shelter, comfort. For our couple with composite Saturn in
Taurus, rational financial behavior is in fact a significant part of their
evolutionary strategy. Without it, anxiety natural arises and poses a big
obstacle to their maturational process.
With that said, let’s accept the fact that the world is full of wealthy,
anxious people. Taking care of the financial aspects of life is only one piece
of the Taurean puzzle. If that’s all our couple does, probably they’ll be more
anxious rather than less so—no matter how much money they have,
something bad can always come along and take it away. That fact will prey
on them, unless they bolster their financial planning with some other
wisdoms from that “inner animal.”
One piece of the puzzle has to do with the joy of simplicity: we are
probably a lot more peaceful inside if we have a modest home with a
modest mortgage, than we would be in a palace we can barely afford. Even
moving to a new home shakes up the inner animal. It would often prefer the
low stress of familiar surroundings. With composite Saturn in Taurus, these
two are learning to be cautious about creating the stress of unnecessary
change in their lives. This doesn’t mean they should avoid anything new—
boredom is stressful too. But they do benefit from valuing the calming
impact of old friends, a favorite restaurant, and life’s other comfortable
rituals.
Food is worth attention here too. Little gives us such a deep sense of
wellbeing as sitting with dear friends and enjoying a good meal—and
there’s not much that pulls in the opposite direction any faster than wolfing
down caffeinated, sugary industrial faux-food at a drive-through.
Of all the changes we might experience, one of the most stressful is a
relationship breaking up. Even the thought of it raises the blood pressure.
Starting over and meeting new people may be exciting, but from the
Taurean and Saturnian perspectives, it’s simply unsettling: just think of the
horror of dating and you’re getting into the Saturn-in-Taurus mood! Thus,
for this couple, there is an evolutionary thrust toward radical commitment
to each other—deep promises, a humble willingness to accept each other,
and, above all, shared images of growing old together.
COMPOSITE SATURN IN GEMINI
To know a little bit about physics or music or astrology is easy. Anyone
who stayed awake through a couple of years of high school can learn a few
buzz words and a handful of basic concepts. If they keep the conversation
moving fast enough, they may even be able to pass themselves off as
experts. But to press ourselves to the limits of our potential in any area of
learning, we need Saturn virtues: discipline, focus, and concentration. With
their composite Saturn in Gemini, this couple moves themselves toward
maturity by committing themselves to an endless process of delving deeply
into whatever interests them, including each other. They might benefit from
taking classes together, for example—and, to go instantly to the heart of this
configuration, just imagine an elderly couple holding hands as they sit in
the lecture hall of the local Jung Society. They’re ninety years old and
they’re still learning. Even better, when they go home that night, they’ve
got something new to talk about!
Not all Geminian learning takes places in academic settings. These two
need to read books, and share what they’ve discovered with each other. It’s
good for them to watch documentaries, visit museums, travel together to
interesting places. Saturn likes detail and complexity, and it balances the
Geminian temptation toward “sound bites.” Thus, they may come to cherish
occasions when they are apart and need to communicate by letters or email
—the deeper exchange of ideas that usually comes from writing powerfully
supports the evolutionary intentions of this configuration.
In the end, the real subject they are studying is each other and language
is the tool upon which they are depending. In direct conversation, they
mature by learnng to let each other finsih sentences, avoiding interruption.
This isn’t about “politeness;” it’s about creating a “culture” between them
that encourages complex and serious thinking—another mark of maturity.
Similarly, expanding their shared vocabulary is a great benefit to them
simply because “big words” are often more precise than little ones. Saying
“I felt humiliated, and I was startled by my vengeful reflexes” actually
conveys the emotional nuances of an experience more clearly than saying,
“I was so pissed off I wanted to kill the bastard!” Note also how the first
statement naturally suggests the language of a self-confident grown-up,
while the the second one sounds more like the words of a young person.
There’s no shame in being young! And sometimes the salty language of the
street can be very eloquent. Formality isn’t the aim here nor is the banishing
of simple, direct language. The aim is banishing the taboo against serious,
mature, precise speech, the kind that conveys the deepest truths we know.
With that taboo removed, and with a life-long commitment to feeding and
cross-fertilizing the fires of their knowledge, these two move rapidly toward
claiming the dignity and grace of their composite Saturn.
COMPOSITE SATURN IN CANCER
The alpha and the omega of the sign Cancer is the notion of the nest: home
and hearth, the place where we restore and nourish ourselves, each other,
and anyone depending on us. There are quite a few letters in the alphabet
between alpha and omega, of course! Cancer also refers to the larger
process of healing. It is related to emotions in general and to the protective
instinct. Anything that feeds us in the Cancerian domain. With their
composite Saturn in Cancer, this couple faces great works in all those
categories. But it all comes back to building a home.
Saturn is often treated negatively in the astrological literature, as if it
were always about “blockages” and “bad luck.” We are often “blocked”
where we are afraid, and often our fears are perfectly reasonable! To
understand composite Saturn in Cancer, let’s recognize that building a home
is profoundly serious, high stakes business. Broken homes are common in
our world, but they take a bite out of everyone they touch. If there are
children involved, the stakes double. Once we start making a home with
another person, we’ve risked deep wounding—and we’ve made a bid for
even deeper happiness. Anyone who isn’t a little bit afraid simply doesn’t
understand the nature of the game.
In the deep intimacy of home and hearth, people hurt each other. Most of
the time, they do that because they themselves have been hurt, maybe when
they were children, maybe later on. Recognizing this truth is the first
discipline (Saturn) in the process of mutual healing (Cancer) for which this
couple has come together. When people behave cruelly or coldly toward
each other they are usually expressing pain and rejection they have
internalized. Knowing that, we steel ourselves to relate to each other
forgivingly and gently. When we have been hurt, we hang in there, looking
compassionately for the wound behind the other person’s misbehavior.
When we have misbehaved ourselves, we discipline ourselves to have the
humility and honesty to own it and ask for forgiveness.
All that is hard work. Given the reality of our anger and pain, that hard
work is also the foundation of any home that promises to endure. With their
composite Saturn in Cancer, these two people have signed up to practice the
ongoing disciplines of forgiveness and humility. They are healing
something hurt inside themselves and they are building a present and a
future that is different from their past. With forgiveness, trust develops.
There is an ever-deeper confidence in the stability of their bond. The
“blockage” and “bad luck” are transformed into a precious sense of having
found a home. They no longer expect perfection of each other or of
themselves, only honesty, loyalty, and some wisdom. As the process
unfolds, an aura of maturity arises around them. It attracts vulnerability in
their friends, who often seek the comforting presence of these “elders.” And
they move into the future, soulfully and with their feet firmly planted on the
ground of human emotional reality as it actually is.
COMPOSITE SATURN IN LEO
Why do birds sing? Ornithologists may talk about territoriality and mating
signals, and they are probably on solid theoretical ground. But as you sit in
the garden on a perfect May morning listening to all the exuberant
whistling, it’s hard to not feel that the birds are celebrating the sheer joy of
making noise. Each bird has style and takes up some space, and seems to
have fun doing it. Humpback whales sing their own songs too. And so do
happy humans. We love that classic Leo realm: self-expression. We puzzle
over which shirt to buy and how to present our hair. We worry about how
we look in photographs. We like to make people laugh. Most of us have had
fantasies about being in the movies. Many of us paint or write or play
musical instruments. All of that is the roar of the astrological Lion.
With their composite Saturn in Leo, part of the soul-contract of these two
people lies in a commitment to develop the intensity, color and individuality
of their self-expression. They have come together in this lifetime to support
each other’s maturation in that quest. Underlying that commitment is an old
unresolved wound between them: somehow, in the ancient mysteries of
their long soul-dance together, they’d either been in situations where
revealing themselves would have been dangerous—situations, perhaps, of
persecution. Or they had simply suppressed each other in an intimate war of
attrition where the only prize lay in drabness, flatlined emotions, and
invisibility. In any case, in the present life, they have agreed to learn the
discipline (Saturn) of letting it rip (Leo). They are casting off the dead hand
of an old, repressive sorrow.
Their evolutionary work starts at the very rudimentary levels of
appearance and behavior. With composite Saturn in Leo, this is where the
foundation is laid: right in the body and its reflexes. Maybe they’re out
shopping. One of them tries on a flamboyant hat. And looks perfectly
ridiculous. The other one responds positively to the idea of the bold hat—
and reaches for another one that works a little better. The shopping imagery
here is very casual, but all the core pieces of the puzzle are present. Leo
wants to wear a colorful hat. Saturn brings in the element of judgement and
discrimination that makes that hat a good choice in the long run. If we once
wear a dumb hat out on public and later realize it, it might be five years
before we take another such risk. Embarrassment represses us.
Here we see the core composite Saturn in Leo notion: these two are
developing a symbiotic partnership that enhances their ever-maturing
capacity for creativity and self-expression.
When we think of creativity, we don’t always think of strange hats. A big
part of the work starts there though, in the realm of clothing—or more,
generally, in the realm of the language we use, the jokes we tell, the aura we
create around ourselves: the theater of our lives. These two need to coach
and support each other in all those arenas.
The process extends outward into life-style: they encourage each other to
fulfill bright dreams: mountaineering, drinking espresso in a Roman cafe,
“living large” in general. And it culminates as they come to support each
other in the incredible soul-risk of authentic artistic self-expression: putting
their naked hearts on the canvas or the printed page or the ivory keys of the
piano. With enough loud applause, gentle, reflective criticism, and support,
they will arrive at that goal.
COMPOSITE SATURN IN VIRGO
Analysis, discrimination, and cautious, critical judgment are classic Virgo
skills. What they lack in excitement, they make up for in sheer utility. Every
time you’ve kept your wallet in your pocket when faced with some urgent
huckster exhorting you to Act Now! Act Now!, you’ve benefitted from
Virgo’s ability to sort out reality from hype. And that’s always the key:
reality versus hype. Or to put it more broadly, Virgo’s core perception lies
in the distinction between the Ideal and the Real. And Virgo sees both: what
could be and what actually is. And it compares them, always drawn to the
discrepancies, always concerned with pushing reality in the general
direction of perfection. A side-effect of those critical perceptions is that
Virgo is profoundly alert to error and shortfall: hence it’s acute attention to
the huckster’s exaggerations and empty promises.
With Saturn in Virgo in the composite chart, the maturational challenges
for this couple lie in learning a set of skills that allow discrimination,
criticism and judgment to serve the evolutionary aims of their bond rather
than destroying it. Every relationship and every human being has room for
improvement. Many of us, with our hearts in the right places, can accept
with good grace a nudge in the direction of virtue from time to time. But
most of us would prefer not to receive a second nudge too close on the heels
of the first one.
We have a human need to feel accepted as we are, without modification
and without “suggestions.” We all need at least some unconditional love, in
other words. Or some R-E-S-P-E-C-T, as Otis and Aretha put it some years
ago.
Given this Saturn placement in the composite chart, there is a powerful
and pervasive evolutionary drive in the couple. That of course can
potentially be good news. The question lies in how they use the energy.
Saturn’s patience, forbearance and sense of timing must temper Virgo’s
focus on the “issues.” Much of it comes down to learning when not to
speak, when to practice silent forgiveness, and when to mix humor and the
longer view into the perceptions of the moment.
One more point: a composite Saturn in Virgo can get a lot of work done.
It tends toward responsibility, effectiveness, and duty. But it can also
become too fussy over details and too quick to take responsibility for
pointless, time-consuming tasks. Vigilance is appropriate here. If the couple
moves in those kinds of unnecessarily hassle-intensive directions, a
chronically pressurized and worrisome attitude creeps into the relationship
—unpleasant enough in its own right, but it also interacts viciously with
their vulnerability toward nickel-and-diming each other to death
psychologically.
COMPOSITE SATURN IN LIBRA
We humans are proud monkeys with sharp teeth. Even the nicest, mildest
man or woman who has ever taken a breath would sometimes challenge our
patience in an intimate domestic situation. No one could fit a razor blade in
the space between “you’re not nice enough” and “you’re always so damn
nice!” It’s worse: there’s nothing like sexual intimacy for bringing our
deepest craziness to the surface. Unresolved issues with our parents? Fear
of abandonment? Free-floating rage? Sleep with someone for more than
five or six consecutive weekends, and there it is: loud and clear—to our
partner. To ourselves, we’re just “right.” And ready to shoot to prove it.
Given all that, it’s a wonder that any two humans can live together. How
do we do it? That love works at all is a miracle.
One of the answers is that classic Libran skill: diplomacy. We humans
have learned a bag of tricks for navigating around each other’s minefields.
With composite Saturn in Libra, these two have a soul-contract to push
these skills into a wiser, more mature expression. They are learning how to
honor each other’s egos, walk softly around each other’s Shadows, and to
avoid unnecessary, costly friction. In a word, they are learning the
discipline (Saturn) of courtesy (Libra). If they succeed, then 100% of their
energy can go into the real work: deepening their level of trust and
enhancing the mutual evolutionary benefits of their partnership. If they fail,
then the story of their relationship collapses into a pattern of endless
bargaining and bickering, punctuated with compromises that satisfy neither
of them.
Two people with composite Saturn in Libra are a year into their
relationship. A touchy issue comes up for one of them: the other one
sometimes smells bad. The problem is of course perfectly correctable—a
little soap and water, a fresh tee-shirt. But how to broach the subject? Being
told that one’s smell is offensive can feel offensive to the person hearing it!
Words have to be chosen very carefully. The smelly person needs to be
made to feel respected and supported, as if his or her virtues were Godzilla
compared to the Bambi of this “slight odor, that perhaps suggests some
serious defect in the cheap detergent we are using.”
We hope you smiled at that last line. It is very difficult to think deeply
about Libran courtesy without recognizing its profound connection to a
sense of humor. With composite Saturn in Libra, humor is elemental to the
strategy these two must employ for making their relationship work. It is the
grease—or the grace. It is the magic that allows love and truth to co-exist.
With their “issues” reframed as clowns rather than as evil demons, these
two can talk about almost anything. Body odor, bad breath, PMS,
testosterone “poisoning”—all of them can be brought out into the open
without anyone feeling equated with them. Similarly, diplomatic, humorous
language arises for handling the more important psychological issues that
come up in intimacy: control, fear, anger, sexual curiosity about others.
Now imagine two people who’ve been on that sophisticated road for fifty
years. Feel their grace and their maturity. Feel how their love shines
through the humor. Feel how they’ve learned the graceful skill of accepting
each other’s simple humanity. That’s the evolutionary goal of composite
Saturn in Libra.
COMPOSITE SATURN IN SCORPIO
There’s a passionate sexual hunger in us all. When we’re very young, we
believe the hormonal message uncritically: if we could only “have” this
person, we would be satisfied forever. And if we don’t “have” them, our
lives might as well end here and now. A little time passes and maybe we’ve
“had” a person or two. Almost inevitably, we feel gypped: those people
turned out to be human beings! They weren’t the everlasting sexual gods
and goddesses we’d expected. They didn’t leave us in a permanent state of
heavenly orgasm after all.
At this point, we come to a crossroads. Some people become cynical,
deciding that the only way to feed this passionate sexual hunger is through
variety—spending their lives beginning relationships. Others become
“realistic,” which is to say they accept the depressing notion that these
hungers are cruel biological jokes the universe has played on us. They take
refuge in fantasy, or simply give up, surrendering to solitude or dull love.
With composite Saturn in Scorpio, these two people have signed a
different soul-contract entirely. They aim to take a third road: enduring,
endlessly transformative passion. That sounds good, but it’s hard work. A
lot of initial sexual passion derives from the newness and unfamiliarity of
the partner. The sexual (Scorpio) discipline (Saturn) this couple is
attempting pivots on sustaining that sense of newness and unfamiliarity.
How? Once we “know” someone, what more is there to discover? That’s
the critical question. At a superficial level, the answer is easy: not much.
But, psychologically and spiritually, we humans are deeper than oceans.
The trouble is, we hide that depth. We are frightened of revealing it.
Often we’ve been punished for being “too heavy” or “too weird” or “crazy”
or “bad.” We’ve adjusted to a shallow society, and been blasted whenever
we were even slightly maladjusted. With composite Saturn in Scorpio, these
two have an inner agreement to be open to anything in each other.
It takes a lot of will-power to sustain that. Maybe your partner is
attracted to someone else. That’s nobody’s favorite subject. But consider the
rich vein of psychological information that opens up the minute two people
make a deal to put that kind of material on the table, without shame or any
sense of “taboo.” For psychologically-immature people, such attractions
might be as simple as the third person’s resemblance to a certain pop star—
and even that reveals interesting questions: there are lots of attractive pop
stars in the world. Why this particular one? As people grow in wisdom,
those who catch our fancy are of course increasingly resonant with places in
ourselves that are emergent, or underfed, or supressed and then “projected”
onto the object of our devotion. How much sexually-precious “newness and
unfamiliarity” can be brought to the surface this way! This is the “third
road” that sustains the passionate heat between two souls.
We’ve used sexual attraction to others as the illustration here. It’s a good
one, but it’s far from the only one. Any “hard” subject could illustrate the
principle almost as well: sharing perceptions about each other’s parents or
families, speaking honestly about ageing and dying, considering what it
would feel like if either person received a scary medical diagnosis.
That is the discipline of composite Saturn in Scorpio: an endless
commitment to truth, an unwavering resolve never to shamie one’s partner
for any inner condition, and a determination never to be driven apart by fear
or pride.
COMPOSITE SATURN IN SAGITTARIUS
Imagine a “wise fool” wandering in an alien city, accosting strangers and
asking them about the meaning of life. Most of them would give him a wide
berth, thinking he was crazy—and consider how much it reveals about their
own beliefs if they took such a question to be insane! The few who did
respond would likely represent a wide range of philosophical views. There
would be Christian answers and Jewish answers and existentialist answers
and Republican answers and cynical answers, and so on. In other words, all
the major “religions” of the world would be represented. We humans have
been worrying about the meaning of life since we first uttered a
comprehensible syllable and we still haven’t come to many agreements.
Even with their composite Saturn in Sagittarius, these two people won’t
come to any final answers either. But they will try: their discipline (Saturn)
is focussed on answering the unanswerable (Sagittarius).
The dark expression of this configuration lies in deadening rigidity. They
need to be wary of mind-dulling agreements between themselves, whether
it’s an agreement to be Methodists or New Age or whatever. Anything that
dampens the quest violates their soul-agreement.
The Sagittarian road is a hard one. More precisely, it is simply
impossible. No “answer” can ever correspond perfectly to reality. For one
thing, we are three-dimensional creatures living in a multi-dimensional
cosmos: the “big truth” can never be captured in the frail nets of our limited
minds. But even that familiar perspective has its traps—see how easily it
can lead to a lazy, stable belief-system in which we make a religion out of
not knowing and not trying to know. With composite Saturn in Sagittarius,
there is a rigorous, unending effort to learn—and to learn in as accurate and
grounded a way possible—why we are here on this planet.
How can these two accomplish that? Let’s start by saying how not to
accomplish it: by shielding themselves from anything that challenges what
they already believe. With their composite Saturn in Sagittarius, for these
two such a course is anathema. The path to the higher ground for them—
and to the precious Saturnian maturity of their relationship—lies in
intentionally exposing themselves to philosophical shock. One effective
road in that direction lies in travel. When we travel outside our own culture,
inevitably we encounter radically distinct ways of being human. Sagittarius
has a natural correlation with journeying, but we need to throw Saturn into
the equations here too. Saturn is always fascinated by the difficult and the
challenging. The imagery falls into place when we think of this couple
paddling up the Orinoco rather than doing a safe, week-long wonder-tour of
Europe—or when we extend that trip to Europe for a year.
Ultimately, with their composite Saturn in Sagittarius, the real
“travelling” for this couple is more philosophical and intellectual than
geographical. Picture them, two old Christians heading for the mosque—or
the peyote cult. Two Jungians off to see Disneyworld. A pair of Beethoven
scholars trance-dancing at the rave. Physicists studying religion. Dancers
joining an investment club. Professors of rats-in-a-maze psychology reading
this book. Those are the kinds of Sagittarian disciplines that keep them on
course.
COMPOSITE SATURN IN CAPRICORN
Saturn rules Capricorn, so this composite configuration is a very potent one.
With all the other Saturn placements, we can lay out some useful truths.
What we cannot see is how central those truths are to the destiny of the
couple. With composite Saturn in Capricorn, we know they are pivotal. This
couple is capable of extraordinary feats. Both Saturn and Capricorn refer to
similar strengths and intentions: serious accomplishments, discipline, focus,
integrity. There is very little these two people cannot do if they set their
joint determination on a shared project.
Like any other powerful force, this energy has to be used in a careful,
reflective way or it can become dangerous.
Say you’ve had the week from Hell at work. Last time you had noticed,
it was Monday morning. Since then, it’s been strictly pedal-to-the-metal.
Every night you lay down to sleep, exhausted, and the next thing you know
the alarm is blaring and off you go again. You’ve been crawling toward the
weekend like a thirsty cowboy heading for a watery mirage in Death Valley.
Finally it’s here: Saturday morning! And you realize that you are too wired
and tense to relax. You know you need to relax—it’s practically a duty,
given your week. But you can’t. And the more you “make yourself” try to
cool out, the more impossible it becomes.
With their composite Saturn in Capricorn, these two people are magnets
for responsibility. Together, they will probably rise to those demands quite
effectively. The questions they need to answer are, how do we personally
want to use this energy? What would our life together look like if we were
not beset by other people’s needs—or other people’s sermons about the
nature of our duties? What is the great work we have actually come here
into this world together to accomplish? (By the way, one valuable hint
about the general shape of the answer to that last question lies in
considering the house where their composite Saturn lies—you can look that
up in the next few pages.) All of these questions boil down to one central
theme: who gets to choose the direction of this formidable Saturn-in-
Capricorn force? Is it the two people who “own” it, or is the world around
them—family, friends, the community, their jobs?
There is a great dignity in accomplishment. For all the usefulness of
simply loving ourselves the way we are and not having to prove anything to
anyone, we humans are still impressed by excellence in others. We admire
someone for disciplining themselves to become a fine pianist, for example.
Or building a successful business. Or raising a sane family in the ghetto.
With their composite Saturn in Capricorn, part of the soul-contract for this
couple is to direct that same self-affirming principle inward. They intend to
gain self-respect, dignity and a sense of their own natural authority through
accomplishing something impressive. Underlying this intention is a karmic
wound: the feeling, left over from prior-life experiences, of somehow not
having fully lived up to their potential. Perhaps they were simply lazy in
that lifetime, or let themselves be seduced by comfort. Or perhaps they
were like Lennon and McCartney on a slave ship, or Audrey and Katherine
Hepburn born dirt-poor in some patriarchal, sexist backwater. In any case,
they have a lot to give—and enough pent-up steam to make it happen. All
they have to do is to make sure they are not still wearing chains anybody
else has designed for them.
COMPOSITE SATURN IN AQUARIUS
“Faith, I ran when I saw others run!” It’s a Shakespearean quote—”Henry
IV, Part 1, Act Two,” to be precise. We first encountered it in humbler
circumstances: on a tee-shirt belonging to a friend who had just run the
Boston marathon. The words made us laugh, as they probably did the
Elizabethan crowds who first heard them. They are also an excellent
summary of the human condition. Literally—if you’re walking one way
down a street and suddenly you are faced with a panicked crowd
stampeding in the other direction, what are you going to do? Anyone who
decides to go investigate what’s frightened them might be brave—but in the
Darwinian scheme of things, such a person is also far less likely than most
of us to leave much of an impression on the gene pool. Survival is often
enhanced by surrendering to our herd instincts. With their composite Saturn
in Aquarius, this couple needs to overcome those reflexes. Their path in this
world goes against the grain. The great work (Saturn) they have signed up
to accomplish is individuation (Aquarius). Separating from the herd. Living
life their own way.
Relationships are hard work, even with the best of intentions.
Fortunately, human beings have been working at them for thousands of
years. We’ve inherited a lot of hard-won learning. Our ancestors have
passed their gifts down to us in the form of folklore and social customs.
Here are a few of the treasures: You don’t know if it’s true love until you’ve
had your first fight. Monogamy enhances trust. Children stabilize a
marriage. Couples sleep in the same bed. Marriage means you live together.
Say a few kind things for every hard thing you tell your partner.
Like running when you see others running away, all the above is actually
pretty solid advice for most of us. But not necessarily for these two. With
their composite Saturn in Aquarius, they have reached a point in the
evolutionary journey where it is more important that they make every
decision themselves, freely, under their own power and without any
external influence. There is an underlying karmic theme of constraint in a
prior lifetime together: Perhaps they were once compelled to marry each
other when they were not ready to do so, or maybe they both carry the scars
of being trapped in unhappy relationships—and memories of
commiserating about it together. In any case, in this lifetime, they must feel
that every step they take together is purely voluntary. They are inventing
their own rules.
That’s dangerous business. The collective “folklore” we mentioned a
minute ago is actually valuable stuff. It makes loving easier. To experiment
with any of those principles requires a lot of maturity—or creates that
maturity on the fast track! In their evolutionary effort, two powerful allies
exist for this couple. One comes from Aquarius, and it is a deep love of
truthfulness. The second is Saturn’s gift: a capacity for profound, grown-up
commitment. As they experiment with the “rules,” they will surely blunder
from time to time. Those two allies can help them over the rough patches.
In the end, the evolutionary intention they share can be conveyed in the
image of two delightfully idiosyncratic elders, having made their own way
down life’s winding road, loving each other well, wearing “grievously
inappropriate” clothing for people of their age—and laughing at anyone it
bothers!
COMPOSITE SATURN IN PISCES
We hit a switch at two in the morning and instantly we have daylight. We
touch the thermostat and we can have the house at any temperature that
feels good to us. Turn a dial and we have a symphony orchestra—or Jimi
Hendrix reincarnate in our living room. Turn another one and our dinner is
cooking. We live in an age of instant gratification, and that’s pretty sweet.
But some processes cannot be sped up or made easy. Building a relationship
is one of them. Another is working the ancient set of evolutionary methods
we call the “spiritual path.” With their composite Saturn in Pisces, those
two slow, stubborn processes are closely linked. This couple has a soul-
contract to discipline themselves (Saturn) to take full responsibility (Saturn
again) for the evolution of their own consciousnesses (Pisces), and in so
doing to create a deeper level of spiritual maturity in their relationship.
Some yoga classes are like Olympic events. Churches and meditation
classes are full of people posing as holier than they actually are. It’s not
difficult to detect competitiveness among people “on the path.” They’ll
intimate how long they’ve fasted, how many days they were out alone in
the wilderness on their vision quest, or how many hours they can sit in
meditation. All of that is just the usual human ego-circus. You laugh or you
cry. The only piece that truly matters in such evolutionary endeavors is
always invisible: it is the quality of surrender in the inner experience. But
that surrender can be enhanced by a strong quality of intention, which in
turn is supported by discipline and determination. An individual doing such
work often benefits most by not talking very much about it—keeping the
thirsty ego out of the whisky bar, in other words. But in this case we are
talking about a composite chart, and so the “individual” is really a
relationship between two people. Thus, we recognize that, with composite
Saturn in Pisces, this couple’s evolutionary aim must cover two bases. First,
they need some kind of serious, joint spiritual practice. Second, they need to
keep pretty quiet about it, except between themselves.
Serious, joint spiritual practice: what does that mean? Anything that feels
right to them is the best answer. “Religious” people often delight in blowing
each other to Kingdom Come over their differences, but the true mystics
always recognize that, while there are many roads, the mountain has only
one single peak. And Pisces is the sign of the mystic, not the theologian.
They can choose their own beliefs, and those beliefs actually matter very
little here. What matters is their “logging hours” in the presence of God, by
whatever methods they like. Doing so alone is fine—they remain
individuals despite their relationship. But, with their composite Saturn in
Pisces, it is also important that they share this effort. It cannot be a secret
between them, although it is useful for it not to be displayed for the world’s
eyes.
So, here’s an old couple with magic thick in the air around them, off on
vacation. “Where are you going?” says their neighbor. “Oh, nothing special
—just off to our cabin in the mountains, as usual.” The neighbor persists,
“What do you guys do all day up there?” And they answer, “Oh, nothing
much—we just sit on the porch and look through our eyes.”
The key is that these two elders know who is looking through those eyes.
COMPOSITE SATURN IN THE FIRST HOUSE
Let’s say that these two people decide to earn their living by shoplifting.
This isn’t exactly the career advice we would give based on having
composite Saturn in the first house! But we’ll learn something from it, so
bear with us. Maybe they’re twenty-something, with body piercing, tattoos
and purple hair. The minute they walk into the store the rent-a-cop’s eyes
get as squinty as Clint Eastwood’s. He scrutinizes their every move. Their
felonious career is doomed from the starting gate. Now instead let’s
imagine that our heros are in their seventies and dressed as if they’ve just
left the country club. They could load their pockets and purses, and the rent-
a-cop would tip his hat as they walked out of the store.
Take it a step deeper. Imagine that you are an actor on stage playing
those two roles. Feel how differently you experience yourself? The
emotional chords struck by being young and wild versus old and staid are
entirely distinct. That rent-a-cop is reacting to more than simple
appearances. He is also reacting to subtle cues: their carriage, their energy,
their facial expressions. Those inner conditions create an outward
appearance, which in turns triggers a corresponding social role . It’s all one
big ball of synchronistic wax.
With composite Saturn in the first house, these two people center
themselves as a couple by embracing the ageing process. No matter their
present age, it is profoundly helpful for them to imagine themselves
together in their later years. With age comes a certain dignity, and that self-
image is very supportive here. Let’s add that making a relationship work is
an accomplishment nowadays. It’s something of which two people can be
legitimately proud. That’s Saturn energy too. The whole point is that there
is a kind of seriousness in this relationship. That’s doesn’t mean they’re
humorless or uptight. What it means is that together they are carrying the
archetype of the Elder and the more they accept that role, the more their
relationship gains clarity, faith in itself, and authority. If they do their work
and choose to remain together, they have a destiny in their community: it is
to represent the culmination of a long effort to do the work love demands.
That’s a real gift for them to give their community. Early in their
relationship, they’ll start to get the message that this is what is expected of
them: just a short way into their courtship, they’ll be startled to realize that
people are already imaging that they’ve been together a long while. They’ll
be asked “if they’ve set a date yet.” They’ll be asked for intimate advice.
That’s what Elders do, and with composite Saturn in the first house, they
had better get used to it!
COMPOSITE SATURN IN THE SECOND HOUSE
A simpleminded astrologer might imagine that with “malefic” composite
Saturn in the house of money, these two people will experience a lifetime of
poverty and financial reversals. In practice, that’s not a terribly realistic
threat. Far more probable is that, if they commit to this relationship, they’ll
work hard for every penny and gradually, soberly, build a solid material
basis for the life they share. Likely, one or both of them will find an “inner
financial wizard,” perhaps quite unexpectedly. Sudden windfalls of wealth
are not to be expected; slow, methodical growth is. That’s the spirit of the
ringed planet.
The second house covers a lot of bases that have nothing to with finance,
but before we leave the subject of money, there’s one more comment to
make. Poverty is not only an objective condition of the checkbook. It is also
an attitude. A wealthy person who is constantly worried about money is
poor in spirit; a more modest person living within his or her means and not
thinking much about cash is in many real ways far wealthier. With
composite Saturn in the second house, these two need to be wary about the
pursuit of money taking up too much of their time and attention. It’s very
useful for them to practice the discipline of squandering money from time
to time, just to keep it in its place. There are people to whom we could say
that and it would be catastrophic advice! But not these two—if anything,
they’d err in the opposite direction, trading an abstract promise of a
financially secure future for a day-to-day life of monetary stricture.
Going more deeply, the second house is always related to self-
confidence. With Saturn there, especially at the early stages of a
relationship, these two face the risk of simply not believing in themselves
sufficiently as a couple. Instead of squandering some money every now and
then, they could squander the relationship! Everything under the domain of
the ringed planet takes time and patience. While it would be wrong for us to
imply that every couple who happens to have a composite Saturn in the
second house should commit to a lifetime together, we can say that sticking
with the process of courtship is a good move. This is the kind of connection
that could be a slow-cooker, building gradually into something that is more
than either person imagined it to be at the beginning. As the story unfolds
and various milestones of deepening commitment are passed, composite
Saturn in the second house becomes a rock-solid foundation for a long,
grown-up future together.
COMPOSITE SATURN IN THE THIRD HOUSE
Sound bites, catchy slogans, and bumper stickers serve purposes in the
world—and probably in relationships too. Bright peopleuse them as quick-
reference summaries of complex ideas; dumb ones use them as a kind of
intellectual butter-substitute. But there are communicative processes that
cannot be simplified or made to happen in thirty seconds. With composite
Saturn in the third house, the success of this couple depends upon their
becoming masters of deep, detailed, patient verbal exchanges.
Intimate life is full of paradoxes. We can love people profoundly and yet
be angry enough to think of hitting them. We can want children and
mortally dread the responsibilities having them entails. We can love two
people at the same time and not want to lose either of them. We can support
our mate’s relationship with his or her family, but still not want the in-laws
here for the holidays. Try getting any of those situations to fit on a bumper
sticker! You can’t do it. Discussing situations such as those requires time.
Both people have to speak in paragraphs and ideally, they take turns doing
it! It can only be successful if both partners recognize that deep, serious
communication is a priority, and make time for it. It can never happen
during the commercial breaks of a sitcom.
Saturn, on the negative side, is always vulnerable to blockages and
frustrations. With composite Saturn in the third house, these two people are
at risk of slipping into silence. That’s a danger, but it’s not their fate in any
immutable sense. Here’s how that problem can arise and how they can
avoid it. Say we do love our partner but we’re angry enough to feel tempted
to hit them, as we described a minute ago. Maybe those feelings are so
complex that we don’t know how to express them. Maybe the relationship
has not developed the essential composite Saturn in the third house skill of
creating time for dialog. So we clam up. Maybe we’re also sitting on that
issue of our ambivalence about having children. And the in-laws have just
left a message on the answering machine that all seventeen of them would
like to come for Thanksgiving. Yikes! See how the backlog of unexplored
issues can build up? Pretty soon we just don’t know where to begin. More
silence ensues. Soon enough, the couple is either sitting on a volcano—or
just so crippled with a depressing sense of being overwhelmed that the
relationship runs out of gas.
All of that is optional. All of it has the same cure: getting past the current
cultural climate of instant answers and sound bites, and committing to the
Saturn discipline of structuring the relationship in a way that reflects a
promise to speak and listen to each other patiently, regularly, and in detail.
COMPOSITE SATURN IN THE FOURTH HOUSE
In the world of intimacy, there is hardly a more powerful symbol than
making a home together. It comes in stages, some of them unspoken and
tender. Consider the sweet implications, for example, of one lover first
leaving a toothbrush in the other one’s bathroom! They’ve begun the
ancient fourth house ritual: two homes are becoming one. Moving up the
ladder, a couple begins to live together—or “basically” live together! A
couple buys their first home. Behind all fancy verbal posturing about
relationships, home is really the bottom line. They do it or they don’t do it.
That’s where a couple walks their talk, if they are truly committed to each
other. Or where they face the truth of the limitations on their commitment.
Legalisms aside, making a home together is essence of the life-partnership
society calls “marriage.”
These issues are pressing for most couples, but with composite Saturn in
the fourth house, for these two, home is everything. It is the Great Work. It
is the make-it-or-break-it issue of their bond. And to get it right, they will
have to work hard.
Astrologers who think of Saturn as a bad planet would immediately
imagine that this couple will experience misfortune or trouble around trying
to establish their nest. We really don’t need to be that pessimistic—but it is
fair to say that making a home will demand a lot of focused effort and
probably a lot of sacrifice on their parts. Maybe they live in a part of the
country where real estate prices are sky-high. How long do they have to
save to get the sort of place they need? What other sacrifices do they have
to make? Or do they realize that they need to move to another part of the
country, perhaps sacrificing some career-potential, because having a home
is so important to them? That might be a very sound psychological calculus
for these two, and a good example of how to satisfy Saturn’s demands.
Maybe, given modern realities, one or both of them have children from a
previous relationship. How do they form a home under those
circumstances? Maybe they live in different cities—if so, who moves? With
composite Saturn in the fourth house, underlying these kinds of vexations is
the eternal question: how badly do they want this relationship? Will they
take it seriously enough to pay the price. There is no shame in refusing. Not
all relationships are meant to last. But ultimately, for these two to move
forward into a shared future, these kinds of home-and-hearth questions will
need to be addressed.
COMPOSITE SATURN IN THE FIFTH HOUSE
Wherever Saturn lies in a composite chart, a couple must practice
discipline. Almost always, Saturn asks us to make the power of our wills
dominant over our instincts, appetites and reflexes. The virtues of the ringed
planet are stern ones: integrity, maturity, morality, and character. The fruits
of a strong response to it are dignity, self-respect and accomplishment.
So what are we to make of composite Saturn in the house of fun?
Because that is exactly what the fifth house entails: playfulness, joy, and
celebration. At first, this composite Saturn configuration appears to be
nothing but a massive self-contradiction. Until we think deeply about it, that
is.
Our first step in untangling this Saturn placement lies in recognizing that
fun is not frivolous. Nor is it something that happens automatically when
work stops. Life is very often difficult. As adults, we must accept that
reality and deal with it. But in brokering life’s difficulties, we become
hardened. We get lines on our faces. We become business-like. Just think of
the way you feel ten minutes after your alarm rings on Monday morning—
and “feel” is actually not the right word there, because the truth is that you
are not “feeling” very much at all in that moment: you are simply doing
what you must do, putting one foot ahead of the other. The necessity of that
grown-up response to life is self-evident. Perhaps less obvious is that we
also need to recover from it! And that recovery is the heart of the fifth
house: it represents the evolutionary and psychological need for wild,
Dionysian release. It represents the cure for our necessary “adjustment to
reality!”
With Saturn in the composite fifth house, a couple must practice the
discipline of celebration. They must actively and studiously make time for
renewal and spontaneity. Underlying these observations is our awareness
that such a couple is vulnerable to becoming too stiff and predictable. They
can be dangerously out of touch with how tired they are, or with the terrible
mordida demanded by dutifulness, responsibility, and “doing the right
thing.” They need to remember how much fun it is to go dancing. They
need to remind themselves of the simple pleasures of civilization: films,
performances, happy restaurants. Bubble baths. Chocolates. And yes—even
sex. Dutifulness and tiredness can kill even that.
These concerns are particularly pressing if the couple has children—
another basic fifth house correlate. While we wouldn’t pay too much
attention to the grim fortune-telling interpretation of “misfortune through
children” in connection with this configuration, we must still be concerned
with the risks of the couple becoming so focused on the needs of their
family that they forget their own needs as lovers and as human beings.
Creativity is central to the fifth house, and with their composite Saturn
there, these two benefit from a serious, long-term commitment to joint
creative projects. Perhaps they landscape a garden together, complete with
trees and a fish-pond. Maybe they form a band or become involved with a
theater group, and strive for excellence and continuous improvement there.
Maybe they write a book together. The point is that the attainment of
excellence in some shared creative expression can be profoundly engaging
and compelling. They can wake up excited on a Saturday morning thinking
about it. Behind the hard Saturnian concentration, behind that tremendous
outpouring of energy and effort, they’re smiling merrily, glad to be alive.
COMPOSITE SATURN IN THE SIXTH HOUSE
Everyone knows that falling in love is a magical world where the air is
perfumed, skies are always sunny, and your beloved is the loveliest and
most reasonable creature who ever graced your bedspread. And everyone
knows that, given a bit of time, the facts of life strike: love is hard work and
the merry hormones coursing through your bloodstream are not sufficiently
enchanted to make reality disappear. One common metaphor for this
intrusion of reality into a relationship is the question, “Who is going to take
the garbage out?” It’s a good one, so let’s start there.
The sixth house has to do with the daily routines of life, garbage-patrol
being only one of them. No one enjoys it, of course. And garbage is just one
metaphor—what it stands for is the whole range of minor mechanical
processes that allow life to continue: cooking, shopping, paying the bills,
returning phone calls and email, housecleaning. Even doing half of that
work is huge drain on our time and energy, which leads us to an elemental
principle in trying to understand this couple with their composite Saturn in
the sixth house: if each one of them does half the necessary work, they’ll
each feel they’re personally doing three-quarters of it! That perception leads
to resentment, which leads to familiar domestic patterns of treachery—
weaseling out of duties, manipulating our partner into doing more, and so
on.
Probably no couple is completely immune, but the key is that for these
two people, consciously building a fair and rational division of labor in the
relationship is absolutely critical. It will not happen automatically. It
requires responsible, mature discussion and compromise from both of them.
They’ll need to talk about, realistically assessing each other’s natural talents
and tastes and coming up with the least odious division of these tasks. And
then they need to stick to their promises. That’s the grease that allows these
wheels turn.
One of the reasons this skillful handling of daily routine is so important
right from the beginning is that very likely, as their story unfolds, they will
face some extraordinary, demanding situation that calls for them to make
sacrifices for another: an indigent parent moves in, there is some illness in
the family, one of the incomes is lost. If they have built the classic Saturn
sense of being an effective team, they’ll rise to this bit of karma. If not, it
may be the straw that breaks the camel’s back.
COMPOSITE SATURN IN THE SEVENTH HOUSE
An inexperienced astrologer could easily get off on the wrong foot
interpreting this configuration—and probably thoroughly frighten the poor
couple who had it! Saturn “the greater malefic” in the house of marriage!
Yikes! Run away! Fortunately for our heroes, this reading of the symbolism
is totally wrong on two counts. First, there really are no bad planets—every
one of them serves a potentially positive purpose, Saturn included. And
second, the main meaning of the seventh house in a composite chart is
about relationships the couple has with other people. It’s only indirectly
about them.
Whenever we see a planet in the seventh, whether it is in an individual
birthchart or a composite, we know that other people are the triggers for
some kind of essential process. We cannot do it alone, in other words. In
this case, we recognize that a couple with composite Saturn in the seventh
house needs help. As a couple, they have soulmates. Those soulmates might
be single, but they are often other couples.
Relationships are hard. People set out with good intentions and open
hearts and often wind up in emotional train wrecks. But there are success
stories too. Forget astrology for a moment and just apply some common
sense. When we are faced with a daunting task and we have a rational fear
of failure and we don’t really know what we are doing, naturally we take a
moment to see how others have done it! We study success and we emulate
it. We put our feet where others have walked without landing on their
heinies. That is exactly what these two, with their composite Saturn in the
seventh house, must do.
To whom do they turn for guidance? Their composite chart tells us: their
helpful soulmates are of a Saturnine nature. One very simple thought is that
they are older. How much older? Enough so that everyone notices it. If our
heroes are twenty-year-olds, maybe they look to a couple who are thirty. If
they’re fifty, that ten years might not be enough: their soulmates might be a
happy couple in their seventies who’ve already weathered storms that are
just brewing on the horizon for our duo. Age differences are a common
correlate of Saturn since it refers to “Elders.”
But the deeper reality is that Saturn is about wisdom and tempered,
digested experience. It’s unlikely but not out of the realm of possibility that
our couple finds guidance in people who are chronologically younger than
themselves. In any case, their soulmates display the whole pantheon of
positive Saturn qualities. They are mature people with seriousness, realism,
and a deep sense of personal integrity. They listen well. If it’s a couple, they
are deeply and unambivalently committed to each other, and have a realistic
sense of each others’ strength and weaknesses. They are disciplined and
have a balanced relationship with their pleasures and appetites. They love
each other, but you also get the sense that each has made peace with a kind
of sacred inner solitude—and that they treasure that quality in each other. If
one died, the other would weep—and survive.
Read that last paragraph again in the light of one more perspective: these
qualities we see in our heroes’ soulmates are the very qualities they
themselves need to bring into their bond. They receive them as a gift from
outside, internalize them, and later, just by being who they are, they offer
them back to the world.
COMPOSITE SATURN IN THE EIGHTH HOUSE
Single people who read pop-psychology books often speak of “fear of
intimacy” as if it were a mental disorder. That’s a common perspective
nowadays, but anyone who’s been in a serious, no-exit sexual relationship is
more likely to view such fear as a sign of good reality-testing and normal
brain-function! Love is profoundly frightening. We all have hot-button
issues and places inside ourselves whose existence we just don’t want to
admit. We’re all capable of very dark thoughts. Who has no “inner
murderer?” Who has never told a lie? Who hasn’t been driven half-crazy by
their sexuality?
Take it further. How would you feel with all that information hanging
out, as obvious as a billboard? And what if the person reading the billboard
is in a position to deal you a crippling psychological blow, if they so chose?
What if they are as crazy as you are, and they have an agenda about
changing you, controlling you, and making you over in their own image?
Spooky, huh? Welcome to the wonderful world of committed love, at
least from the eighth house perspective! It puts “fear of intimacy” in a
different light. With any planet in the composite eighth house, a couple has
signed up to deal with these deeper psychological territories. With their
composite Saturn there, they need to do that work in a “Saturn” way—or
those issues will erode their ability to remain committed to each other.
“Commitment” is a key word with Saturn, always. And that is what is
required here. How can we possibly trust another person enough to deal
with deeper, more threatening kinds of issues? Certainly we are not going to
it with someone who is here today and likely to be gone tomorrow. Trust is
founded on vows and promises—vows and promises that have been proven
reliable by the only sure test: the passage of time. Two people can meet and
truly love each other very quickly. Love can be telegraphed directly from
one soul to another, and even though it doesn’t make logical sense, most of
us have experienced it. But trust is different: it must be forged in the
furnaces of difficulties endured and promises kept. With composite Saturn
in the eighth house, these two need to win each other’s faith. That process
cannot be rushed. We’re dealing with scared, cautious, self-contained places
in each of these people—in fact, healing that particular fear of commitment
in each of them is what they’ve signed up to do together. In that process, it
probably takes a hundred promises kept to make up for one promise broken.
It calls for the reassurance that comes from a partner being consistently
honest, committed, and honorable. If we strip away all the cultural and
social mythology and get right down to the bare bones, with composite
Saturn in the eighth house, we are talking about the ancient, archetypal
reality of marriage, in a spirit of “until death do us part.” Anything less isn’t
strong enough medicine to make the process of surrendering the ego’s
defenses safe enough to endure.
COMPOSITE SATURN IN THE NINTH HOUSE
The ninth house is expansive, adventurous, and philosophical, while Saturn
is rigorous and grounded. The combination is rich and paradoxical, and a
little daunting. With their composite Saturn there, for this couple, the
successful maturation of their relationship depends upon a sustained effort
in a challenging direction: figuring out exactly why they are together, what
the rules are, and what they believe the meaning of commitment to be.
Religions usually offer a lot of fancy talk about the sanctity of human
commitments. Perhaps these two draw some comfort and clarity about their
bond from such an ecclesiastical direction. Many astrologers would
emphasize the connection between this configuration and traditional
religious beliefs. That reading of the symbolism is valid, but, while we can
honor it, we need not be limited to it. In fact, the trouble with taking refuge
in religious support for a bond is simply that it is always about somebody
else’s words and thoughts. We can say them without having really made
them our own. Saturn, on the other hand, always calls for absolute integrity
and objective self-analysis. When we are parroting words that aren’t real to
us personally, we’ve failed that test—or perhaps a kinder way of saying it is
that we are passing tests just fine, but in a lower grade.
So, what is the moral, philosophical basis of this bond? With composite
Saturn in the ninth house, that’s the question. And it is, to put it mildly, an
essay question! No quick, pat answer will work. Should your partner fail
you grievously, is there anything you have a right not to forgive? Discuss.
Under what conditions, if any, would you declare yourself free of the vow
you’ve spoken? Discuss. Do people “drift apart” and is that a valid basis for
ending a relationship? Do you have the right to keep any secrets at all from
each other? Should honesty be sacrificed ever for the sake of kindness? In
committing to each other, what are the precise limits and definitions of your
commitment to each others’ families? Discuss, discuss, discuss.
Ideally, those “discussions” should begin very early in the relationship. If
two people with this configuration cannot agree on the elemental principles,
their bond will very likely fail. Saturn is merciless that way. It can become a
black hole if we don’t rise to its challenges. And of course no two people
will agree on everything! That’s not even the aim. Two people can vote for
opposing political candidates, united by their higher commitment to respect
each other’s differences. We doubt that two people can remain together very
happily, however, if one believes in sexual fidelity and the other one
doesn’t. Let them agree on a “religion,” walk their talk, and then commit to
the reality of endless adjustment and deepening as their lives together
unfold.
COMPOSITE SATURN IN THE TENTH HOUSE
Saturn is very strong in the tenth house. One common interpretation is that
this couple is very career-oriented. That pronouncement is not in fact very
reliable. Truth is, two people, neither of whom think of a job as anything
more than a way to put food in the table and toys in the toy box, can come
together with Saturn in their composite tenth house. They won’t
immediately be transformed into dynamos of blind ambition, nor should
they be. Their evolutionary work, as individuals and as a couple, maybe
very well like elsewhere.
Another common reading of composite Saturn in the tenth house is that a
couple with this configuration are likely work together professionally.
While there is a little tidal pull in that direction, again it’s not a very reliable
prophecy.
So what does it mean? Our first step in answering that question is to
recognize that, as culture, we are very work-oriented. That bias has tainted
the astrological view of the so-called “house of career” with an overly
professional perspective. The reality is that the tenth house refers to our role
in the tribe—the way we look to people who don’t know us very well. Work
is part of that, but so are a lot of other factors that define us socially, such as
our relationship status, where we live, our political and religious
affiliations, our ethnicity: all the hats we wear. Taking it up a notch, let’s
recognize that part of being sane and self-actualized is finding a meaningful
role to play in the world. At the risk of making it sound silly, we can call
this our “cosmic job description.” And that brings us to our point: with
composite Saturn in the tenth house, this couple has such a job description.
In a nutshell, they are to be Elders.
Strangely, being Elders has nothing to do with age! Elders guide and
advise the “younger people” in the tribe: that is their age-old role. In a
composite chart we are talking about a relationship, and so we recognize
that these two human beings have signed up to demonstrate to their
community how committed love works! They can be natty little
conventional types, or wild-eyed radicals—in any case, they have a
community, and all communities are full of men and women facing the
eternal questions of human sexuality. Right from the beginning, their crowd
will take their relationship seriously, taking cues from them, watching them
carefully. People who believe in love will be rooting for them to make it,
while those who look askance upon the idea of two people in serious life-
partnership will be doing the opposite: feeling this relationship to be a
threat to their lonely belief-system, they’ll do their best to sabotage it. In
either case, we see the powerful symbolism these two wield.
Many combinations of two people have composite Saturn in the tenth
house. Realistically, not all of them are supposed to be together in life. For
these two, the stakes are high: the pressure of social expectation alone
makes it virtually impossible for them to be in a casual relationship. Like it
or not, they will become symbolic of intimacy in their community—
symbolic of success or symbolic of failure, but always symbolic. That’s
inherent to the tenth house: it is always public. Ultimately, there is a burden
they must decide if they want to carry: the burden of showing others the
way. There is no shame in choosing not to carry it! But if they succeed, the
mind immediately races ahead to the magnetic image of two old people
walking hand in hand, keepers of each other’s histories and secrets,
tempered by love, their rough edges smoothed by the crashing waves of
decades of intimacy, honesty, and commitment. One wordless look at them
and even a stranger has received a blessing.
COMPOSITE SATURN IN THE ELEVENTH HOUSE
Imagine a couple attends a weekend “relationship workshop.” A positive
use of their time, or not? It is, of course, a pig in a poke. You never know.
Maybe the class is brilliant and helpful—or maybe it’s taught by some
empty-headed idealist who’s yet to experience a romance hitting its first
anniversary. In either case, there is one reliable prediction we can make: at
the class, our heroes will encounter other couples who are willing to work
seriously on their relationship. And with composite Saturn in the eleventh
house, that’s soul-food. These two need the support of that kind of
community around them.
The eleventh house is linked to our social network—the faces we
recognize, our crowd, our tribe. It’s often connected with the word
“friends,” but that’s misleading nowadays: the eleventh house isn’t always
so intimate. If you are a member of an astrological society or a church or
even a group of country-and-western dancers who put on their cowboys
hats the first Saturday of every month, you are familiar with the eleventh
house context. With composite Saturn in the eleventh house, this particular
couple benefits from having “Saturn” people around them, especially ones
who take a “Saturn” attitude toward their own relationships.
If we read a traditional astrology book, those statements might actually
seem a little depressing! Why? Because “Saturn people” would probably be
represented as abysmally boring! Predictable. Humorless. Literal-minded.
Tired, sexless creatures dressed in drab clothes, wearing practical shoes.
Yuck! That’s a good description of the dark side of Saturn, but that’s not
what this duo needs—what they need around them is the energy of maturity,
honor, commitment, and integrity in relationship. Those virtues are not in
any way the opposite of having a good time. In fact, they probably help in
that department. Solid love is freeing. There is something exhausting and
distracting about people “on the make.” Being around someone in the midst
of heartbreak is tiring too—if we love them, we want to help, but the
conversations do tend to sound like familiar litanies. With the “sexual
question” more-or-less settled, the range of joy in life is free to expand
beyond the enormous gravitational field our hormones create.
For this couple with composite Saturn in the eleventh house, the
company of people in solid, tried-and-true relationships is like fresh air.
They can of course support each other in hard times, comparing notes about
the bumps in the road of love. When they hit bumps themselves, how
precious it is to have people around who are rooting for the relationship
rather than expecting it to fail! By contrast, think of the way divorce and
breakup can become “contagious” in a group—one couple parts and there’s
a epidemic. To support their commitment, these two people must simply
find their place in the community of long-haul lovers.
COMPOSITE SATURN IN THE TWELFTH HOUSE
Mystical realities are symbolized by the twelfth house and Saturn is linked
to solitude, among other things. It’s a natural combination—mystics are
forever seeking lonely mountaintops and wilderness hideaways. They love
getting away from the noise, distractions and temptations of the social
world. But, with composite Saturn in the twelfth house, we are talking
about a relationship: not a solitary condition. So how can these pieces add
up? Simple: these two people need to get away together. They need regular
doses of radical, uncontested privacy.
Couples naturally regenerate by withdrawing. Even the most inveterate
party animals sooner or later share a private joke before returning their
attention to the crowd. Most of us who are closer to the mid-range of the
introversion-extroversion spectrum feel some relief when the guests leave
our home, even if we love them and enjoyed ourselves. With composite
Saturn in the twelfth, we are simply seeing an exaggerated version of this
principle: for this couple, learning to create and defend their own privacy
plays a pivotal role in the maturation of their bond. Without those skills,
something drains out of the space between them. Their love gets lost in the
maze of other, lesser loves: friendships, family life, and so on. It doesn’t
need to be that way: they can have the solitary time they need and enjoy
those other relationships too. Diplomacy—and clear boundaries—are the
secrets.
The spiritual life of a couple is always a complex question, but when
there is a composite planet in the twelfth house, it becomes a pressing one.
“Religion” is public and can be shared by a couple, but the twelfth house
isn’t really about religion. It’s more about the notion of direct contact with
the next dimension—and that may sound exotic, but anyone who has every
prayed or meditated has had the experience of it. Ditto for anyone who has
ever simply walked into a sacred space—a cathedral, an Anasazi kiva, a
Zendo—and been blown away by the feeling of the place. The point is that
these two need to experience such things together, and the ticket that gets
them in is shared solitude. Perhaps they walk into an empty cathedral
together. They are quiet. They separate and wander through the alcoves.
One looks up and sees the other a hundred feet away, sitting quietly in a
pew. The other one sits down too, but not too close—eyes closed, but after a
while he or she becomes aware of the partner’s presence. Eyes open, a
smile, an unspoken understanding—and they both walk out of the building
into the sunlight. Only then to they begin talking, and maybe nothing that
happened “inside them” is even mentioned. No need to say it. It is simply
understood. That is the heart and soul of composite Saturn in the twelfth
house. Those silent, shared understandings weave a bond between the souls.
Now, imagine they’d succumbed to social pressure, and brought their
noisy nieces and nephews along on the trip . . .
Chapter 13
The Composite Uranus
U ranus spends about seven years in each sign of the zodiac. Result: a lot
of people who wind up in relationships with each other have the planet
in the same sign. And since composite charts are based on midpoints
between planets, their composite Uranus will be in that same sign too.
Some astrologers therefore dismiss such planetary symbolism as “just
generational.” That’s a wrongheaded approach, in our opinion: the fact is
that if two people, plus their composite chart, all have the planet in the same
sign, the effects are quite visibly reinforced.
When people are born natal Uranuses in adjacent signs, which also
happens a lot, their composite Uranus falls in one sign or the other—and
then it “sides” with the person who has it in that same sign, giving at least a
hint of a “Feudal System” dynamic, described in Chapter Three.
In any case, where the composite Uranus lies, we can hope for some
fascinating fireworks. This is the planet of rebellion. It carries the gene for
human zaniness. Always, it represents an area in a couple’s life together
where, if they are going to be true to their hearts, they’re going to get into
some interesting trouble. Society—which may mean their culture, their
community, their ethnic context, or their families—has one plan for them;
their souls have another. Who will win? That’s uncertain. It depends on
their own courage, creativity and self-awareness. But one point is sure: if
they get it right, they’ll “look wrong,” and if they get it wrong, they’ll “look
right.” What feeds them as a couple may seem offensive to other people. Or
it may seem grossly impractical, crazy, or simply silly. If they are true to
themselves, pressure on them to change will mount. Naturally, such
pressure can draw them closer together, make them stronger as a unit. Or
they can succumb to it, falsifying their lives and creating an uncomfortable
feeling of “going through the motions” in the area of life defined by the
position of their composite Uranus.
There can be real “wild card” feeling about this planet. Where it falls in a
couple’s composite chart, especially with its house placement, there is a
tendency for strange, unexpected developments to unfold. Underlying that
apparent chaos is a basic Uranian principle of “cosmic matching funds.” If
the partners remain true to themselves, typically that means painting
themselves into a corner somehow—breaking out of the “safe” patterns
established by society is dangerous, impractical business. It seems that, if
the couple is willing to do that anyway, the universe will create odd and
unusual circumstances that support going forward against the odds. But
only if they’ve determined to do it anyway!
COMPOSITE URANUS IN ARIES
One day in Jodie’s yoga class, her teacher said, “And whoever has had the
most assertiveness training can come take these foam blocks.” Silence! We
were all completely derailed. What were we supposed to do? There were
enough blocks to go around, but no one wanted to look aggressive or
greedy by taking one first. None of us had Uranus in Aries, but it felt like a
Uranus in Aries moment nonetheless.
The Lord of Individuality in the sign of the Warrior! Does that mean this
couple should start a revolution? Not necessarily, but they’ve got some
thinking to do about the whole function of courage, willpower and assertion
in their lives and in their relationship.
Sometimes it seems that in no area of life do we get more socialization
than in how to handle our Aries function of will, assertiveness and anger,
beginning with but not limited to The Terrible Twos, the time of our first
Mars returns. A long discussion of gender politics is beyond the scope of
this book, but men are probably socialized to be more tough and aggressive
than they actually are, and women are probably socialized to be less so.
But the questions run deeper than that. What’s worth getting angry
about? What requires a show of force or an act of will? What should our
boundaries be? The answers vary more by culture than we might think. In
some cultures, not sleeping with your host’s wife was an insult. In others,
showing the soles of your shoes is an offense. Fans have been known to kill
one another at soccer matches. These are learned responses, not innate
ones.
A couple with composite Uranus in Aries needs to work out for
themselves where they will draw their own lines in the sand, when they’ll
rattle their sabers and when they’ll use them. And if they’re doing a good
job with this composite Uranus placement, their decisions may puzzle or
even shock other people, but that’s not our couple’s problem!
COMPOSITE URANUS IN TAURUS
The sky is our father; the earth is our mother. We are all natives of this
planet; it is our natural habitat. We are all mammals, all primates, intelligent
ones but primates nonetheless. Our bodies were designed for use, and work
best when they are fed properly, move wisely, and rest and play and cuddle
enough.
How quickly we forget these basic facts of our existence. In much of the
industrialized world, most of our lives are spent in little boxes with four
walls. We’ve polluted the outside air. Many people barely spend a moment
outdoors, eat atrocious diets, never stretch, never move, and don’t sleep
enough.
For Uranus in physical, earthy, kinesthetic Taurus, that is madness.
This composite Uranus sign needs to revolutionize its treatment of its
primate self. Here we may find a couple who sleep on their screened-in
porch in the open air, who go camping, who practice yoga daily. These
partners may refuse to join the rat race and maintain the crazy pace we
Americans demand of ourselves. They may walk or bike to work, rather
than drive. They may spend time and money on regular massage and other
types of bodywork—recovering the power of touch is important for them.
They may experiment with their diet until they find the one that most fills
them with vitality.
As we write these words, there are about five inches of snow on the
ground. Both of our cats have gone outside just long enough to sniff the air,
set a paw in the snow, shake off the offending white flakes and retreat into
the warm house and their cat beds. But on a temperate day, they tend to
come in only long enough to eat and get a quick pat. They are just doing
what cats do: following their instincts. A couple with composite Uranus in
Taurus needs to do the same thing, and honor their instinctive side.
COMPOSITE URANUS IN GEMINI
Gemini, the Storyteller, the Journalist, the Observer. First of the Air signs,
with all of Air’s mental and conceptual outlook. The eternal student, the
messenger with winged feet, the glib and curious youth, in love with ideas
and with youth itself.
What happened when the generation with natal Uranus in Gemini got to
college? An outpouring of insatiable curiosity about the rest of the world
and the life of the mind. More than once, we’ve heard professors tell us that
there was unusual brilliance in the student body during those years,
brilliance of a degree they hadn’t seen before and haven’t seen since. A lot
of other things happened, too. Student unrest. Journalism as a revolutionary
tool. Teaching as a subversive activity. Peter Pan joined a rock and roll
band. And a number of young people claimed they wanted to keep their
options open as long as possible, and that they valued Experience over
Stability: no job, no possessions, no commitments except to a life of
maximal freedom and wonder.
Times change, and time catches up with us all. There’s no shame in the
maturing process. Yet a couple with composite Uranus in Gemini needs to
make sure that their life together remains interesting to them both. That
may mean using their brains, their feet, their library cards or their Frequent
Flyer miles. It may mean taking a class rather than nodding off in front of
endless reruns on television. And, all other things being equal, they should
opt for a fascinating vacation before they recarpet the family room.
Let’s say that our couple heeds the Pied Piper call of their composite
Uranus in Gemini, saves their money, uses all of that sign’s verbal ability to
parley their way into six months off from their respective jobs, rents an RV
and goes traveling across the continent. They home school their kids on the
road. The neighbors think they’re strange. Their state’s school system
doesn’t approve, but can’t very well stop them. The kids’ grandparents may
border on apoplectic. Yet that couple has done more for their marriage in
those six months than six years of living just like everyone else would do.
COMPOSITE URANUS IN CANCER
Where Uranus lies, we need to break the rules and follow our own path. We
tend to individuate both from and through the typical characteristics of the
sign where our Uranus is located, and this is just as true for couples as it is
for an individual. What do we associate with Cancer? A flippant answer
might be Mom, home and apple pie, but let’s look at this placement a bit
more closely.
Cancer has to do with nurturing, both physical and emotional. It has to
do with a rich inner life. It prefers a secure nest in which to accomplish all
of the above. A couple with composite Uranus here needs to make
conscious decisions about these areas of their shared lives.
Nurturing: this can apply to how they nurture each other, pets or a
garden, but the most typical meaning is children. Should these two have
children? As is typical where Uranus lies, they will get a lot of well-
intended advice here that won’t work for them. As someone once said, “It’s
wonderful to have children, and it’s wonderful not to have them.” Which
side of this fence our couple comes down on should be entirely up to them.
If they decide to have children, the same Uranian logic applies to how those
kids are raised: according to how this couple best sees fit. If they don’t have
children, no one should be allowed to shame them or pressure them about it.
Nurturing is food, too. Perhaps they need to arrive at their own diet plan,
and we don’t mean a reducing diet, but such things as joining a local food
co-op, growing their own vegetables, or exploring a vegan lifestyle.
A rich inner life: self-actualization is important for this couple. In an
ideal world, they would be able to make decisions about their relationship
based on the top levels of the psychologist Abraham H. Maslow’s hierarchy
of needs: love, creativity, self-actualization, personal growth, spiritual
pursuits. Many of us are too busy dealing with the lower levels—survival,
food, clothing, shelter—to have time or resources to devote to the higher
levels, yet the higher levels are grist for the mill for Cancer. Perhaps this
couple needs to limit their wardrobe in order to free up some money for
yoga seminars. Perhaps they need to settle for lower incomes in order to
develop their art.
A secure nest: what constitutes security for this couple may not be a
retirement plan, a home in the suburbs, and the accumulation of material
goods. They may experiment with housing arrangements, or strive to live as
simply as possible.
Obviously, there can be trade-offs among these features of Cancer:
nurturing, a rich inner life, and security, since it isn’t always easy to attain
all three. These partners need to choose for themselves what the right
balance among these factors is for them.
COMPOSITE URANUS IN LEO
Comfort. Acceptance. Warmth. Humor. Self-expression. And a certain
display of personal style and flair that derives from all of the above (and we
don’t mean in the clothing department). That’s what Leo’s all about. A
planet in this sign has learned all it can from self-flagellation, and requires
joy to evolve any further.
This couple needs to say “yes” to life, and to help them do so, they need
to play. If the various, joy-affirming, life-enhancing reasons why it’s good
to be alive—chocolate, orgasms, hot tubs, nature, pets, music, hiking, jokes,
etc.—are amputated from their relationship, they’re in trouble.
Your own list of fun might have been different than the one in the above
paragraph. If you’re a couple with Uranus in Leo, then more power to you!
Go enjoy life however it most pleases you to do so. Yet because Uranus is
involved here, what you relish may be puzzling to the mainstream. Baseball
trading card conventions? Rebuilding ancient 486 PCs? The Society for
Creative Anachronism? Never mind the raised eyebrows at the office; just
dive right in. One hint: Leo planets also thrive on applause, so if you can
get some positive feedback from the folks who share your offbeat tastes, so
much the better.
But how you’re having fun is only half the battle. The other half is
claiming your right to have as much of it as you need. We live in a culture
of maniacal overworkers, partly by choice, partly by necessity—or
perceived necessity. Europeans average three to six weeks of paid vacation
every year. Think about it.
A couple with composite Uranus in Leo should remember: on our
deathbeds, we are usually more inclined to value whatever we did that
opened our hearts, not how many hours of overtime we put in.
COMPOSITE URANUS IN VIRGO
Here is a classic Virgo word: should. What a couple is “supposed” to do
seems eternally opposed to what they actually want to do. The situation has
that primordial Virgo signature: the tension between the ideal and the real,
between “should” and “want.” It’s fashionable in some circles nowadays to
hold the position that we shouldn’t say “should”—a position fraught with
some humorous paradoxes, needless to say. But without “should,” we
would have no room in our lives for those solid Virgoan qualities:
conscience, altruism, and civil behavior.
The challenge facing the couple with their composite Uranus in Virgo
lies in successfully throwing out the bath water while preserving the baby.
Maybe they’ve accumulated a ton of empty plastic bottles. They “should”
re-cycle them. Fair enough: our ability to survive on this planet depends
upon our willingness to live in more ecologically savvy ways. That’s just
self-preservation, and only idiots, manufacturers of plastic bottles, and
certain elected officials would argue with it. Maybe these partners with
composite Uranus in Virgo have good professional jobs. They “should”
keep those jobs as if life itself depended upon them, and give up this crazy
idea of cashing in their chips, going to Nepal to study Buddhism and
eventually opening a Buddhist center somewhere.
Hmm.
Whose voice is speaking there? At one obvious level, the answer is that
it is the voice of the world—the collective, anti-Uranian chorus of everyone
who has ever given them “common sense” advice about how they “should”
live their lives. At a deeper level, that limiting, boring, repressive voice is
coming from inside them. And that is often the most tangled thread for
people with composite Uranus in Virgo to sort out—their internalized
“tribal” voice, that intimate part of themselves that purports to speak for
their souls . . . and actually has a lot more to do with the values motivating
the characters they saw on television before they were ten years old.
We are nothing without values and principles. The task facing this couple
is to make sure that those values and principles are in fact their own.
COMPOSITE URANUS IN LIBRA
Libra, the traditional sign of marriage. What could this independent planet
mean here?
Let’s start by stating that Libra is also the sign of fairness, moderation,
reciprocity and the formation of aesthetic relationships as well as human
ones. Libra needs balance, both in and out of relationships.
Remember that Uranus in a sign rebels both against and through the
matters of that sign. Here the relationship itself, and the very notion of
relating, are subject to scrutiny by the Lord of Independence. This couple
needs to choose to be together, not drift into a union through habit and
because of societal expectations.
They may well question some of the age-old traditions around love, and
come up with their own answers. Something about their relationship itself
needs to break the rules. Which ones? We don’t know. It may be as simple
as the man’s not always walking on the half of the sidewalk closest to the
traffic, if the couple is heterosexual. It may be as profound as never living
under the same roof—they may have a horror of feeling joined at the hips.
They may have married across socioeconomic or racial boundaries. They
may take separate vacations. They may go through a private ceremony of
re-commitment once a week. Whatever they do, they shouldn’t take the
relationship as a given, but as a living, breathing art, a work in progress, a
balancing act.
How this couple deals with its friendships may also be affected by
composite Uranus in Libra. Choosing their friends, and deciding on their
friends’ roles and importance in the relationship, can be a brave new world
for these partners. So can their taste in the arts. What decorates their walls
may shock or startle a less conventional couple, but for these two, beauty
really is in the eye of the beholder.
The challenge for this couple is to make the relationship a day by day
performance art, deliberately chosen, and not hide behind a wall of
“niceness.”
COMPOSITE URANUS IN SCORPIO
A few years ago in Canada we saw an interesting piece of graffiti:
“Psychological Revolution Now!” In a bumper-sticker kind of way, that
phrase captures the spirit of composite Uranus in Scorpio. This is the sign
of making the unconscious conscious. To that end, it is intense, brooding,
passionate and self-analytical. It wants depth, and employs psychological
perceptiveness and honesty to get there.
When you were growing up, you might have been told not to discuss
religion, politics, sex or money at the dinner table or at parties. Later,
magazines might have advised you not to discuss your sexual pasts,
insecurities, or attractions outside the relationship with one another, and to
be very careful indeed about criticizing each other’s families.
In general, that’s probably good advice, even in these permissive times.
For a couple with composite Uranus in Scorpio, however, that advice just
doesn’t work very well. If they sense polite evasions or skillful minimizing,
they’ll feel compelled to probe beneath the surface of those defenses.
Friends with less revelatory dispositions may be appalled at what these
partners discuss with one another, but that’s what works for composite
Uranus in Scorpio.
With a few caveats. It is possible to go too far in such conversations, and
neither partner should carry it to the extent of bullying or shaming the other
one. Also, this composite Uranus sign is not a license to go probing unasked
into the psyches of people outside of the couple.
Scorpio also has to do with our reactions to death and dying. These
partners would do well to have some frank talks about those issues, and
figure out how they want to handle their estates, whether they want living
wills, or what sort of funeral arrangements each might prefer. What each of
them thinks happens to the essence of the person after the body dies is
another good subject for discussion, and for sharing individual opinions.
The challenge for this composite Uranus sign lies in the couple’s making
their own individuated response to the areas of life most of us term “taboo:”
sexuality, death and dying, the occult, and the deep unconscious, without
either pointlessly going too far or retreating into shallowness.
COMPOSITE URANUS IN SAGITTARIUS
What do you believe in? Love? God? Buddhism? What helps you make
your life meaningful? Progress? Education? Ecology?
Sagittarius has to do with generating a certain philosophy of life or world
view, with choosing what stars we steer by. It is a sign that needs to move
toward a belief system, to have faith in something.
But with Uranus in Sagittarius, the whole question of what beliefs shape
our lives and why is brought sharply into focus. The search for meaning can
be extreme or, if sufficiently frustrated, can even turn to cynicism and
expediency—those are “religions,” too. Here are a few others:
Aim for the American dream: a nice house, two cars and two children.
Look out for number one.
Attend the church of your choice.
A rolling stone gathers no moss.
College and graduate or professional schools are the best route to a
better-paying job.
Live fast, die young and live a good-looking corpse.
We could spend all day naming these religions great and small, but the
point is that the couple with Uranus in Sagittarius should accept none of
them blindly. They should believe nothing without questioning it
thoroughly first.
Travel helps this sign grow, so perhaps this couple will shun that house-
holding American dream in order to stay mobile. They may skip extra
education for hands-on experience. And they might “leave the church of
their fathers,” join it, or start a new one all their own.
Like its opposite number, composite Uranus in Gemini, composite
Uranus in Sagittarius needs a wide variety of experiences, but ideally they
should all contribute to the evolution of this couple’s worldview. Whoever
said “the road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom” undoubtedly had a
lot of Sagittarian energy!
COMPOSITE URANUS IN CAPRICORN
What could it mean for this couple to individuate both against and through
the energies of the sign of the Wise Elder, the Executive, and the Prime
Minister?
Capricorn seeks accomplishments, Great Works. It can exude a natural
authority. Its drive is to become a master of manifestation in the material
world, the outer world of form.
The mini-generation of people with the Lord of Independence in this
pragmatic sign will be called upon to re-examine the roles of integrity,
achievement and self-containment in their lives. What will they want to
accomplish by the end of their time on the planet? What mark might they
want to leave behind them? A reformed company? A sane family? A work
of art? A political or legal change in society? There’s no way to tell for
sure, but we can be fairly sure that it won’t be “business as usual” with this
couple, and we can be positive that it shouldn’t be.
To accomplish what they need to do, these partners will have to break the
rules, and that may be difficult for them. It must have been hard for
Gandalf, the wizard in The Lord of the Rings, to refuse the head of his order
Saruman’s request that the wizards ally themselves with the Dark Lord,
Sauron. Gandalf made that refusal at not a little personal cost. Yet he did the
right thing, and helped save Middle Earth from Sauron thereby. It must
have been hard for Mr. Spock, the Vulcan science officer in the original
Star Trek, to leave his own Vulcan people and join a human crew, not to
mention sacrificing himself to save the ship and its personnel in one of the
Star Trek movies.
Remember those bumper stickers from the 1980s and 1990s: “Subvert
the Dominant Paradigm”? Those are Uranus in Capricorn bumper stickers!
What did Gandalf and Spock do, in the above examples? They started out
working within the dominant paradigm, then left it. Interestingly, by doing
so they happened to serve not only their individual growth, but the common
good.
Finally, this couple is called upon to define the meaning of true success,
accomplishment and integrity for themselves, not according to societal
measures.
COMPOSITE URANUS IN AQUARIUS
The Lord of Individuality is powerful in his own sign, and that means he’ll
be a powerful force in the lives of this couple. Whatever house he occupies
will be a charged and busy one in their lives.
We’re about to say something that will sound like a play on words, but
we mean it quite literally and sincerely: this couple must figure out the
individuation process of their relationship by themselves. Workshops on
finding their true selves, or discovering the heart’s core of their marriage,
however well intended or skillfully presented, will not work very well for
them. They are striking out on new relating territory alone, with no idea
what might lie ahead. The trusted old maps simply don’t apply to their
terrain.
How does that feel? It can be not only bewildering, but stressful.
Adaptability and openness to the new are key here. We’re reminded of a
young adult science fiction novel that Jodie treasured in her childhood, The
Universe Between, by Alan E. Nourse. In this novel, a portal to a new
universe had opened up, but everyone we first sent there went insane,
because the laws of our physics simply did not apply there. It’s been a long
time since Jodie read this book, so she may not have remembered these
examples precisely, but they’ll serve to give you the general idea.
Rectangles could have five sides, not four, yet still be rectangles. Right
angles didn’t have to be ninety degrees, yet still were right angles.
Mathematicians in the other universe could divide by zero with impunity,
while trying to do that here produces nonsense equations. Finally, we
figured out why our envoys were all coming back as gibbering nervous
wrecks, and we started testing potential envoys for their adaptability in
dealing with strange new realities.
That’s what it can be like to have composite Uranus in Aquarius:
unnerving! All the rules for relating just don’t apply any more. The trick is
for this couple not to let that unsettle them, not to buckle under the stress
nor cling to old ways that won’t work for them, but rather to adapt by
creating their own rules.
COMPOSITE URANUS IN PISCES
Pisces, sign of the Mystic and the Dreamer and the Visionary. Or, if
responded to less skillfully, the Escapist. The goal of this sign is to
experience itself as consciousness, not just personality, to experience other
realities as just as real as this one. To that end, compassion and imagination
are major tools.
How this couple walks the border between reality and fantasy is at issue
with composite Uranus in Pisces. They are working on a revolution in
mysticism, in whatever form that might take for them. They’ll have some
trouble living as purely rational, scientific, atheistic, empirical thinkers,
because the whole thrust of Uranus in Pisces is counter to that mind set. For
Pisces, reality is fluid. “Question Authority” is an Aquarian bumper sticker,
but “Question Reality” is a Piscean one! Thus, there can be a delightful
irreverence about the “real world” to this couple, a shared sense of the
cosmic joke, and a refusal to take officiousness very seriously, whether they
find it in organized religion, the New Age, or government offices.
They may need to be careful about not rebelling against consensus reality
to the point where they lose their ability to function in it. Meditation,
creativity, compassion and humor are all constructive ways to explore
consciousness, but there are destructive and addictive ones, too. Another
shadow side of composite Uranus in Pisces might be a sort of learned
helplessness, a shared assumption that reality is simply too overwhelmingly
harsh and difficult to deal with. That’s not true! This composite Uranus sign
needs to learn to be graceful about accepting the endings, the transitions and
the unknown in their lives, but that doesn’t mean surrendering their internal
locus of control.
The challenge for this couple is to enjoy developing their unique take on
the transrational side of existence, and to let their imagination and
compassion flourish, without retreating into unhealthy escapism.
COMPOSITE URANUS IN THE FIRST HOUSE
The classic astrological interpretation of this placement would be that,
regardless of how conservative or mild these people may be as individuals,
as a couple they give an immediate first impression of uniqueness, zaniness
or downright eccentricity and unpredictability. In extreme cases, that first
impression may include detachment, alienation, contrariness or even
sociopathy. They don’t give off the same “vibes” as everybody else.
Wherever they are, they don’t seem to fit in. Something about them just
sticks out like the proverbial sore thumb. Security officials question them at
airports. They get pulled over for more than their share of “routine” license
checks. Stand-up comedians target them in the audience. What’s happening
here? The Lord of Individuality is part of the face this couple wears in the
world. Their shared mask is imbued with the energy of the Rebel and the
Non-conformist. Of course this astrological signature can draw attention
and projections.
But that’s not the entirety of what this composite configuration should
do. This couple shouldn’t stop at merely looking different. The Ascendant
has been called “the identity in action.” This couple needs to act—
Ascendant—according to the imperatives of the unique—Uranian—entity
that they form together. Frankly it’s hard to say exactly what a composite
first house Uranus should do, because that’s the couple’s own decision.
About all we can state with any certainty is that it means questioning all the
current status quos for a relationship, and making up their own minds
whether those status quos work for them.
There are a million unwritten rules for how we are supposed to relate,
and every culture and subculture has its own. The man drives, pays the bills
and maintains the family computer. The woman grocery shops, cooks and
does the laundry. They vacation together and attend all parties together.
They alternate whose families they see at what holidays. They eat three
meals a day whether they’re hungry or not.
But not without questioning all of the above, if they have composite
Uranus in the first house. Perhaps that means not getting married. If they
do, perhaps it means changing both of their last names to an entirely
different third name, or not living together. Maybe it means changing their
religion, breaking family traditions, or keeping a telescope on the roof of
their house and a pool table in their living room.
It’s when those unwritten rules are never questioned, and are slavishly
followed, that this composite Uranus house placement starts to act out the
couple’s individuality, rather than to act upon it. Perhaps, in an ideal world,
these two were meant to leave New York City and run a ranch in the
Montana outback. Perhaps some failure of nerve has kept them from doing
so. What do they do instead? Dress the whole family in cowboy outfits, and
endure raised eyebrows or worse from all over Manhattan. Suppose they
buy that ranch after all; will they still get stopped by security at the airport?
Probably. It’s hard to have this composite Uranus placement without some
ambivalent reactions—so those reactions might as well be to the life that
this couple truly chose to lead.
COMPOSITE URANUS IN THE SECOND HOUSE
Fluctuating and unstable finances! With composite Uranus in the traditional
house of money, that’s what the fortune-teller would predict for these two.
Why might that be? To answer that question, we have to look more closely
at the concept of money as a symbol. Symbolism is not literalism. What
might money symbolize?
Energy. The power to survive in the world. The freedom to live one’s life
as one chooses. That for which we trade our time and skills and effort. That
which we trade for something we find valuable enough to buy.
Now we’re getting warmer. The second house also shows that which we
value, that which we hold dear, that which we consider a precious resource.
If we have enough of that resource, we feel confident in our ability not
merely to survive, but to thrive. If we don’t have enough of that resource,
we feel bereft, and our self-esteem, as well as our chance of survival, heads
south.
Society fills us with an unreasoning need to buy things. Canny retailers
put impulse items by the cash register and on their shelves’ end caps, or put
loss leaders in their windows. The media is full of ads about the latest
product that’s all the rage, that’s better than sliced bread, that will transform
our sex lives, our bank accounts, our productivity, our leisure hours, our
“cool” factors. In Western society, this materialistic brainwashing starts in
our infancy and doesn’t stop until our deathbed.
Our point here is not to bash the advertising industry: we live in a
consumer society too, and we probably like our toys as much as the next
person. Our point is that most of us think we need a lot more stuff than we
actually do. If you don’t believe us, go visit a yard sale, or a place that rents
storage units. But what do we actually need? What do we actually value?
Talk to a couple whose house burned down. Ask them what they grabbed on
their way out the door. Chances are that if there’s anything on the list
besides their kids, their pets and their hard drives, then the rest of the list
begins with something like photographs. Heart-stuff. Items with sentimental
value. What do they most regret not having been able to save? Chances are
it’s not their channel zapper or their clothing.
“Sentimental” value has a lot to do with the second house. What do you
hold most valuable? After your loved ones, what would you save from a
fire? Think about it. A musical instrument or a CD? Then music is one of
your core values, and a core resource, too. Your grandfather’s diary? Then
family is a core value and a core resource.
“Where your treasure is, there your heart is also.” A couple with
composite Uranus in the second house needs to define for themselves what
that treasure is, what their values are, and honor those values. Maybe their
treasure is time to travel together. Then they might need to resist
advertisers’ pressures to buy the latest stereo equipment, window
treatments, a microwave, a riding lawnmower and patio furniture, and start
saving for an RV, or for a month off with a Eurail pass. Mom and Dad
might think their house is sparsely furnished, and the neighbors might think
their lawn is ill-kept, but so what? Whose house and lawn are they,
anyway?
Suppose our couple has misdefined their treasure. Remember those
“fluctuating and unstable” Uranian finances? Look carefully at what that
couple has lost—was that loss a blessing in disguise? An unconscious
Uranian yard sale? Look just as carefully at their “impulsive” purchases; do
they say anything about that couple’s real treasure?
COMPOSITE URANUS IN THE THIRD HOUSE
The Lord of Rebellion in the house of speech. True or false: does this
couple “have a mouth on them,” as we say in the South? All couples
communicate, both with one another and with the outside world. But this
couple has a greater tendency to have a smart mouth, or tendencies toward
foot-in-mouth disease, than most do.
How does society say that we should handle communication within a
relationship? It has rules, of course, regardless of the fact that some of them
are contradictory. Don’t fight when you’re tired. Don’t go to bed angry. If
you can’t say something nice, don’t say anything at all. Honesty is
paramount. Everything should be put on the table for discussion. What you
don’t know can’t hurt you. Some of these rules vary from culture to culture.
We hear from British friends that they are far less likely to discuss their past
relationships with their mates than Americans are, and that British couples
tend to fight about whose family of origin was saner, while American
couples seem more likely to fight about whose family was crazier.
Confused? So is a couple with composite Uranus in the third house. Only
Uranian rules should apply to them, and those rules are worked out by their
own trials and errors, not handed down by their parents or picked up from
their friends. Maybe they have a serious conference about the state of their
relationship once a month. Maybe they figure if it ain’t broken, don’t fix it.
Perhaps they never write down their dinner dates with friends or holidays
with family. Perhaps their appointment diary runs two years ahead, and
copies of it hang in the kitchen and by every phone in the house. It can take
time to arrive at the communicative style that works for them, and what
works for them may change. And if it doesn’t resemble the communicative
style of any other couple on the planet, so what?
What should they talk about? Whatever they please. Above all, neither of
them should feel censored by the other in any way.
What about how these partners communicate with people outside the
relationship? Again, they need to make up their own rules, and they’ll
dislike any feeling of being censored or edited. Yet each culture does have
some mores about what’s appropriate to discuss in a social context, and
these two may get a reputation for their blithe disregard of Emily Post and
Miss Manners in that regard. Sometimes common sense or self-preservation
indicates it might be better to keep one’s mouth shut, too. From time to
time, this couple may have a perfectly good and self-serving reason to
watch their language. If they wind up blurting out something
“inappropriate” regardless, they might be wise to observe carefully what
that thoughtless remark got them out of, or into, and how that might relate
to their individuation as a couple.
COMPOSITE URANUS IN THE FOURTH HOUSE
Uranus, Lord of rebels, of geniuses and revolutionaries. Planet of misfits,
mad scientists and sociopaths, too. Doesn’t sound very homey, does it? No,
not if by “homey” you mean the traditional nuclear household of Betty
Crocker and apple pie, Leave It to Beaver and Donna Reed. For baby
boomers, their parents and a lot of Gen Xers, that televised family mythos
was the norm. Dad worked; Mom stayed home and raised the kids.
Let’s look at some statistics about households. The Bureau of the
Census’s 2000 Census showed that only 69% of American households—
defined as people living under the same roof—had at least two members
related by blood, marriage, or adoption. Married couples without children
formed the largest segment of those households. In 2000, the average U.S.
household size, family or non-family, was 2.59 persons, while the average
family size was 3.14 persons. According to learnframe.com, almost 80% of
U.S. families are either dual-income or single-parent households, and only
7% of families fit the stereotypical Ozzie-and-Harriet model of a never-
divorced working father and a stay-at-home mother.
That mythic family model no longer corresponds to the American
majority’s reality at all, if indeed it ever did. Yet some of us feel unmoored,
as if something is not quite right, as if we are somehow not “normal,” in
proportion to how far our own households deviate from that internalized
norm.
How did you feel reading those statistics? Relieved? Intrigued? Startled?
Annoyed? The facts don’t fit the myth. Where did the myth go? What are
our households supposed to be like now? That’s a composite Uranus in the
fourth house feeling: the old family mythology doesn’t work, and we have to
create our own households.
There’s no telling how this couple will react. Maybe they’ll live apart.
Perhaps they’ll join an intentional community or a commune or a three
family household. They might try a long distance relationship or a
commuter marriage. They could live on a houseboat, on a space station, in a
gypsy caravan or in the house next door. The only certainties are, first, that
they must intentionally choose their own living arrangements, regardless of
how traditional or avant garde those arrangements are. Perhaps our couple
settles in Norman Rockwell suburbia, but they have hippie parents who live
in a treehouse. Perhaps they have Norman Rockwell parents, but they’ve
moved into a huge yurt with one big happy family consisting of five of their
dearest friends, three cats, two ferrets and a possum named Mulroy. No
matter: they must be willing to defend their choice of whatever hearth
works best for them.
COMPOSITE URANUS IN THE FIFTH HOUSE
Simply having fun together is an essential ingredient for lasting love. It
balances the hard inner work that love requires, and it helps us face the
stresses and frustrations of everyday life. With their composite Uranus in
the fifth house, these two people need to have a good time, just like the rest
of us—but they need to do it their own way. In simple terms, they’ll
probably develop some odd hobbies or avocations, and in that process,
some strange friendships as well.
Here’s the deeper story: there are people who love to watch football
games, and others who find them boring and predictable. One person loves
opera; another one says she’d rather listen to fingernails scraping a
blackboard. Just simply discovering the truth about what kinds of playful
activities actually have a revivifying impact on this couple is their
challenge. Chances are good that the answers lie outside the realm of
conventional behaviors. Not everyone is attracted to the idea of stamp-
collecting, but for these two, despite the “geek” factor, it might really be
perfect. What about searching for arrowheads or photographing polar
bears? What about exploring caves?
And here’s a still deeper version of the story: from the cradle, we are told
what is fun and what isn’t. We are expected to enjoy parties more than
work. We are told that by a certain age, we should “outgrow” certain
fashions or certain kinds of music. Who says? Always with composite
Uranus in the fifth house the core idea is that there is tension between how
the couple has been trained to enjoy themselves and the reality of what they
actually need. If they respond weakly, they will dutifully “have fun” just as
they have been told by their social class how to do—and gradually wither
from sheer soul-tiredness. A conservative couple with this configuration
might need simply to admit to themselves that they hate going to their
exclusive country club. A wilder couple might realize that they actually
don’t want to listen to this “very chic” jam band or hip-hop group anymore
—the music just isn’t moving them the way (gulp) old Frank Sinatra
records do!
Uranus in the fifth house is really all about the freedom to have fun in a
way that really works. And that is a lot more difficult than it sounds. The
process starts with very honest conversation, and the conversation itself
must start by making sure that the couple is really all alone in the room—no
figures of authority or arbiters of “cool” are lurking inside them, listening
and judging.
COMPOSITE URANUS IN THE SIXTH HOUSE
Uranus is naturally rebellious, and the sixth house is about exactly the kinds
of daily duties and boring requirements that bring out resentment in most
couples: housecleaning, shopping, changing the oil in the car, mowing the
lawn. Almost universally, people imagine that they are doing more than
their “fair share,” that their partners underestimate how hard they’re
working, and that the other person is getting away with shirking the odious
tasks that make life possible. The root cause of this tension is easy to
understand: simply sustaining daily life is a huge, time-consuming job. It all
seems trivial and dull, but the hard, sad fact is that it takes up most of our
waking hours.
With their composite Uranus in the sixth house, this couple must be both
vigilant and creative regarding their division of labor. Vigilance is needed
because, with this configuration, it is very easy for the couple to slip into a
stubborn pattern of “stand-off” about every day responsibilities, each one
rebelling against their duties. The result is obvious: the need for routine
housecleaning starts to look more like the need for demolition and urban
renewal! These problems gather interest, in other words. If this couple is
not vigilant about their own tendency toward rebelliousness here, the
situation can spin out of control. Taxes and bills aren’t paid. Important
phones call aren’t returned. And the condition of the cat box begins to
impact their social lives.
Creativity—always a Uranian quality—plays a helpful role here. Maybe
they both hate housecleaning with a passion. Well, maybe they’ve got a
friend who’ll gladly do it in exchange for cat-sitting and the right to borrow
their truck when she’s gardening. Maybe they can play poker, with the chips
representing Get-Out-Of-Dishwashing-Free passes. Always, with Uranus,
the right answer is essentially one that no one in the history of the world has
ever considered before. These two may not be able to escape the practical,
physical requirements of life, but they can approach them in novel,
conscious ways—and probably get a laugh out of their answers, to boot!
COMPOSITE URANUS IN THE SEVENTH HOUSE
The seventh house is traditionally the part of the chart that describes
intimate relationships. That’s still quite valid. But all composite charts, by
definition, are about relationships. There is no symbol anywhere in one of
them that isn’t of a “seventh house nature,” so to speak. Thus, when we
observe a planet in the seventh house of a composite chart, we must
overcome the reflex to think of it narrowly as “describing the relationship,”
even though it does that to some extent. Instead, we must think about the
relationships of the relationship—the friends, soulmates, rivals, partners,
and so forth who help the couple fulfill their evolutionary intentions.
With Uranus in the composite seventh house, these external partners play
a crucial role in the primary relationship. Elemental to understanding of any
seventh house planet in any human astrological context is the fact that we
cannot do what we came here to do without the help of the people it
describes. For the couple with composite Uranus in the seventh house, there
is a need for feedback about leading their own lives as a couple, about
designing their own unique relationship, that comes to them from sources
outside themselves. The people who carry this message are Uranian. They
are independent, original, highly individuated, even quirkish or eccentric.
They are very much their own persons. They may well be controversial, and
our couple’s association with them may raise a few eyebrows.
What is the nature of the gift these Uranian soulmates bring to the
couple? Maybe they teach by example: perhaps they dropped out of the
corporate rat race and opened their own B and B. Maybe their input is more
direct and challenging: a couples therapist who encourages these partners to
move away from their crazymaking families. In any event, the Uranian
soulmates will have a lot of insight about how we needlessly distort
ourselves and our partners to make a relationship work, and how we might
behave in ways that are more authentic for us.
COMPOSITE URANUS IN THE EIGHTH HOUSE
Sex is so paradoxical: in human relationships, it complicates everything
while making everything possible. Everyone knows that sexual bonds are
stormier than simple friendships. But every couple understands the way
sexual contact can mysteriously rebuild the deep sense of connection that
the storms sometimes wash away. With their composite Uranus in the house
of sexuality, these two people have a specific challenge: they must chart
their own unique course through this maze of ancient mammal-
programming and transcendent soul-experience.
Wherever Uranus lies, we must think for ourselves. The social scripts
we’ve inherited just won’t work meaningfully for us. And yet it is harder to
find an area of human life that is more hedged by custom, taboo and
conventionality than sex. Because we also consider sex to be “a private
subject,” we tend not to think of it as so controlled by outward forces. But
try on the following bits of gossip (and know that for a couple with their
composite Uranus in the eighth house, each of them is example of the kind
of “group-think” they need to learn to recognize and escape).
They haven’t made love for six months. Uh oh, right? (But who says a
committed sexual relationship might not benefit from a period of
abstinence?)
They’ve been together for ten years and I hear they still have to do it
every night. (Compare this with the previous statement, and see how even
sexual frequency is constrained by social expectations.)
They say they’re not having trouble, but I hear they’re taking separate
vacations. (Why not? A little absence can make the heart—and perhaps
other parts as well—fonder.)
They’re both near fifty years old, but they did it in an elevator. (That’s
only for hot young couples, right? Who says?)
He claims he’s not jealous, but she spends quite of lot of time with
Thomas. (And why shouldn’t we honor our partners’ soul-connections with
other people, even attractive ones?)
The point is, sex is a psychological labyrinth. Societies have always
created a set of “suggestions” for how to live with it—and enforced them
with the threat of mockery, shaming, or worse. For this couple with their
composite Uranus in the eighth house, half of those suggestions are wrong.
Their task is to figure out which half.
COMPOSITE URANUS IN THE NINTH HOUSE
“Sudden, weird or unexpected journeys.” That would be one traditional
reading of composite Uranus in the ninth house. And it may be prove
accurate. Let’s just look at it from a deeper viewpoint.
Uranus is always about getting free from the beliefs and expectations of
the people around us. To understand it truly, we need to add that those
people got to us pretty early—like about ten seconds after we were born.
We’ve internalized their version of reality. For these two people, the belief-
system of their families and communities is too limiting. It would stifle
them, even poison them. They absolutely need to get away from it. Travel is
one way to accomplish that aim, although any fool can get on an airplane.
It’s more than the physical miles—they need some miles in their minds, too.
They need to see and feel different cultures. They need to understand how
the basics of relationship are handled in other societies. Here we are
speaking of relations with family and in-laws, gender roles, flirtation and
fidelity issues, sexuality, children—the whole nine yards of committed
intimacy. Other cultures are not necessarily wiser, although they may
contain a few answers never learned or seen at home. The real point is
actually the beneficial impact of the culture shock itself. It can shake them
out of their assumptions.
As this relationship unfolds, this couple is likely to develop an interest in
some rather exotic topics. One we can point to with confidence is astrology!
Every society has an “official” version of the truth, composed of “serious”
and “grounded” topics, brokered by “reasonable” or even “scientific”
attitudes and values. The Uranian impulse is always to question those
authorities, to look at everything freshly and differently. These mental
impulses of curiosity need to be honored too—the individuality of the
couple is enhanced by them.
Morality is a ninth house issue too. Certain moral principles, such as
loyalty and honesty, are elemental to the reality of adult love. But there are
an awful lot of “moralisms” that do not apply across cultures, or even to
every happy, sane couple. Again, the Uranian key must turn in the lock: to
make sure that the moral standards to which they subscribe are ones in
which they actually believe. Until only recently, for example, divorce was
considered “immoral.” Or a couple who elected not to have children were
violating some basic principle. Or that God “Himself” frowned upon the
man who cooked and the woman who worked! Most of us laugh at these
assumptions nowadays. If it weren’t for couples with their composite
Uranus in the ninth house, we would probably still be bound by them.
COMPOSITE URANUS IN THE TENTH HOUSE
From a traditional astrological perspective, there are two prophecies for the
couple with composite Uranus in the tenth house. The first is that their
reputation, public image, and professions would be a little weird. The
second is that they should expect many sudden, unexpected changes to
befall them, disrupting any plans they might have had for a quiet, more
conventional life together. As is typically the case with such astrology,
there’s a kernel of truth in these predictions. Let’s see if we can understand
them more psychodynamically.
Whether we are raised by nannies in a country club or on the hard streets
of a ghetto, society has a certain pre-planned biographical trajectory all
picked out for us. That’s true of us as independent individuals or as couples.
Leaving aside any evaluations we might make of those pre-packaged
lifestyles, it’s fair to say that for the couple with composite Uranus in their
tenth house, such a life together would feel wrong and empty. But they are
still under relentless pressure to live it. Sorting out their own direction, and
fighting for the right to live it, is the key.
The tenth house is usually related to career, but not every couple with a
composite planet in the tenth actually works together professionally. The
term lifestyle often proves a lot more relevant—how will they “style” their
lives? By whose dictates, assumptions, and values? It’s a fair bet that if they
answer those questions in an evolutionarily positive way, they’ll be
violating the expectations of a lot of people. Another fair bet is that if they
don’t have good answers for those questions, the universe will de-stabilize
their “safe” circumstances, providing them with another crack at finding the
right answer—that’s one of the dynamics that underliethe traditional
prophecy of “sudden, unexpected changes.”
Taking it a step further, if a couple with Uranus in the tenth house
succeeds in claiming their own freedom and individuality in terms of the
outward, obvious shape of their life together, there’s a good chance that
they’ll figure out a way to get paid for having done that. Planets in the
composite tenth house don’t always manifest in terms of career—but there
is a tendency for them to move in that direction, if the more elemental work
of individuation has been successful. At the deepest level, we recognize
here a soul-intention to make some kind of difference in their communities,
to become agents of change in the collective, to affect the very myths and
symbols by which their community knows and understands itself.
COMPOSITE URANUS IN THE ELEVENTH HOUSE
For these two people, time promises more than the usual mix of wrinkles
and wisdom. It will also make them stranger! They are on a diverging
course from the social mainstream. The longer they remain together, the
more they come to question the usual assumptions about happiness, sanity,
even reality itself. Increasingly, if they are true to themselves, they become
forces for change in their communities—even if they don’t think about it or
intend it. Their lives take on a certain symbolism. They influence people by
their very existence, like the first female airline pilots or black baseball
players.
They may not have started out that way! Depending on factors in their
birthcharts and backgrounds, when they first come together as a couple,
they may very well have been “normal.” And of course the word “normal”
has a flexible meaning, depending on who is defining it at the moment.
Always, however, “normalcy” is connected to some manner of shared sense
of reality—anathema to Uranus. This is the planet that thinks for itself, that
breaks the rules, that is resonant with genius and revolutionaries. This
couple may come together as “normal,” modern, television-watching
existentialists—and become Pentecostal Christians. Or they may come
together as culturally conservative Southern Baptists—and take refuge as
Buddhists. Maybe they meet as brokers on Wall Street—and opt for the
simple life on an old New England farm. The point is that they trigger
rebellion in each other. The chemistry they generate moves them away from
everything expected, safe, and known. They leave the map.
Chickens and eggs: early on, as this process begins to unfold, they start
attracting some “unusual characters” into their social circle. Are they
attracting them because of their own “inner unusualness?” That’s a fair
guess. Or do these strangers have a “corrupting influence” on them? The
latter will probably be a common interpretation of their story among the
people they leave behind.
In either case, in coming together, they have signed up for a roller coaster
ride. It will carry them into the thin, cool ionospheric air of true
individuality. They’ll both shake their heads and look back at where their
old lives were headed. Each will say to the other, gratefully, “I know where
I would have been without you.”
COMPOSITE URANUS IN THE TWELFTH HOUSE
Hearing a traditional interpretation of Uranus in the twelfth house could be
bad for these partners’ blood pressure. “Something really weird and bad
will happen to you and you won’t see it coming and it will shatter
everything in the blink of an eye.” Yikes! How can anyone live with such a
prediction? It’s ominous—and so vague that, if they believed it, a mix of
fear and fatalism would come to pervade everything they did. Yet
astrologers have long recognized that the planet Uranus does figure in all
life’s longshots. Winning contests? Yes—and getting hit by lightning too.
The twelfth house is often related to trouble and loss, which is why this
particular configuration leans away from hitting the state lottery and more
toward being nervous when we hear thunder.
So what is really going on with composite Uranus in the twelfth? Here’s
the higher ground—and, as usual in evolutionary astrology, the basic idea is
that the gloomier traditional predictions are much more likely to manifest if
we fall short of getting the real lesson. This couple is ready to individuate
spiritually. Very probably, together they must “leave the religion of their
births.” That, or go so much more deeply into it that they become virtually
unrecognizable to the community around them. Together, they begin asking
questions. Together, they begin to question the “spiritual authorities” with
whom they grew up. Together, they attract radicalizing, mind-expanding
experiences of undeniable authenticity.
When we speak of “spiritual authorities” and the “religion of their
births,” we need to use some imagination. The terms may be literal and
obvious. But let us envision two people raised in the belief-system of
modern psychology orpsychotherapy—who begin to find it soulless and
empty and turn to shamanic practices. Or two, raised to worship money,
who become Peace Corps volunteers in Haiti. In both cases, there are many
who will think they have lost their minds—and that is a judgment upon
which one can count if the higher Uranian road is taken! Underlying all this
is not the notion that one set of beliefs is better than another, but rather that
they have come to a point together where they must think and choose for
themselves. They are ready to take responsibility for the reality of their own
perceptions, rather than having those perceptions explained to them by
priests, psychologists, imams, or New Age gurus in Los Angeles.What
about the harsh lightning-bolt predictions? Easy. If they need a wake up
call, they’ll get one. Life is too short for games we have outgrown.
Chapter 14
The Composite Neptune
L ike Uranus, Neptune moves slowly through the zodiac. Its speed varies,
but on average it takes about fourteen years to get through a sign. For
that reason, it’s very common for people in sexual unions to have their natal
Neptunes in the same sign, and thus to have their composite Neptune in that
sign as well. If their Neptunes lies in different signs, then there’s an
excellent chance that their composite Neptune shares its sign with one of
their natal Neptunes, in which case we would need to pay attention to some
of the “Feudal System” logic we outlined in Chapter Three.
“Mystical” is better word for Neptune than is “spiritual.” It’s narrower
and more specific. How we conduct ourselves behind the wheel of a car on
the freeway is a spiritual question—but one hopes that we’re not in an
altered state of consciousness at the time! And Neptune is very much about
such states. Instantly that language turns our attention in the direction of
intoxicants, sacred plant medicines and so forth—definitely Neptunian
territory. But the meaning of the planet is bigger than that. It also includes
conditions of consciousness that are induced through spiritual practices
such as meditation, fasting, chanting, yoga, sacred drumming, and so forth.
And in every one of these activities, there are certain common features:
consciousness becomes less identified with ego; there is a feeling of
surrender to something much vaster than ourselves; and “reality” as we
define it consensually—the three-dimensional, “reasonable” world—loses
some of its compelling authority over us.
Not every couple professes a religion or even any particular theological
belief-system. But every couple, just as every individual, benefits from a
sense of surrendering to wonder, vastness, God, the mystery of life—pick
your favorite metaphor. All that is under the domain of the composite
Neptune. “The family that prays together stays together,” as the billboards
inform us. But praying—and churches, religions, meditations, and the rest
—are somehow a little too safe, too glib and pat, to convey the realities of
this planet. One of the keys to an authentic understanding of Neptune’s
action is an appreciation of its sheer weirdness. When our three-
dimensional consciousnesses contact n-dimensional reality, fuses tend to
blow. Logic and reason fall apart. Things stop making any sense. And
something ancient and gloriously pre-scientific in us loves it.
Where Neptune lies in the composite chart, the couple is invited to
surrender to the inscrutable weirdness of God. It’s an area that calls for
radical faith, and an openness to being guided by forces we don’t
understand. Any control issues we have as a couple are going to have a
rough ride.
Throughout history, mystics are forever surrendering. There’s beauty in
that, but also darkness. Where composite Neptune lies, the couple might
give up too much, unconsciously conspiring to make a virtue of “doing
without.” And the horror is that, if we go down that road, we’re often
“doing without” something we actually, legitimately need for our journey
together. Even the most ferocious individuals, with a fire-breathing, dragon-
slaying, eat-nails-for-breakfast composite chart, may not be immune. Where
Neptune lies, we might just go to sleep, lapsing into uncharacteristic
passivity and lassitude—unless we stretch our psyches and senses toward
that divine weirdness that’s calling us.
Please note: Neptune entered Leo around the beginning of the First
World War. For obvious reasons, there aren’t a lot of lovers around with the
planet in the earlier signs of the zodiac! Below, you’ll read about Neptune
in the signs Leo through Pisces.
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN LEO
Neptune was in Leo between 1914 and 1928. As lovers, this generation
came of age between approximately the mid-1920s and Word War Two.
And they sure had terrific clothes! That may sound like a silly remark, but it
carries us toward the heart of Neptune in this sign. Leo the Lion is about
display. It is about appearance and manifestation. It is about our right to
exist—boldly, colorfully and without apology. It is about our right to take
up some space, to insist upon being taken seriously. The dance these lovers
did—and will do again when the next crop of them starts appearing in 2078
—is easy to misinterpret in shallow terms, or in terms of vanity and self-
importance. And of course those are the shadows of Leo. The myth this
generation of lovers spun has an empty concern with mere appearance as its
dark side. But underlying it, as always, is a divine intention. And that
intention is theatrical. It has an enormous sense of humor about itself, and
about life’s grand drama.
This group of souls watched the Great Depression. They experienced the
Second World War. They were lovers in dark, dangerous times. Those
historical realities provided a stark background for the sheer color of Leo. A
plucky spirit of confidence and faith pervaded the myth of love then,
despite the horror. Or maybe even because of the horror.
How can we dance when bombs are falling? Bravado like that can be
faked. It can be a kind of “whistling past the graveyard.” And undoubtedly
there was some of that kind of simple posturing in this generation. But the
real heart of it is pure Neptunian mysticism: the knowledge that physical
life is always short and uncertain, but that our spirits are eternal. The
knowledge that there is something glorious, even divine, in us all—
something that can laugh at death, shine brightly in the deepest darkness,
and never be defeated.
And incidentally, that “something” looks good in an elegant hat.
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN VIRGO
Neptune passed through Virgo between 1928 and 1942, and so lovers born
during approximately that period of time show a Virgo Neptune in their
composite charts. As always with the slower outer planets, there is a
generational signature here, as well as individual meaning. The basic
underlying mythos and mood are ones of caution, with a great emphasis
upon self-sacrifice and service. Love asks a lot of us. A willingness to give
—and even a sense of the joy of giving—are essential to it. As an ideal,
composite Neptune in Virgo carries that energy. Implicit in it is an instinct
that lasting intimacy requires sacrifice, that each person must do his or her
part—plus ten percent—if the bond is to endure. It’s easy to see the spiritual
implications of this kind of attitude: a sexual bond characterized by such
egoless devotion and surrender works almost like vows of obedience,
humility and service taken by monks and nuns throughout history.
Neptune, however, also warns of places where we might give up too
much. In that regard, its interaction with Virgo can be dangerous. A couple
with their composite Neptune in Virgo must guard against becoming
invisible to each other—and even perhaps to themselves—as they move
into the deeper complexities of a shared life. Virgo has a particular affinity
for the details that allow our existences to go forward: paying the bills,
keeping the house clean, doing the laundry. All of those things are
necessary to life, but most of us have recognized that they’re also inclined
toward endless proliferation. When are we ever done? When have we ever
gotten everything finally in order? The answer of course is never. And that
means we must all learn to recognize when “enough is enough,” and it’s
time to sit back and appreciate the larger view: the joy of life, the meaning
of life, the texture of life. Composite Neptune in Virgo runs the risk of
being steamrollered by the endless onslaught of minutia. It can drown in a
sea of lists. Each lover can became a cog in an efficient machine whose
ultimate purpose has been forgotten.
Service is a very real expression of love, and these lovers are here to
serve each other. That is the Virgo path. If the love remains always in their
eyes and their hearts as they face the endless complexities of life, they are
on the higher ground.
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN LIBRA
Neptune passed through Libra from 1942 to 1956. There is, sometimes, a
kind of sweet perfection in human love. Two people can watch over each
other, nourish and nurture each other, and simply be better together than
either of them could ever be alone. And they can know that and own it,
humbly and gratefully. They can view each other’s faults charitably, in the
light of forgiveness and with a sense of their own weaknesses and
limitations. They can appreciate each other, like each other, and be the
guardians of each other’s highest aspirations. Without lapsing into denial
and phoniness, they can see the best in each other, concentrate on that, and
turn their hearts away from judgment, “psychology,” and anything else that
might separate them. They can commit, above everything else, to keeping
their attention on each other’s spiritual realities. They can love each other’s
souls.
Romantic? Yes indeed. And that set of attitudes and values is the core of
composite Neptune in Libra. So why did the generation of people with their
composite Neptune in Libra practically make a national sport out of
divorce? Actually, it makes sense: the expectations this generation put on
love were extraordinarily demanding. Unless there was real soul-magic in a
relationship, they tended to feel shortchanged. “Something was missing”
became their refrain, as they moved from relationship to relationship.
So why was something always missing? The answer brings us to the
lazy, passive side of Neptune—the side of the “mystic” that is vulnerable to
giving up the very things it most needs. With a Libran composite Neptune,
there is a driving need actively to feed and preserve the sense of soul-
contact between the two individuals. Something as simple and pleasant as
making a custom of dining by candlelight can help significantly. We all
know the magical, soulful feeling that candle-glow can produce, especially
if the couple takes their time about it, sits there a while after the food is
gone, and maybe takes a moment simply to look into each other’s eyes.
Shared spiritual practice can help. So can putting themselves in sacred
situations—cathedrals, temples, the presence of real Teachers.
Perhaps most central for the couple with composite Neptune in Libra is
the conscious use of sexual energy: making love, at least sometimes, in a
way that honors sex as a sweet sacrament of soul-communion, and avoiding
the pervasive cultural pressure to turn it into mere recreational biology,
pornography, or God’s joke.
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN SCORPIO
Neptune passed through Scorpio from 1956 to 1970. Passion. What is it?
White-hot emotional intensity. A bond that can never be broken. Eternal
devotion that burns beyond the grave. The ability to read each other’s
minds, inhabit each other’s skins. The stormy affair. Antony and Cleopatra,
Tristan and Isolde. Abelard and Heloise, Romeo and Juliet. Lancelot and
Guinevere. History mythologizes such couples, and the arts all but deify
them. Notice how often this theme turns up in novels, music and film.
Different centuries, different costumes, different mores, but the same
archetype is at work in all of them.
Passion is overwhelmingly seductive. It can be profoundly dangerous,
this quest to feel your own heart beating in your lover’s chest. We are
beyond Libran romanticism here. Like a hurricane or some other great force
of nature, passion can turn our lives upside down, shatter us and transform
us completely. Think of the devastatingly handsome vampire. The demon
lover. La belle dame sans merci. Passion of this depth and force invokes the
shadow, yours and your lover’s and even that of the society around you.
Lose your heart in this cataclysmic way, and you can lose your sanity, your
honor, your country and your life along with it. They don’t call it “fatal
attraction” for nothing.
A couple with composite Neptune in Scorpio can risk their hard-won
equilibrium for such love regardless of how experienced and
psychologically sophisticated they are. Passion is everything. Passion is the
Holy Grail, that by which we transcend the realm of mortals.
And passion at that volcanic level is very, very difficult to sustain for any
length of time. Why?
Intensity is exhausting. Have you ever had a four-hour fight with your
mate? We mere mortals get tired. We have jobs, kids, families,
responsibilities. Moreover, when our shadow is evoked and exposed, which
happens in a relationship of this nature, we get scared. Defenses form
against the person who can rip the lid off our insecurities and secrets, who
knows where our vulnerabilities lie. We need to re-establish boundaries. We
need to lie low and lick our wounds for a while.
Nonetheless, a couple with this composite Neptune sign needs to feed the
soul-passion between them. Carefully. Scorpio is a Mars-ruled sign, so not
letting anger build up and fester will go a long way toward helping sex stay
as fervent and bond-building as it can be with this placement. Risk
revealing too much, rather than clamming up and letting the relationship go
on automatic pilot. On the other hand, beware of soap-operatic arguments
that don’t resolve anything. Strive to settle conflicts fairly as well as
quickly. Try to remember that one reason your shadows are emerging is so
that they can be seen, accepted and perhaps at least partially integrated, not
shunned or denied or subjected to psychological character assassination.
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN SAGITTARIUS
Neptune passed through Sagittarius from 1970 to 1984. The Holy Grails for
this couple are gaining a far wider perspective on the world than the one
they were born with, and aligning their behavior to some sort of agreed-
upon ideals and principles of right action. These partners need to feel that
it’s part of the Divine Plan that they are together. Without a sense of wonder
that Spirit brought them together and continues to take an active interest in
the relationship, some of the magical heart will go out of it.
What can produce that sense of wonder?
Journeys, both literal and metaphorical. Vision quests. A pilgrimage to a
sacred site. A trip to Europe, a trip to the Edgar Cayce center, or a weekend
jaunt. Embarking on the local Jung Society’s “Journey into Wholeness”
together.
Learning. These two should not be strangers to their local continuing
education departments, planetariums and museums.
Philosophizing around the fireplace on a winter’s night, or around the
picnic table on a summer one, or at the coffee shop after church.
And a total change of pace once in a while! If they’re bored with their
lives, they may interpret it as being bored with one another, and that,
combined with the Sagittarian hunger for new experiences, may make these
two sacrifice the relationship.
Other problems can arise if God is speaking personally to one of these
partners, and the other one disagrees with what the Lord Almighty said. Did
you smile when you read those words? That’s good: a sense of humor goes
a long way with composite Neptune in Sagittarius. Neither partner has a
monopoly on their connection to Spirit, and one shadow of Sagittarius is
proselytizing. Not everything is a “lesson,” and nobody has the moral high
ground all the time.
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN CAPRICORN
Neptune passed through Capricorn from 1984 to 1998. Love is a discipline.
Love is a point of honor. Love is a reflection of our integrity and our
maturity. All of us are free to make a vow of love, or not to make it. But
once made, to break such a vow shames us and trivializes us. For that
reason, no one should be pressured into taking such a vow. A grown man or
woman, after long reflection, chooses freely whether to make that promise.
A person may go through life without undertaking it; that is fine. That is his
or her own business. There is no pressure to accept the task. Just be serious.
Do it right or don’t do it at all: that is the essence of composite Neptune in
Capricorn. That is the Mythos that underlies the relationships these couples
create.
They are relatively young now, as we write. Neptune entered Capricorn
in 1984 and remained there into 1998. These people arrive at their sexual
maturity in a world characterized by highly chaotic change in terms of life-
long partnerships and marriages. They add a timely and needed element of
realism, seriousness and sobriety to the mix.
Some astrologers relate Capricorn to “traditional values.” We have to be
careful of such a label blinding our imaginations. Couples with their
composite Neptune in Capricorn will not necessarily be more conservative
than the general population. They will simply be more realistic. Again, the
core idea is that life-long commitment isn’t for everyone—in fact,
Capricorn is the “Hermit,” and so very probably there will be more people
in this generation who simply choose to live more solitary lives. And those
lives might not be “monastic” either: it is realistic to recognize that sex
exists outside of committed relationships. Accepting that fact without a
second thought—or a thought of “traditional values”—simply reflects the
core Capricornian wisdom: first see reality as it is. Then make your grown-
up choices within that context, and stick with them.
When this generation has finished its work, we may well see a world in
which fewer people choose commitment, but the commitments will be
better, more realistic, more stable ones.
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN AQUARIUS
Neptune passed through Aquarius from 1998 to 2011. In human intimacy,
think anything. Try anything. Put no blinkers on your imagination. The
rules of the game are simple: hurt no one if you can help it, and love as
much as you can. Beyond that, let’s throw away the last ten thousand years
of history and tradition and just start over again.
Extreme? Maybe—but look at the results of the last ten thousand years:
there really isn’t that much to lose! This is the spirit of composite Neptune
in Aquarius. The iconoclastic genius of the Water-Bearer collides with the
unbounded capacity of the human imagination. Once it triggered the Italian
Renaissance. As we write, it is happening again. Neptune entered Aquarius
in 1998. It remains there until early 2012. As these children grow up, they
will rewrite the rules. They will create new, liberated visions of human
potential and possibility in general, and they will create a new blueprint for
intimate relationship.
Could a marriage exist between three people? Could people marry, but
choose to live on opposite sides of the country? Could a marriage be created
with a twelve month renewable contract? Could wedding rings be replaced
with wireless file-sharing hardware linked to brain implants in the two (or
three) people’s cerebrums? And could anything less than that even be
considered “marriage” in this modern world? Why be old-fashioned?
Some of these are probably very bad ideas! But remember: it is the
nature of radical creativity that it makes a lot of mistakes. And that radical
creativity is the essence of Neptune in Aquarius. Mistakes must be accepted
as part of the process of discovery. With composite Neptune in this sign,
undoubtedly there will be a lot of heartbreak—love’s “experiments” always
involve real people with eternal human vulnerabilities. But this generation
will carry sex forward into a post-patriarchal mythos of global culture.
Their errors will be spectacular. Conservatives will fulminate and
comedians will have a field day. But the world they leave behind will have
a new mythology of love.
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN PISCES
Neptune passed through Pisces from 2011 to 2025. Composite Neptune in
its own sign is powerful, and can be a powerful force in the spiritual and
secular lives of this couple.
Here, the partners’ path to the Divine is a classically mystical path.
Meditation, reflection, compassion, imagination and openness to the
transrational are all important here. This couple may have had more than
their portion of shared ESP experiences, too, as God gives them extra
encouragement to look within. Their presence in one another’s lives
heightens and potentiates all that which we associate with Pisces in each
other, for good or ill. Mysticism—and absent-mindedness. Visionary
imagination—and woolgathering. Sensitivity—and learned helplessness.
They need to honor the divine in one another. To be able to go into an
altered state in each other’s presence. To participate in a kind of shared
receptive trance. When this composite Neptune is functioning well, they
may find that their meditations are deeper in one another’s presence than
they are when alone. They may feel a profound and mysterious connection
between their spirits that’s very hard to explain in words—it can be and is
experienced, but can’t be described.
As with every planetary placement, darker possibilities exist here too.
They are more psychically sensitive in each other’s presence, more
mystically aware, more compassionate, more tuned in, and their need for
meditative time is increased by being around each other. Yet that self-same
heightened meditative and psychic awareness in this couple may be
something that they choose to numb, not to develop. If they decide to go
down that route, they will be spacier in each other’s presence. They’ll find
it harder to concentrate. They’ll forget things. Any flirtations with mind-
altering substances may deepen, until they feel more and more helpless
about coping with day to day realities and responsibilities.
A shared, or at least mutually supported, spiritual practice becomes all
the more important here. With that in place, this couple can share in
transporting, almost hallucinatory experiences of deepening sensitivity,
compassion, otherworldly awareness and soaring imagination.
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN THE FIRST HOUSE
The first house is very willful, even self-centered. Neptune is the opposite,
so there is a deep paradox here for this couple. Are they headstrong, or are
they drifting like leaves in the wind? Let’s add that any planet in the first
house is extremely powerful, so this paradox is perhaps the central mystery
of their bond.
Let’s start with what we know for sure. Outwardly, with composite
Neptune in their first house, there is a feeling of something a bit out of
synch with this world about these two. They seem transcendent—or spacy,
depending on your point of view. There may be even be something
glamorous about them. That doesn’t always mean physical beauty either.
Just as easily, it can correlate with a certain vibration of intrigue or
fascination. Going a bit deeper, we find that people have widely varying
perceptions of them: they’re smart; they’re dumb; they’re sophisticated;
they’re just weird. Stop and think for a minute, and you begin to see the
deeper reality: when others look at these two, what they’re seeing says more
about their own biases than it does about this couple. They are like sponges
for the projections of other people. They would be a movie director’s
dream: they could play the parts of any kind of couple.
Another sure-fire layer of the mystery is that, from the moment they
came together, these two people have been having experiences that defy
rational explanation. A week into the relationship, they phoned each other
but got busy signals because they’d called at exactly the same moment. A
wild thought enters the mind of one of them, and two seconds later the other
one says the same words out loud. These kinds of minor psychic
phenomena occur so frequently for this couple that they hardly notice them.
A deeper way of saying that is that they seem to trigger mystical or psychic
development in each other. And that’s the key to our first house Neptune
paradox.
Yet bumping into the next dimension occasionally and at random is a
lackluster use of a composite Neptune in the first house. The soul-contract
between these two people is centered on the willful, intentional exploration
of these kinds of spiritual phenomena. Together, they need actively to
pursue the kinds of experiences that deepen their innate mysticism:
meditation classes, visits to sacred sites, yoga, encounters with spiritual
teachers. Such choices will press the buttons of some of their friends and
family members—and that’s where the first house “ego” energies come into
play. As the cliché has it, you can’t make an omelet without breaking some
eggs. And the danger with this Neptune placement is that, instead of taking
this active role in pushing the edges of the envelopes of their
consciousnesses, they might just drift along, taking in the show, carrying
the expectations of people around them, and letting this astonishing
opportunity slip through their fingers.
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN THE SECOND HOUSE
Confusion and dumb choices about money—that would be the standard
framework for an interpretation of composite Neptune in the second house.
Neptune is otherwordly, and in financial affairs two and two make four, so
the combination is typically seen as an unhappy one. Throw in another fact:
in money matters, we are usually swimming with the sharks, and Neptune’s
gullibility can makes it an easy mark—thus, the configuration is seen as
ominous of a vulnerability to being “conned” or cheated out of what is
rightfully ours.
As usual, the conventional interpretation is worth a moment’s
consideration. Those lapses in practical judgement are in fact dangers for a
couple with composite Neptune in their second house. But there are many
other layers of meaning to the configuration. Even in money matters, there
is more to say. For one thing, this duo might very well make a lot of money
by cashing in on the joint power of their imagination and creativity: that’s
Neptune as well. Maybe they could write together or make movies, or
simply design beautiful objects: clothing, furniture, houses. If they keep one
eye on practical reality, they might also improve their financial fortunes by
trusting their unique capacity to sense future trends before they happen.
Maybe in a few years, moving to the “incredible energy vortexes” of
Nebraska will become the “in” thing to do—if these two start buying up
real estate outside Omaha, we’ll buy some too!
There are deeper waters here, ones that have nothing to do with money.
The psychological arena that the second house represents is self-confidence.
With their Neptune here, these two need to concentrate on believing in their
innate spirituality and imagination. What that means in practical terms is
that they invest in those qualities in themselves, treating them like
something they value as precious. If they take their spirituality seriously,
they will feed it. They will spend the money it takes to sit with teachers. For
example, they’ll attend classes, go on vision quests, get psychic readings
and counsel, do energy work and conscious bodywork, visit sacred places.
Above all, they’ll take the time to tend to their souls. This integration of
conscious, intentional spiritual growth will become one of the main sources
of their dignity and confidence in their relationship. Similarly, they will take
their joint imaginative powers seriously. They will, for example, buy a good
video camera and take a filmmaking class together. They’ll have musical
instruments in their house. They’ll paint together. They’ll design a home.
And again, they will take the time to develop these creative dimensions of
the life they share.
With composite Neptune in their second house, for these two it all comes
down to taking their spirituality and their creativity seriously. That faith is
the trigger that allows the blossom to shoot through the stem.
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN THE THIRD HOUSE
Communication is the lifeblood of any relationship. Without it, there is no
connection between people. One method of communication is, of course,
language. It’s not the only form, but let’s start there. With composite
Neptune in their third house, finding a clear path to each other through
words can be a challenge. Easily, meanings can be misconstrued. Take the
seemingly simple sentence, “You’ve lost weight.” Here are some
possibilities for what that might mean in the ears of the partner: You are
looking great. Or you are too fat. Or you look unhealthy—or you look
healthy. Or I’ve been secretly harboring resentment at your recent weight
gain. Or I love you and am attracted to you. Or I only value you as a sex
object.
One dimension of compatibility in a relationship is that the words and
phrases in my dictionary have more or less the same meaning in your
dictionary. For the couple with composite Neptune in their third house, that
verbal compatibility can be elusive—unless they handle the challenges of
this configuration effectively. How can they do that? Let’s start by
recognizing that there are other forms of communication besides language.
The key is that, for these two, these alternative methods of staying
connected are actually a lot more effective. They provide a context in which
language is less of a trap for them. In a nutshell, these other forms of
communication are non-verbal: body language, touch, direct emotional
rapport, psychic linking. With composite Neptune in their third house, this
duo is actually very strong in those departments. Very likely, they delighted
in that early in their relationship—communication was almost
supernaturally easy in their salad days. They seemed simply to be reading
each other’s minds. The heart of what we are saying is that those early
perceptions were valid. The trick is that they need to keep trusting them,
then build on them as a foundation for all their verbal processes.
How? Well, when one says, “You’ve lost weight,” the other one, ideally,
sits with the words for a moment before responding or interpreting them.
Looks into the partner’s eyes. Visualizes a tube of light linking their hearts.
Is open and receptive. Lets the psychic link work, in other words. Lets it be
the foundation for all other forms of communication—not a substitute for
them, but the foundation.
We sometimes marvel at wartime stories in which two people who have
no language in common come together in marriage. How can they do it?
The challenges must be enormous—and yet we suspect that many of these
couples have composite Neptune in their third houses, and that much passes
between them through channels our ancestors of three million years ago
knew very well. For these two, here’s a recommendation: pretend that you
are such a wartime couple. At least once a year, go somewhere alone
together and leave the English language at home.
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN THE FOURTH HOUSE
Dating and courtship are a labyrinth, but if a couple successfully threads its
way through the initial stages of the process, sooner or later a pressing
question looms on the horizon: should we try to make a home together?
That’s fourth house territory, and with Neptune there our first statement is
cautionary: these two need to be careful they don’t let that issue drift away
in the fog. Wherever Neptune lies in the composite chart, there is a risk that
the couple will “transcend” something they really need. For these two
people, once they’ve gotten their relationship on solid ground, making a
home together is a natural step.
This is delicate territory, since many people become attracted to each
other but ultimately have no evolutionary need to live together. Some of
them will have composite Neptune in the fourth. Living together is a serious
step, and it shouldn’t be rushed. But within those parameters, any couple
with a planet in the fourth house sooner or later has to deal with the
question of whether they are going to be “a family” or not—that’s simply
the heart of the matter with this house. And it can be a very joyful, fulfilling
step, if both people desire it and they handle it wisely.
With Neptune in the composite fourth house, any “nest” these two make
together needs to be Neptunian. In a nutshell, that means dreamy. There are
homes you walk into and immediately feel calmer and more open
emotionally and psychically. Achieving that “look” is not purely a matter of
interior decoration. In fact, at the highest level of understanding, we must
recognize that the actual spiritual practices these two employ together are
the hub of the wheel. For them to make a home that supports their
relationship, it is deeply helpful if they, for example, do yoga there. Or sit in
meditation. Or say grace before their meals. Or pray. Those kinds of
activities create a lasting energy in any building in which they occur. A
cathedral feels different to us energetically than a bus station.
First things first—but second things second. A few lines back we
emphasized that creating a Neptunian space isn’t a question of interior
decoration. Still, with Neptune in the composite fourth house, these two can
support their bond by paying attention to the physical appearance of their
home as well. Probably the single most useful comment is that peace and
quiet are very supportive of meditative attitudes. They really benefit from
living in a place that allows them that freedom from intrusive noise.
Secondly, let’s emphasize the helpfulness of candles, oil lamps, and electric
lights that can be dimmed. Some people are helped by spiritual or religious
images—sacred icons, representations of saints, paintings that carry the
imagination into the next dimension. A fountain or a fireplace can add
Neptunian ambience to a home, as can peaceful music. But always
remember: these are only outward supports. Anybody can spend a few
hundred dollars at the local New Age emporium and make their place look
like a medicine man’s boudoir. The real key is inward spiritual practice in
the home.
Finally, let’s take one practical peek in the direction of the Shadow. With
Neptune in the composite fourth house, these two should probably be wary
about being deceived in real estate transactions—the dreamiest, most
peaceful house in the world won’t help them find inner peace if the cellar
tends to flood, the foundation is rotting, and there are termites in the walls.
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN THE FIFTH HOUSE
Lovemaking is fifth house territory. With composite Neptune there, this
couple probably has an interest in the subject! So far, we’re confident that
our interpretation is on solid ground. But how do they maintain their
interest in sharing their sexuality with each other? This is one of life’s
persistent questions—people constantly fall into mutual attraction, but how
often does such an attraction survive even one serious conversation, let
alone a few weeks of relationship?
Sexual response can be destroyed by betrayal, anger, or violence. It can
be destroyed by shame. It can be eaten alive by unresolved psychological
issues. But it can also be destroyed by more immediate, concrete sexual
dysfunction or incompatibility. A planet in the fifth house always gives us
some clues regarding the natural erotic style of a couple. With these two,
there must be a Neptunian dimension to their lovemaking. That means there
must be at least sometimes a sense of their using sexuality as a doorway
into mystical, sacred space. If they can’t make love with each other’s souls,
their bodies soon lose interest.
How can they experience sex that way? How can they keep it truly
sacred? As with most things Neptunian, this is more a question of
consciousness than a question of any particular outer behavior. Still, we can
say that very likely there is sometimes eye contact through the point of
orgasm. Very probably, sexual expression is sometimes very gentle and
tender, with more emphasis on energetic, emotional connection and less on
earning the gold medal in some pornographic Olympics.
As individuals, they may or may not have any interest in experiencing
sexuality this way. That’s a question that can only be answered from their
individual birthcharts, not from a composite chart. But with Neptune in the
composite fifth house, we know that this relationship needs that kind of
sexual experience. It may be the natural meeting point between two very
different sexual styles, or it may provide a missing piece in what is an
otherwise baffling sexual frustration.
Once this couple has established this primordial erotic foundation for
their bond, they’ll find that it spins off other joys in unexpected, delightful
ways. It is, for example, the trigger for shared creativity. There is some art-
form trying to come through them, something that neither of them could
accomplish in a complete way without the other one’s specific talents and
perspectives. They’ll also find that their ability simply to have fun together
—another fifth house theme—will be greatly enhanced.
One more note. Traditionally, the fifth house is related to “debauchery.”
Getting into trouble with addictive or compulsive behaviors is a danger, and
many a couple with Neptune in the composite fifth house has gone down
that road together. What underlies this problem is pain—a pain that comes
from the absence of the core psychospiritual eroticism that is the true
meaning of this configuration.
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN THE SIXTH HOUSE
The sixth house is often related to the idea of service. And in fact a couple
with their composite Neptune there may very well be drawn in an altruistic
way to be of some use in their community. But we can be a lot more
specific about the nature of this service: one of the forgotten meanings of
the sixth house is lineage. Most of us have been served by a mentor at some
point in our lives. If that happens, then typically, as we mature, we go on to
mentor someone ourselves. And presumably someone mentored our
mentors, just as those we mentor will eventually pass on the gift
themselves. Extend that pattern into the forgotten past and the unseen
future, and you’ve got lineage. The individuals comprising it may not be
remembered literally by name, but that doesn’t make them any less
effective or precious.
A couple with Neptune in the composite sixth house, whether they know
it or not, is part of such a tradition. What exactly is being passed down the
line? The answer lies in the general category of Neptunian energy and
Neptunian initiations: it pertains to consciousness itself. And specifically,
given that we are speaking here of a composite chart, the tradition to be
conveyed is one of conscious, spiritual mating and bonding. Being a
conscious lover in a committed relationship is not easy or totally intuitive;
there are “tricks of the trade.” There are hard-won answers to tough
questions, such as knowing when to get in our partner’s face about
something, and when to forgive and forget. And conscious lovers have been
on this road for a million years, gradually accumulating better answers. It’s
all that, and the vibration behind all that, that are being conveyed in this
Neptunian lineage.
Thus, with this configuration, we are alerted to a couple, probably a little
older than our heroes, appearing in the courtship-days of our subjects. There
is something magical and attractive about this older couple—they know
something. And somehow, that “something” is passed on. How? The
phrase, “monkey see, monkey do” comes to mind. So does the Sanskrit
term, darshan. In some primordial human way, the older couple teaches the
younger one something about how to keep soul-consciousness alive
between two people in the face of the mundane realities of living together in
the world. And the older couple expects nothing in return—the giving is as
joyful as the receiving.
The wheels turn, and eventually we find our heroes, a little older now,
exercising a strange and mysterious attraction over another two people,
younger than themselves. And the flame, incalculably ancient, burns on.
The wonder is that all this might have happened over something as
mundane as a “chance meeting” in a grocery store.
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN THE SEVENTH HOUSE
The seventh house always gives us insight into our “significant others.” For
a couple, this isn’t about their relationship. It’s about their closest friends.
Very typically, it describes other couples with whom they have some kind
of connection. Many traditional astrologers would view this particular
configuration in a negative light—that our two heroes would be deceived by
their friends, or that they would tend to form alliances with unsavory
characters, given to drug addiction, dissipation, financial indigence,
drunkenness, and flaky theorizing.
The horror is, all that could be true. There are, as we will soon see,
happier potentials, but let’s consider these dark prophecies first. They are
not random words of despair; astrologers have seen these patterns. They are
real. What astrologers often don’t say is that they are also optional!
Neptunian people are often drawn to escapism—that is the underlying
pattern in all the dispiriting comments we’ve made so far. So what
motivates people to escape? The basic answer is pain. And pain always lies
at the crossroads of two vectors. Outwardly, there is something that hurts
us. And inwardly, there is a degree of sensitivity to that hurt. Kick a rock,
and it won’t bother the rock! Rocks don’t feel much. The more sensitive a
person, the more susceptible he or she is to pain. Thus, Neptunian people—
who are the astrological epitomes of sensitivity—are overrepresented in
drug and alcohol treatment programs, escapist religions, and bars at closing
time.
With Neptune in their composite seventh house, this couple has some
unresolved karmic business with people in those conditions. Maybe they
can help them. If they can do that without being drawn down the drain
themselves, good for them. But they do need to learn that sometimes people
in that condition aren’t interested in truly being helped. All they want is a
free ride, a shoulder on which to cry, and to borrow a few dollars until
“Monday.” Our heroes are kind, but they are going to have to learn to cut
some people loose. That will hurt them, but it needs to be done.
What about the higher ground? Some people are born with highly
elevated levels of sensitivity, and they respond brilliantly to them. These are
the creative visionaries of a culture, and, with Neptune in their composite
seventh house, this couple will probably know a few of them. Maybe they
are poets or musicians or painters. Others among their higher-order
Neptunian soulmates are psychics, meditation masters, and healers—the
spiritual lighthouses of the community. In all cases, these relationships
serve a critical role in the intimate life of this couple. They help keep their
feet on the higher ground, assisting them in maintaining that sweet sense of
other, higher worlds interpenetrating this physical one.
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN THE EIGHTH HOUSE
In attempting to overthrow the old Goddess cultures, one of the charges
hurled by the patriarchal propagandists was that witches had intercourse
with the devil. It was, of course, a lie, purely and simply. But the origins of
the lie are interesting. Many of the world’s older religions recognized that
sexuality, under certain circumstances, could provide a doorway into higher
conditions of consciousness. Two people, joining their energies that way,
could be stronger psychically than either of them could be alone. Adding
sexual energy to certain meditation practices was like putting rocket fuel in
the engines—doorways into other worlds would open. For these two
people, with Neptune in their composite eighth house, such doors are
available today. Their soul-contract is to pass through them together.
Whether they know it or not, they are part of that ancient tradition.
When this couple came together, an alchemical process of transformation
was launched deep inside each one of them—a process they could not
understand or even recognize, except as an enticing sense that the sex
looked “promising” in this relationship. Still, evolution never happens
automatically. There are needles to be threaded here, and ways to get the
process wrong. Always with Neptune, the darker possibility lies in a sort of
lackadaisical “transcendence.” Down that road, people basically just
become lazy and unmotivated, not claiming the treasures that are available
to them. Eventually the heightened sensitivities devolve into various forms
of escapism. For these two, we could imagine sexuality following what
would seem at first to be a conventional, predictable course—hot and
compelling at first, then mellowing into something more akin to the normal
realities of stable relationships. All those changes would seem unsurprising
and expected—but then, instead of sexuality stabilizing in the usual long-
term way, it would continue to go down the drain until it essentially
disappeared all together. And that isn’t normal. That is Neptunian
dysfunction.
So what happened? They key here is that for these two, with their
Neptune in the composite eighth house, if sexuality doesn’t open magical,
psychic doors for them, it will simply fade away. And the happy news is
that it can open those doors. That chemistry is basic to their relationship. It
is what wants to happen between them.
How can they help that process along? Negatively, they must recognize
certain no-no’s: ideally, they should never treat sexuality as the world does:
as something between a joke and a form of recreation. If they are not
feeling emotionally connected with each other, they should refrain from
sexual expression until they’ve had a talk about what’s separated them.
They need to be wary about overriding psychic walls between them with
alcohol or drugs—again, talk works better. Positively, eye contact during
sex is probably the single biggest conscious-triggering yoga. All the
magical processes come down to a commitment always to see Spirit in each
other during sexual contact. It is very helpful if they speak together about
the inward experiences they have during sex; that makes them more
“real”—or more precisely, it integrates them into the shared reality of their
relationship. Similarly, there are books that have been written about these
conscious sexual traditions. Some are in the shamanic, “medicine”
traditions. Some are Tantric. Just knowing consciously that they are part of
that lineage can help them further believe in the reality of their own
experiences with each other. In a nutshell, they simply need to keep the
divine present between them. That energy will carry them into worlds
they’ve never imagined—and anything less will bore them, first into
mechanical responses, and then into either boredom-induced celibacy,
separation, or affairs.
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN THE NINTH HOUSE
At first glance, the combination of mystical Neptune with the religious
ninth house seems perfectly natural and easy. Our understanding is richer
when we recognize that mystical spirituality and religion aren’t
nterchangeable ideas. The history of religion shows a disturbing tendency
for true mystics actually to be seen as a threat and even persecuted by God’s
“official” spokespersons. With their Neptune in the composite ninth house,
this same battle rages inside the dynamics of this couple. One of their soul-
contracts is to resolve it.
The loftiest aspect of the ninth house is the notion of the endless quest
for understanding. It is less about certainty than it is about good questions.
With Neptune there, the natural area on which these questions focus is the
nature of consciousness itself. What is the relationship between mind and
cosmos? That’s an inquiry so vast that ten thousand years of theology
haven’t answered it. Our two heroes won’t answer it either—but their
relationship will thrive on the process of trying.
How? By seeking information. Data. Grist for the mill. Has there ever
been a religion that didn’t contain at least a piece of the truth? These two
benefit from learning a bit about all of them. And when we say “religion,”
we need to understand the word broadly. Any set of beliefs through which
people interpret the world is a religion. That means not only Christianity
and Islam and so on, but also existentialism, political views, cynicism,
materialism. All of them are “religions” in some sense, and for these two, a
good aim is the achievement of fluency in all those religious languages.
The ninth house is also connected with travel and cross-cultural
experience. Whenever we see a planet there in the composite chart, it’s a
good bet that the couple benefits from getting away from the culture of their
birth, at least temporarily. They need that “fresh air” in their perspective.
When the planet is Neptune, we see something more specific: the need for
shared journeys undertaken for intentionally, consciously spiritual purposes.
There is an ancient word for such journeys: pilgrimage. These too have a
soul-stretching impact upon this couple.
If they slip into Neptunian laziness and give up their natural path, then
they will probably find themselves adhering to a numbing “religion” that
substitutes dogmatism for thought or experience. That could be any of the
obvious candidates—Fundamentalism by any of its names. But just as
easily, they could slip into making a religion of “not knowing” or “not
caring.” Those perspectives are lazier, but they can be defended with the
same ignorant zeal that marks any Bible-thumper.
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN THE TENTH HOUSE
The Lord of Mysticism in the house of career . . . So should this couple start
a psychic hotline together? Found an ashram? Not necessarily, although
either of those events might happen.
Neptune symbolizes altered, non-linear, transrational states of
consciousness. It’s helpful to remember that there are many varieties of
such states. Some of them take us close to Spirit and are blissful. Some of
them simply blur the boundaries of our egos, impair their functioning, and
are scary or dangerous or weird. When we are deep in meditation, we are in
Neptunian awareness. When we are just about to fall asleep, we are also in
a Neptunian state. When we are lost in a movie or a book, we are
experiencing another world as just as vital and real as this one—Neptune
again. If we’re watching the six o’clock news, and a stranger’s trauma
floods us with such compassion that our eyes fill with tears, that’s also a
Neptunian experience: we identified with something beyond our own ego.
Have you ever picked up the phone to call a friend, only to hear the friend’s
voice on the line because he or she was calling you? More Neptune. When
we’re a drink or two over our limit, that’s yet another altered state of
consciousness, and a potentially dangerous one.
The tenth house is not just the house of career; it is also the house of
reputation, of public identity, of public image, of one’s role in the
community. With Neptune here, this couple’s “cosmic job description”
should not be defined merely in material terms. We don’t often see ads for
professional mystics in the classifieds. Yet this is an earthy house, and an
externally oriented one that needs some concrete manifestation. How to
integrate this internally oriented planet, this planet of inner work, into the
extraverted workaday world?
The key lies in remembering that one way or another, this couple has a
soul intention to symbolize Neptune, our awareness of consciousness, in
their larger community. What happens if they get it right? There are many
possibilities. They may symbolize Spirit, and our various means of
connecting with it; perhaps they are deacons in their church, or meditation
teachers. They may symbolize intuition or heightened sensitivity to that
which lies beyond the veil; maybe they host a psychic when she comes to
town, or they host an Edgar Cayce study group. They may represent
compassion—they volunteer at the local soup kitchen. They may embody
the Neptunian realms of fantasy and imagination; they’re film-makers. Or
they may serve as a bad example: drifters, drunkards, addicts, or become so
entrenched in learned helplessness or victim consciousness that they can’t
stand on their own two feet.
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN THE ELEVENTH HOUSE
As the wheels of life turn, these two will become increasingly “Neptunian.”
That’s just the nature of anything in the eleventh house; it gets stronger with
age. Good news or bad? It doesn’t depend on Neptune itself—it depends on
how this couple handles it and responds to it. At its best, this configuration
promises an ever-deepening sense of a soul-linkage between them. One way
of thinking about that is the notion that it takes them a while to discover that
they are soulmates—that if they hang in there, that feeling that they are
“supposed to be together” really takes hold. Here’s another perspective:
where do soulmates come from anyway? How do souls create that healthy
interdependence, something strong enough to survive even death and
rebirth? The assumption is that at some point in their distant past, they came
together and formed that bond. Well, why not now, in this lifetime? Can’t
the soulmate contract come into existence anymore? Our second
perspective is that these two are offered the opportunity to create that bond,
over time, in this lifetime.
Either way, to get it right, a couple with their composite Neptune in the
eleventh house requires certain supports. Some they create themselves.
Right at the top of the list is a strong, shared inner intention to put their
relationship on a spiritual basis. So much of this comes down to letting
mystical or perhaps religious language be natural and comfortable for them.
Lines such as “Here’s something I want your soul to hear” come to mind—
and of course we must recognize the soul-eating peril of misusing such
language! My soul probably doesn’t need your soul to hear that it’s about
time the garbage was taken out.
These two benefit a lot from shared prayer or meditation, or at least
shared silence. A long walk in the woods can be as sacred as a long sit in a
church or temple. Two Muslims can share an appreciation of a Christian
cathedral, and two Christians can feel their souls touch in a Sufi dance.
The eleventh house correlates with group activity. Here, with their
composite Neptune in the eleventh, we recognize the benefits that come to
these two from having some kind of spiritual community around them. That
may be formal, as for example with a church or an ashram. But just as
easily it can be informal: a crowd of friends who can all say the word
“God” without immediately following it with the word “damn!”
With such support, our couple will natural move in that sweet soul-
connected direction this configuration promises. Without it, they are drawn
to lower reaches of Neptune’s potential: shared addictions, escapism, a
gradual sense of the relationship’s running out of gas. Sometimes the
balloon simply bursts and the bond collapses: the relationship ends, “not
with a bang but a whimper.” Or, far worse, it continues: a study in gray
mist, going nowhere. Far better to head for the sweet higher ground, with a
little steadying help from their friends—and a lot of help from themselves.
COMPOSITE NEPTUNE IN THE TWELFTH HOUSE
If these two have any doubts about the reality of psychic phenomena, they
had better be prepared to shed them. With their composite Neptune in the
twelfth house, the computers between their ears are definitely networked!
Thoughts in one person’s head will turn up in the other one’s head without
the intervening necessity of speech. The same for feelings and moods—
there’s a constant tide of emotion flowing between them, blurring the
boundaries of their private inner worlds. Early in their dance together, they
experience dozens of these kinds of little miracles. They phone each other
at the same moment. They run into each other at the same out-of-the-way
restaurant. Out of the blue, they both say the words, “I was thinking—”
cutting each other off mid-sentence. And of course it turns out that they
were thinking the same thing.
This magical dimension of their bond must be cultivated. It’s not just
there for entertainment purposes. Something spiritual is triggered in the
chemistry of their interaction. It’s as if they are more evolved together than
they are separately. Together, they experience a taste of the Higher Mind.
Should they walk into a temple or a meditation room together, they
naturally tend to be quiet, feeling the energy or an angelic presence. There’s
really no way for us to know the language they will use to describe these
experiences—only that the experiences are there for them to have. The
mystery we call “God” is trying to make itself felt between them. It’s as if
together they’re a radio receiver tuned to that ancient channel. But one was
the antenna and the other one the transistors.
Quiet time alone as a couple is essential for keeping a composite
Neptune in the twelfth house tuned. Some days they simply need not to get
out of bed! Some evenings, how sweet it is for them to let the home be lit
only with candles, or to turn the lights down low. A bit of meditative music
in the background can subtly turn their consciousnesses toward the inner
planes. Even one of them meditating can have a contagious effect, creating
a resonance of silence in the other. These “temple” feelings must be
cultivated and encouraged, because the alternative is a kind of loss of focus
in the bond. Always with Neptune, we must beware of a lackadaisical side
to the planet, one that gradually trends down toward laziness. They might
tune each other out. They might disappear into the television. The very
energy that creates so much magic at the beginning of a relationship can
turn in these darker directions so slowly and subtly that they hardly notice
the attrition.
The bottom line is that their soul-contract is a bid for the higher mystical
ground. Together, they have what it takes to arrive there. They get a glimpse
of it, for free, right at the beginning. Then they have to work to make it
permanent.
Chapter 15
The Composite Pluto
P luto takes about two and half centuries to orbit the Sun, spending an
average of twenty years in each sign of the zodiac. The result is that in
romantic relationships, it’s very common that both people have the planet in
the same sign. Since composite charts are based on midpoints between
planets, their composite Pluto will be in that same sign too, although of
course the house symbolism and planetary aspects will probably vary
widely between them. As we saw with Uranus and Neptune, some
astrologers are inclined to dismiss such Pluto sign symbolism as just
generational. But actually the effects are dramatically reinforced.
When people are born with their natal Plutos in adjacent signs, which
also happens frequently, then of course the composite Pluto must fall in one
sign or the other. In that scenario, it “sides” with the person who’s got it in
that same sign. That gives us at least a hint of a “Feudal System” dynamic,
as we described in Chapter Three.
So what does Pluto mean?
The astrological power of this icy little world, so far from the Sun, is
astonishing. A couple of years ago, as data came in that further shrank the
already-diminutive diameter of the planet, there was a big flap in the media
about whether astronomers were going to downgrade Pluto to the status of
an asteroid. Most astrologers just laughed and shook their heads. More than
a few remarks were made about not envying the future Pluto transits of
those who were foolish enough to risk mocking the Lord of the Dark. The
International Astronomical Union has since relented: Pluto’s status as an
official planet seems secure for the time being.
And well it should be. Few astrological symbols give us such trenchant
insights into ourselves and, through its placement in the composite chart,
into our relationships with each other. For all of us, as individuals and in
partnership with each other, there are places we don’t want to go—hell-
worlds inside us, where we keep our wounds and our secrets. These are
places where parts of our souls have been carried off, Persephone-fashion,
into the Underworld. In fact, our dear friend and colleague, Jeffrey Wolf
Green, has developed a popular and powerful system of astrological
analysis in which Pluto is actually equated with the soul. Our system and
his reconcile easily—all we need do is remember that the soul (Jeff’s view
of Pluto) tends always to be wounded (our view of Pluto). In either case,
there is a need for us to undertake a daunting journey of soul-recovery,
down through our blindness and our resistance, into the stormy places
inside us all.
Every couple has a composite Pluto. Thus, every couple has a wound
they must face. On the surface, this might seem illogical. The composite
chart exists at the instant we meet—in fact, it existed potentially as soon as
we were both born. How can there already be a wound between us when we
haven’t had a chance to hurt each other yet? It’s a fair question, and we
can’t answer it by referring to wounds we each bring to the relationship
separately. Those wounds are discernible astrologically, but they’re
discernible in the two natal charts, not the composite chart. The answer, as
we explored in Chapter Four, lies in the notion of the pre-existing karmic
pattern of the couple—what and whom they were together in prior
lifetimes. Always, our assumption here is that souls simply don’t enter into
real intimacy in this lifetime without some prior history. We certainly meet
people in this lifetime with whom we have no prior connections, but those
relationships tend to be formal, transitory and fundamentally forgettable.
Where composite Pluto lies, soul-healing must happen. The alternative is
for the relationship to be distorted and haunted by forces that always lie just
beyond the reach of rational comprehension. “Soul-healing,” by the way,
can be translated pretty effectively into pigeon-Greek as psyche therapos.
And what an irony that many of today’s psychotherapists don’t believe in
the eternal soul—it’s like podiatrists who weren’t convinced of the reality
of the feet!
Not every couple needs psychotherapy, in the modern, narrow sense of
the word, or would benefit from it. But all couples, in their own way, must
sooner or later make the journey down into the dark. The benefits of that
journey are not simply the resultant diminishing of negatives. Once Pluto
work is done, there is a great release of energy into the relationship. Much
sheer Eros that was tied up behind the repressive mechanism is released,
empowering the pair to do everything they do with more verve, intelligence,
creativity, and panache. Once we get to the higher potentials of Pluto, we
are actively creating meaning and works of lasting significance in our life
together. This is a planet that, once moving, can shape history.
Note that in the sections that follow, you won’t read about Pluto in Aries,
Taurus, or Gemini—Pluto hasn’t been in those signs for so long that
virtually all the lovers who experienced that configuration have passed from
the earth. We’ve included sections about some generations of lovers who do
not yet exist, at this writing—those with Pluto in Capricorn and Aquarius.
We’ve not included Pluto in Pisces because it’s so far down the road.
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN CANCER
Cancer the Crab, that most delicate of creatures, is drawn inward, to the
heart, to the feelings, to the safest and most impenetrable of shells within
which to nurture oneself and others. Although we must remember that we
are considering just one symbol that applies to hundreds of millions of
relationships, couples with their composite Pluto in this sign carry a wound
that had something to do with the loss of their shell, the loss of protection,
the failure of nurturing, with feeling overwhelmed and utterly vulnerable.
Perhaps this couple’s home burned down or was taken from them. They
might have lost their life savings. Perhaps they lost their families. Maybe
those who were supposed to nurture them abused them instead. We have to
be imprecise about the specific origin and details of the karmic wound here
—but remember that a close consideration of the composite lunar Nodes as
described in Chapter Four will carry us light years closer to specificity.
For this analysis, it’s sufficient to remember that with composite Pluto in
Cancer, this couple has experienced something akin to the ground
crumbling beneath their feet. That which they thought was their ultimate
refuge has failed them or betrayed them. Their sense of safety in the world,
their ability to trust, their willingness to lower their defenses and allow true
adult to adult intimacy, were all damaged long ago. Thus, we find a
complicated relationship with the acquisition, maintenance and shedding of
shells, and with nurturing. Perhaps that shell is a house. A gated
community. A family, the bigger the better, but where everyone either lives
at arm’s length from one another emotionally, or where no one is allowed to
have any boundaries, any shells of their own. Entrenched and bristling
defense mechanisms. Some all-encompassing belief system that leaves
nothing in doubt. A recession-proof job or retirement plan. Often, all that
which lies within that shell is “nurtured,” sometimes regardless of whether
that nurturing is necessary or appropriate, or abuse in disguise. All that lies
beyond the shell is viewed as foreign, suspect, and probably dangerous until
proven otherwise. The underlying logic is that if I have the perfect shell, I
am safe: no one will rip it away from me and hurt me.
The “cure” for the Cancer Plutonian wound in the composite chart lies in
the area of nurturing, healing and caring for one another and for others
outside the relationship, outside the shell. This means realizing that there is
no guaranteed safety in this world, and that no one is ultimately responsible
for anyone else’s happiness. It means self-revelation: taking calculated risks
of emotional nakedness with one another. It means truly listening instead of
rushing in with a solution. Sometimes it means “tough love,” too, rather
than merely colluding with each other’s defense systems.
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN LEO
Leo the Lion draws attention to itself, and doing that is not always a
formula for longevity. While we must be cautious and general here, since
we are dealing only with a single symbol that applies to hundreds of
millions of relationships, it is safe to recognize that couples with their
composite Pluto in this sign carry a wound that had something to do with
being set up and knocked down by their communities. Those words cover a
lot of bases, of course. Movers and shakers in history, lifted high, then
brought down through political reversal or treachery—yes, that could be. Or
simply souls raised amid privilege in some “bullet-proof” bourgeoisie who
was then clobbered by loss or catastrophe. That’s consistent too. We cannot
help but be distressingly vague about the specific origin of the karmic
wound here—and take comfort in remembering that a close consideration
of the composite lunar Nodes as described in Chapter Four will carry us
light years closer to specificity.
For our purposes now, it’s sufficient to remember that with composite
Pluto in Leo, something hurts very badly in this couple. Their spontaneity,
their joy in life, their ability to trust life and to feel comfortable in the
human family, were all damaged long ago. Thus, we find a kind of
approach-avoidance relationship with pleasure: a compulsion to feast—and
then worry about calories. Benders, followed by penitent abstinence. A
desire to be famous—and thus feel defended and powerful—followed by a
fearful compulsion to undo the fame and escape into anonymity, loss or
shame. Perhaps the single most characteristic mark of this Plutonian wound
lies in a vulnerability to establishing an impressive facade which has
nothing to do with the actual nature, tastes, or desires of the soul. The
underlying logic is that if I am the epitome of importance and “coolness,” I
am safe: no one will hurt me.
The “cure” for a Leo Plutonian wound in the composite chart lies in the
area of authentic creative self-expression. The couple must find a way to
leave tangible evidence of their values and their inner processes in each
other’s hands, and then in the hands of the world. Their souls must shine
forth, and be seen and appreciated as they truly are. They must experience
authentic success and appreciation—and the word “authentic” is the key.
Merely playing the role of success is the empty path, just another defense
against being truly seen, and thus hurt.
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN VIRGO
Virgo the Craftsperson strives for perfection, and its tools include two
highly detailed and laser-sharp pictures: one of reality as it actually is, the
other of an ideal reality, reality as it could be if it had been perfected. Since
few things in life are perfect or even perfectable, this dynamic is unlikely to
lead to contentment. While we must be cautious, since we are dealing with
a configuration that applies to hundreds of millions of relationships, we can
generalize that couples with their composite Pluto in this sign bear a wound
that has to do with having fallen short of some deeply-held ideal. Many
scenarios could fit this description. Journeymen who never became masters
of their trade. Servants unable to rise above their station. Soldiers or
politicians whose missions failed. Athletes who lost a big game.
Commoners never raised to peerage, unpublished writers, architects or
masons whose designs for a medieval cathedral were rejected. We have to
be imprecise about the specific origin of the karmic wound here—and
remember that a close consideration of the composite lunar Nodes as
described in Chapter Four will help us become more specific.
For our purposes now, it’s sufficient to remember that with composite
Pluto in Virgo, a deep sense of inadequacy is at work in this couple. Their
self-esteem, their ability to see positive outcomes, their belief that the cup
could be half full rather than half empty, their capacity to accept a good-
enough although flawed reality—a job, a body, a person, a relationship—
were all wounded long ago. Thus, we find a complex set of issues regarding
criticism, guilt and shame. They may judge themselves, one another and the
world too harshly, and dole out punishment for not being perfect: self-
destructiveness, risky behavior, negativity, consistently underestimating
themselves and selling themselves short. On the opposite side of that coin,
they may defend against those feelings by becoming grandiose, blaming
everyone and everything other than themselves for what’s wrong with their
lives, and being unable to bear criticism. The underlying logic is that if I
don’t try, I will be safe from a repetition of that crushing failure.
The “cure” for the Virgo Plutonian wound in the composite chart lies in
the area of recognizing that perfection is an unattainable goal. Working
towards growth and improvement, on the other hand, is both attainable and
healing. With clear-eyed Virgo realism and a big dose of tolerance, this
couple should work on themselves, work on the relationship, and find some
way to contribute together to the larger human good.
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN LIBRA
Libra wants peace, harmony, equilibrium, symmetry, and accord. That
Libran principle applies to both relationships and aesthetics. Although
composite Pluto in Libra is a configuration shared by hundreds of millions
of relationships, we can still say that couples with their composite Pluto in
this sign bear wounds that stem from some fundamental loss of peace, from
radical inequalities and divisiveness, from failure to compromise, from
some breakdown of elementary human courtesies.
Perhaps they suffered from the horrific breakdowns of the human social
contract that can happen during wartime. They could have been the victims
of prejudice and other inequities: Jim Crow laws, lynchings, the caste
system. Perhaps such injustices prevented their relationship from attaining
its deepest levels; how easy is it to marry across racial or religious lines?
Maybe it included the painful realization that not all conflicts have a win-
win resolution—America was going to be a free and independent nation or
remain a British colony; there was no middle ground. We have to be
imprecise about the specific origin of the karmic wound here; still, an
analysis of the composite lunar Nodes as described in Chapter Four will
help us become more specific.
For our purposes now, it’s sufficient to remember that with composite
Pluto in Libra, a profound and pervasive tension, rooted in that loss of
peace, is at work within this couple. Their centeredness, their ability to be
moderate and calm, to believe in true equality and reciprocity, and to do
what Jung called “hold the tension between the opposites” was damaged
long ago. Therefore, we observe free-floating anxiety, indecisiveness, a
tendency to compromise too much or too little, to try to gloss over conflicts
and harsh realities, to strive for peace at any cost, to prefer a cool
appropriateness to honesty or real connection. The underlying logic is that
if I never rock the boat, I’ll be safe.
The “cure” for the Libra Plutonian wound in the composite chart? We’re
reminded of the bumper stickers, “If you want peace, work for justice,” and
“Commit random acts of kindness and senseless beauty.” It’s a resolution
that this couple will help contribute to an aesthetically aware, truly
civilized, charitable, courteous society. Striving for justice includes stating
one’s own needs, hearing the needs of others, and granting equal
importance to both.
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN SCORPIO
Scorpio’s primary aim is the generation of consciousness about the dark.
The dark side of our character; the human capacity for evil. The human
unconscious. Everything that can make us uncomfortable, that can poke
holes in the human ego’s certainty that it’s always in the driver’s seat. This
is deep, charged, and not particularly popular territory. Composite Pluto in
Scorpio is a configuration shared by countless couples, yet we can
generalize that couples with their composite Pluto in this sign carry wounds
that stem from a denial of the dark, a refusal to deal with some of the
grittier truths about human nature, the turning of a blind eye to the human
shadow. They might have been whistle-blowers who were scapegoated or
attacked, in the ancient tradition of Kill the Messenger. Perhaps their own
blindness contributed to their victimization by bullies and tyrants, or
perhaps someone else looked the other way while they were being abused.
Perhaps, on the other hand, this couple were the perpetrators rather than the
victims, and all the while insisted that their hearts were pure, that the other
guy started it. We can’t know the specifics of the karmic wound here; still,
an analysis of the composite lunar Nodes as described in Chapter Four will
help us become more clear.
For our purposes now, it’s sufficient to remember that with composite
Pluto in Scorpio, a brooding intensity fills this couple, a fascination with the
dark, a reflexive suspiciousness about others’ real motives, a desire to ferret
out ever more complex, charged and uncomfortable truths. This is not
necessarily an identification with the shadow, although in some cases that
may occur, as may a denial of it or a projection of it onto others. It is, rather,
a need to examine and understand the human shadow, in ourselves and in
others. The danger here is of looking at the world exclusively through that
Plutonian lens, to the point where despair and hopelessness arise, where the
shadow looms so large that it blots out faith in the possibility of the human
capacity for good as well as evil. The underlying logic is that if I assume
the worst, I won’t be blindsided again.
The “cure” for the Scorpio Plutonian wound in the composite chart lies
in recognizing that we all participate in the collective shadow. No one
person or group has a monopoly on it, and the collective shadow includes
both victim and victimizer. The human psyche contains both dark and light.
This couple should face the complexity of their own natures, that can both
feel and cause pain, with equal amounts of courage and compassion.
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN SAGITTARIUS
Sagittarius, sign of the Pilgrim, the Anthropologist, the Gypsy, the Scholar,
the Philosopher. The motif of the quest connects these symbols, the quest
for perspective, knowledge, experience and understanding. The sign is
idealistic, colorful, pattern-seeking, pattern-recognizing. For Sagittarius, life
must contain some grand meaning. Composite Pluto in Sagittarius is a
configuration shared by millions of couples, yet we can state, cautiously,
that this composite Pluto indicates that the couple carries wounds that come
from a loss of meaning, from dashed hopes, from restrictions and restraints,
from the pratfalls that grandiose idealism, naïveté, inflation and restlessness
can suffer. Missionaries attacked by cannibals? Cowboys captured by
Indians? Scholars muzzled by the Inquisition? We can’t know the specifics
of the karmic wound here; still, an analysis of the composite lunar Nodes as
described in Chapter Four will help us become more clear.
For our purposes now, it’s sufficient to remember a hunger for freedom,
purpose and expanded possibilities fills this couple, along with the fear that
hunger can’t be satisfied. There is a yearning for some greater significance.
There can be a frustration with God, that the mechanisms of the universe
are not more clear. Sometimes this frustration is so painful that the opposite
reaction forms, and Pluto in Sagittarius insists that it knows exactly how
many angels can dance on the head of a pin, how much they weigh and
what their names are. This “knowledge” can be used to justify, rationalize
or explain all sorts of behavior, and can contribute to reality-testing errors
that more Saturnian types would be far less prone to make. There can be
cynical or condescending indignation about the proclivities of more
earthbound, less far-sighted and great-spirited souls. The underlying logic is
that if God speaks to me directly, I will be spared the pain and
embarrassment of mere mortal error.
The “cure” for the Sagittarius Plutonian wound in the composite chart
lies in this couple’s willingness to believe, their admission that belief is not
knowledge, their tolerance of their own and others’ uncertainties and
mistakes, and their readiness to embrace the new, the foreign and the
untried.
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN CAPRICORN
This is the sign of the Great Work. Of hard-won accomplishments,
Herculean labors and great undertakings, whose fruition demands
Capricornian virtues: realism, pragmatism, efficiency, self-reliance,
integrity and productivity. While we must be cautious and general here,
since we are dealing only with a single symbol that applies to hundreds of
millions of relationships, it is safe to recognize that couples with their
composite Pluto in this sign carry a wound that involved some great work
that failed to reach its full manifestation. An unfinished symphony. A
pioneer settlement that had to be abandoned. An unratified treaty, a
bankrupt enterprise, no medal in the Olympics. Perhaps the cause of the
failure was lack of persistence, poor reality testing, hostile circumstances or
sheer fatigue. We can’t know the specifics of the karmic wound here; still,
an analysis of the composite lunar Nodes as described in Chapter Four will
help us become more clear.
For our purposes now, it’s sufficient to realize that a mood of great
seriousness, stoicism, purposefulness and formality pervades this couple.
Their confidence in their ability to achieve something meaningful, and to
overcome harsh outer circumstances, has been damaged. Thus we can find
exaggerated issues around survival, power, and the need for control, a
reflexive pessimism, a tendency toward worst-case-scenario thinking and
guardedness. Vulnerability, emotional, financial or practical, is avoided at
all costs. Feelings are suspect, rationalized, or dismissed—including one’s
own feelings. A kind of brittleness sets in. Without an emotional compass,
all that drive to accomplish can be aimed in ultimately unsatisfying and
empty directions. The underlying logic is that if I don’t make any mistakes
and take all possible precautions in every situation, I will remain safe from
a hostile outer environment and from unpredictable, unreliable, irrational
human beings.
The “cure” for the Capricorn Plutonian wound in the composite chart lies
in Great Works—but only if this couple recognizes that all of that Capricorn
self-discipline and drive are best used to manifest some inner ideal in the
outer world, rather than to build barricades against the feeling life and the
uncertainties of human existence.
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN AQUARIUS
Pluto enters Aquarius in 2023, and relationships showing a composite Pluto
in that sign will start showing up perhaps fifteen years later. At the time
we’re writing, that’s definitely back-burner material! But we can use the
symbolism to peer into the future.
As always, there is a divine intention behind this Plutonian
configuration. It has to do with liberating human individuality within the
context of love. There is an age-old tension between intimacy and freedom.
Love is so precious, but it costs us so much. How many people throughout
history have held their tongues about something they felt or believed simply
to avoid conflict with their partner? Or to avoid hurting their partner? Love
is full of compromise. Kindness must trump truth sometimes. But there is a
dark side to all that, and for this Pluto-in-Aquarius generation of lovers,
their task is to devise a culture of intimacy that is more compatible with
human individuality, honesty, and freedom. They will create art-forms about
it. They will vex their more conventional Pluto-in-Capricorn parents. And
they will re-define the eternal, archetypal institution of marriage—by
whatever name it is then known!
Pluto always casts a dark shadow. It pervades the cultural soup and
makes itself felt in every life. Each generation of lovers must deal with it,
along with their own more individual wounds and defenses. With Pluto in
Aquarius, the shadow is coldness, distance, and detachment. Alienation, in a
word. Love goes bad sometimes, and knowing how just to walk away is a
necessary survival skill. But if we are too good at it or tend to use it too
quickly, it can spell loneliness. Now imagine a planet full of people who all
have an Olympic level of that skill—there’s the Shadow of composite Pluto
in Aquarius.
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN THE FIRST HOUSE
Outwardly, there is a feeling of dramatic intensity about a couple with their
composite Pluto in the first house. There is something sexy about them. You
feel like opening up around them, telling them secrets. And you are not the
only one: if these two ever wrote a book about the shady sides of their
friends’ lives, there would be a lot of embarrassed people in the community.
The Plutonian energy in their outward “mask” asks for that kind of
confessional response—even when these two might prefer not to know.
The inward story is different. The first house is about the freedom to
make our own choices. These two are wounded in that department. We view
that wound as karmic; that is, as leftover damage inside them from a
previous lifetime together in the reincarnational sense. If the idea of
reincarnation doesn’t work for you, it’s easy enough to just stay with the
present tense and not worry about the origins of the wound. What matters
anyway is healing it, not explaining it. Using reincarnational language, we
can see that they were tricked out of their freedom. Their relationship was
not allowed to unfold naturally. Perhaps they were imprisoned in some
sense, but very likely the bars of that cage were not literal. Much more
likely, they were connected with what appeared to be worldly power. But is
a leader ever truly free? Typically, those in positions of control lead very
structured lives. Furthermore, they often have to make bitter, morally
complex decisions—who, for example, can ever succeed in politics without
making repugnant compromises? Something of that Machiavellian nature
hurt these two. They danced close to the “Dark Side of the Force.” They
carry those scars forward into their present experience.
How can that manifest? They may become overbearing as a couple. They
may exert unnecessary and inappropriate levels of control over their friends
and family. There may be an aura of darkness, uncomfortable intensity, or
even something tragic about them.
The healing of this composite Plutonian wound lies in these two people
learning to do exactly as they please—wisely! Their aim is a kind of
“enlightened selfishness,” where they share their hearts with each other,
decide what choices will give them the most pleasure, and then go forward
unencumbered by any other concerns. The underlying idea is that deep
down inside them, at the level of their instincts, is a natural, spontaneous
goodness. As they learn to trust life—and themselves—again, their inner
compass needle swings back toward this naturalness and simplicity. In
getting there, they may make some waves, but they will recover their
innocence. In being kind to themselves, they build a solid foundation for
their kindness toward others—one that is rooted in firmer bedrock than
philosophy or morality. One that is rooted in natural instinct.
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN THE SECOND HOUSE
Our word plutocrat means someone with a pile of cash. Gems and precious
metals come from under the ground, so it makes sense that the “lord of the
underworld” would be pretty flush—that’s very likely the origin of the
Pluto/money connection. Given that the second house is traditionally the
house of money, it’s no surprise that financial astrologers love this
configuration! And indeed it’s fair to say that a couple with their composite
Pluto in the second house may very well find that their financial fortunes
improve as their relationship becomes more committed. They may even
eventually deal with large sums of cash, and the complications and
opportunities that reality can generate.
Underlying that surface there is a wound. To grasp its nature and its
impact upon their present life together, we need to recognize that the second
house means a lot more than money. It actually refers to the entire material
basis of survival—money, certainly, but also what money buys: food,
shelter, safety, protection from environmental extremes, clothing. These two
are wounded there. We view that wound as karmic; that is, as leftover
damage inside them from a previous lifetime together in the reincarnational
sense.
If the idea of reincarnation doesn’t work for you, it’s easy enough to just
stay with the present tense and not worry about the origins of the wound.
What matters anyway is healing it, not explaining it. Using reincarnational
language, we can see that in a prior lifetime together, this couple
experienced some trauma connected with survival.
A detailed analysis of their composite lunar South Node will open up the
story for us, but just seeing this Plutonian configuration is enough to lead us
to speculate that they may very well have experienced poverty together. It’s
plausible they have actually experienced famine together, or perhaps the
indirect results of war or some environmental fluctuation that rendered
survival dubious. The key is that this prior-life memory has created a
feeling of foreboding in the couple, as if something bad will surely happen
to them again. This subtly undercuts their faith in themselves as a couple,
and that’s really the psychological key: the healing of the Plutonian wound
is linked to their learning to trust that their relationship can survive. They
need to let go of the feeling that somehow they have bought a ticket on the
Titanic. Achieving material security can actually be a very helpful, healing
step for them. It would be ignorant and insensitive to frame such a goal as
“unspiritual.” Hungry people need a meal; later, we’ll give them the
philosophy!
There’s another karmic possibility, statistically less probable, but one we
need to consider. That’s the idea that these two, in the karmic past, were not
hurt by poverty, but by its opposite: great wealth. That’s a rarer condition,
obviously. But it can still be damaging to one’s dignity and self-confidence.
Outwardly, a wealthy life is an easy one. Laziness and a lack of the drive
toward true self-actualization can take a terrible toll. Furthermore, whatever
we accomplish, people will tend to downgrade it, imaging that it was the
result, not of our own strengths, but of our resources and connections.
In both cases—lack and too much abundance—we see the same
underlying Plutonian second house wound: self-doubt. In a nutshell, these
two have come together as a couple in this lifetime in order to prove
themselves to themselves. They are gaining dignity and a sense of their own
solidity and legitimacy as a couple. There is only one way to do that: their
relationship must succeed.
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN THE THIRD HOUSE
These two will say anything! They may not be that way as individuals, but
if you get them together, you know that the conversation is going to head
for the deep end of the pool. Maybe it will start out as humor—one of them
makes a risqué remark or offers some teasing “psychological insight” that
actually cuts close to the bone. In the blink of an eye, talk has gone into
taboo territory. Maybe humor is bypassed entirely. One says, “You’re
looking older lately. Are you all right?” The other one nods and adds, “And
you’ve gained a few pounds. What’s going on?” Thirty seconds later you’re
pouring out your heart. Or walking out the door, feeling invaded and
violated, with them left sitting there wondering what happened.
Underlying those confrontive surface behaviors, there is a wound. To
grasp its nature and its impact upon their present life together, we need to
recognize that the third house means a lot more than language. It also refers
to the entire basis of perception—how we see the world, how we filter our
perceptions through the stained glass of our biases, interests, and
psychological orientations. These two are wounded there. We view that
wound as karmic; that is, as leftover damage inside them from a previous
lifetime together in the reincarnational sense.
If the idea of reincarnation doesn’t work for you, it’s easy enough to just
stay with the present tense and not worry about the origins of the wound.
What matters anyway is healing it, not explaining it. Using reincarnational
language, we can see that in a prior lifetime together, this couple
experienced some trauma connected with how they viewed the world, what
they said, and the reactions of others to them. A detailed analysis of their
composite South lunar Node will open up the story for us, but just seeing
this Plutonian configuration is enough to lead us to speculate that their
mouths got them into a lot of trouble. They almost certainly crossed swords,
perhaps unwittingly, with the representatives of the “official version” of
reality. Maybe that involved a prior life in which they were connected with
a religion deemed heretical. Maybe they were siblings in a family headed
by a tyrant, and rather than keeping silence, they spoke up and were
punished.
In any case, two phenomena arose in them, and they are dealing with
them in the present lifetime. First, there is a lot of edge and anger in them
around “their right to tell it like it is.” This can lead them to use too much
linguistic force in their statements to others and, most centrally, in their own
dialog about their relationship. They need to learn gentleness, especially
with each other. They need to learn that crackling one-liners that work
wonderfully in a stage-play are generally catastrophic grandstanding when
two people are treading in delicate emotional territory.
The second phenomenon is more subtle. In the past, they were punished
for speaking what they perceived as the truth. This has led to a fear of
repeating that pattern. Thus, despite the outward appearance of extreme
candor, we can actually find a vulnerability to “lies of omission,” or even to
flat-out lying, when fear of punishment is a factor. And of course lovers,
despite their fancy talk to the contrary, do typically punish each other for
honesty. The deep healing for these two with composite Pluto in the house
of language is, gently and slowly, to move to a place in their relationship
where they trust each other enough to lay scary truths on the table.
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN THE FOURTH HOUSE
With composite Pluto in the deep, interior world of the fourth house, there
is an undercurrent of psychological intensity that flows like blood through a
vein in this relationship. Looking in from the outside, the surface of the
pond might seem placid enough—but there are surely finny, improbable
creatures swimming in the depths. Squint at them with the eye of a
psychologist or a detective, and immediately the wheels start turning:
something is going on here, something is not what it seems to be. These two
have a secret.
And it’s good that they do! Every shrink worth a penny is zealous about
maintaining confidentiality—and every shrink worth a quarter knows that
the deepest therapy in the world happens in the secret world of a serious,
committed sexual relationship. With composite Pluto in the fourth, these
two do have secrets—and they need them! Their bond is an alchemical
cauldron in which a very private process of soul-healing is happening. It is
profoundly helpful for them to speak honestly with each other about the
families in which they grew up. For this relationship to work, that
psychological territory must be sorted out. We don’t need to make dark
assumptions about their families either—only to observe that the unusually
high level of honesty that is appropriate to these two people wasn’t
supported in their early training and socialization. Either they resolve that
pattern, or they reproduce it.
Underlying all this is a wound. We view that wound as karmic; that is, as
leftover damage inside them from a previous lifetime they shared together
in the reincarnational sense. If the idea of reincarnation doesn’t work for
you, it’s easy enough to just stay with the present tense and not worry about
the origins of the wound. What matters anyway is healing it, not explaining
it. Using reincarnational language, we can see that in a prior lifetime
together, these two were almost certainly in a family together. Possibly they
were married, but the clan-relationship might not have been sexual; just as
easily they were simply kindred. And something catastrophic happened. A
detailed analysis of their composite South lunar Node will open up the story
for us, but just seeing this Plutonian configuration is enough to lead us to
speculate that in coming together in this lifetime, they remind each other of
unresolved, painful issues from a previous one. As they come to trust each
other more deeply, they’ll open up some “unfair” interpretations of their
own—and each other’s—families. And even if the interpretations are truly
unfair, they are still connected with reality—the difference being that it’s
not the present reality they are seeing. It’s the one from the prior lifetime.
And, in a nutshell, it’s never too late for therapy! Psychological healing and
reclaiming their faith in the idea of family is their soul-contract.
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN THE FIFTH HOUSE
Pluto is dramatic and the fifth house is expressive. Put two and two
together, and what you’ve got with composite Pluto in the fifth is a formula
for fireworks. And fireworks can be a lot of fun! Much depends on where
the explosions are happening. In a nutshell, the pyrotechnics need to be
directed into these arenas: creativity, a pagan celebration of living, and
passionate sexuality. Otherwise, they’ll land in the realm of exhausting
psychodrama, vexing attractions to other people, and children from hell.
To remain healthy, composite Pluto in the fifth house requires that these
two people really make “seizing the day” a priority, especially in terms of
life’s more ephemeral joys: dancing “as if no one is looking;” making space
for play, enjoying a little too much food with their soul-friends from time to
time. It is helpful for them to concentrate on always encouraging each other
sexually, and never shaming or repressing each other. Letting their
relationship feel like the scene of the liberation of their libidos, not as a
prison for them, is critical. If they can find a creative medium to share, so
much the better: acting, music, painting.
Why so much emphasis on getting the ya-yas out? Underlying those
expressive, playful behaviors, there is a Plutonian wound trying to be
healed. To grasp its nature and its impact upon their present life together,
we need to recognize that there is a basic human need for ecstatic release.
It’s the only force that can balance the undeniable pain of life. These two
are wounded in the house of pleasure. We view that wound as karmic; that
is, as leftover damage inside them from a previous lifetime together in the
reincarnational sense.
If the idea of reincarnation doesn’t work for you, it’s easy enough to just
stay with the present tense and not worry about the origins of the wound.
What matters anyway is healing it, not explaining it. Using reincarnational
language, we can see that in a prior lifetime together, this couple
experienced some trauma connected with the repression of their natural
instinct for pleasure and release. A detailed analysis of their composite
South lunar Node will open up the story for us, but just seeing this
Plutonian configuration is enough to lead us to speculate that, in a prior life,
they were hungry for each other sexually, but that the situation or local
customs prevented the full exploration of those energies. Perhaps they were
shamed by bad, repressive religion. Perhaps they had a brief and socially
catastrophic affair that left them both damaged. Maybe they experienced a
childhood together under tragic, “growing up too fast” circumstances.
In any case, in the present lifetime, they have signed a soul-contract to
try to develop a right relationship with the human need for pleasure. If they
are committed to each other for the long haul, they still need to try to live
each minute as if it were their last. And if they come to a place where the
joy of their bond has seriously dissipated, they must recognize that there is
only one ultimately real reason to stay together: because they want to!
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN THE SIXTH HOUSE
When truly dreadful things happen in life, we find out who our friends are.
It can be a bitter phrase or a very sweet one, depending on whether the
people we count on fail us or prove reliable. With their composite Pluto in
the sixth house, this couple is very likely to deserve a gold medal in
troubled times—they’ll come through for us like saints. They are also a
magnet for such situations. Together, they’ll see more than their fair share
of life’s difficulties, if not in their own lives, then in the lives of those
around them: disease, family dysfunction, existential and economic
reversals. Simply calling this “bad luck” is a defensible perspective, but
here’s a deeper one: these two are servants of humanity. God will use them
where they are needed. When they came together, an alchemical process
was triggered that made them far more useful to others together than they
ever could be as separate individuals.
Within the context of this basic soul-contract, they have choices to make.
The first and most elemental is simply this: how will they serve? It is wise
for them to seize the initiative here. Simply stated, here’s the menu. They
can exercise a set of helpful skills of which they are justly proud and which
give them a sense of fulfillment. Or they can be outmaneuvered by
circumstance into washing out the johns, mowing lawns, and being at the
beck and call of various petty tyrants. In either case, it’s Plutonian sixth
house energy: service.
Underlying these surface behaviors, there is a wound. To grasp its nature
and it impact upon their present life together, we need to recognize that
sixth house “service” has a lot of meanings. Some of them are bitter, and
these two have been wounded there. We view that wound as karmic; that is,
as leftover damage inside them from a previous lifetime together in the
reincarnational sense. If the idea of reincarnation doesn’t work for you, it’s
easy enough to just stay with the present tense and not worry about the
origins of the wound. What matters anyway is healing it, not explaining it.
Using reincarnational language, we can see that in a prior lifetime together,
this couple experienced some trauma connected with a grievous weight of
unwanted responsibility. There are duties from which we cannot in good
conscience escape: a dependent child or aged parent may simply,
objectively need us, for example. Going out a little further on the limb, let’s
recognize that slavery has been pervasive in human history. Perhaps these
two were literally in chains together—and if it’s not factually true, those
words at least provide the right metaphor.
Karma tends to repeat; this is why we emphasize the danger of the joy of
this relationship being diminished by pressing, exhausting duties—old
patterns might manifest again, either in the form of circumstances or, more
likely, in the form of an old tendency to accept burdens which they could in
fact ethically refuse in the present context. Let’s also add that the real shared
soul-intention here is to find meaningful service, and transmute the karma
into something higher, sweeter, and far more rewarding.
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN THE SEVENTH HOUSE
Watch a couple with Pluto in their composite seventh house for a few
weeks, and you start entertaining some interesting questions about them.
Who’s that guy in the trench coat hanging outside their door? He looks like
he’s either a gangster or a spy. Who’s that woman in the dark glasses? Is she
a hooker or a rock star? Oh—those are their best friends, Mugsy and
Bubbles. They’re really sweet . . . once you get to know them.
OK, we’re exaggerating a bit. But not much. Ostensibly, we all choose
our friends—unlike family, those are voluntary relationships. But
friendship, like deeper forms of intimacy, is partly karmic too. We may
have evolutionary business with people who seem to be inexplicable
“choices.” With composite Pluto in the seventh house, this couple has a
series of soul-contracts with a group of Plutonian people. And Pluto is, of
course, the Lord of the Underworld.
One expression of this phenomenon is that our heroes may in fact find
themselves drawn to and involved with some people who are actually doing
a dance with the Dark Side of the Force. Naturally, there are dangers in that,
and they do need to be careful of being dragged into trouble. But let’s
hasten to add that “darkness” is much in the eyes of the beholder. Cautious
or prissy people use the label in a profligate way. Anyone exploring
sexuality outside conventional contexts might be fairly called “Plutonian,”
for example—and that just means they’re breaking taboos, not natural law.
Ditto for people who are fascinated with crime, psychedelics, war,
deformity, torture. The list of subjects that make people uncomfortable is
long. It is also well-mapped, so that we don’t commit a faux pas in the
polite cocktail party of human civilization. With composite Pluto in the
seventh house, the simple fact is that these two people have soulmates who
are exploring these edgy areas. For this couple to do what they came here to
do, they need the help of these honest, intrepid individuals.
Ultimately, the seventh house is about trust. These two are wounded in
that department. We view that wound as karmic; that is, as leftover damage
inside them from a previous lifetime together in the reincarnational sense. If
the idea of reincarnation doesn’t work for you, it’s easy enough to just stay
with the present tense and not worry about the origins of the wound. What
matters anyway is healing it, not explaining it. Using reincarnational
language, we can see that this couple was somehow deceived in the past. At
the psychological level, we are looking at the results of a feeling or
experience of intimate betrayal. This is why, in this present lifetime
together, they are so drawn to psychologically honest people—these people,
who are obviously not hiding anything, are the ones they can trust, and who
play such a critically healing role in helping this couple return to a place of
having faith in other human beings. The wonderful paradox is that in
learning to trust others, they build a foundation for trusting each other more
deeply.
One final note. Because karma tends to repeat, we can also count on the
fact that whoever betrayed them in the prior lifetime will show up again in
this one—and may well be no more honest now than then.
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN THE EIGHTH HOUSE
Drama finds these two. Psychological intensity radiates from them. When
they walk into a room, there’s a witchy, almost shamanic energy just
beneath the surface: you’ll see it when they catch each other’s eyes in a
conversation, or when someone in the social group makes a comment that is
obviously wishful thinking or a comforting lie. They may not say anything,
but you know they caught it—and checked it out with each other. These are
Plutonian qualities, and Pluto is the natural ruler of the eighth house, so its
signature is very strong in this relationship.
Going further, you get the feeling that there is real passion between these
two individuals. It’s a sexy energy, but the sense is that what drives their
passion is deeper than the natural hungers of the body: they seem more
engaged with each other than most couples. They know each other better
than people typically do, even ones who have shared a bed for many years.
If you received dire medical news, to whom would you turn? These two
are on the list. Their shared energy invites realness—in turning to them, you
would expect compassionate understanding, but more importantly, you’d
feel an assurance that they wouldn’t fall apart or resort to clichés because
they just didn’t know how to handle the situation.
Underlying all this honesty and intensity is a wound. We view that
wound as karmic; that is, as leftover damage from a previous lifetime they
shared together in the reincarnational sense.
If the idea of reincarnation doesn’t work for you, it’s easy enough to just
stay with the present tense and not worry about the origins of the wound.
What matters anyway is healing it, not explaining it. Using reincarnational
language, we can see that in a prior lifetime together, these two almost
certainly faced some kind of nightmare together. There is a feeling of
shared tragedy between them. Probably it involved death, quite possibly
each other’s deaths. There’s a fair chance it involved the impact of evil upon
them—and, by “evil,” we mean humanity’s oldest enemy: the capacity that
some people have to enjoy inflicting pain and damage upon others. There’s
been no shortage of that energy in human history, and there’s a good chance
these two were on the receiving end of it together. A detailed analysis of
their composite lunar South Node will open up the story for us, but just
seeing this Plutonian configuration is enough to lead us to speculate that in
coming together in this lifetime, they remind each other of unresolved,
painful issues from a previous one. This has given them a kind of soul
maturity and a real ability to relate to people in extremis. But they also
desperately need the healing comfort of the kind of honest, bonded intimacy
and shared understanding of our fragility that they have potentially found
in each other.
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN THE NINTH HOUSE
In the couple with composite Pluto in the ninth house, there is a driving
hunger to penetrate down to the honest heart of whatever matters face them.
The ninth house always ultimately seeks understanding, and Pluto
intensifies that motivation as well as aiming it toward uncomfortable
perspectives—places where the human heart naturally tends toward
avoidance and rationalization. The configuration is therefore quite
consistent with a shared scientific attitude, as well as a kind of streetwise
sense of what makes people tick. In philosophy or religion, it inclines
toward hard-hitting psychological perspectives rather than fluffy fairyland
“answers.” There is a quality here that a casual observer might interpret,
quite incorrectly, as cynicism. It’s not that, really: just a profound desire not
to be hoodwinked by glib, slick perspectives or teachers.
Seeking truth is dangerous business. What we find might hurt us. Those
whose identities are built around lies and falsehoods are inclined to punish
us for it. Karmically, there is a shared story here that includes being
wounded somehow by the collective beliefs of a culture. A shared prior life
experience that included religious persecution or prejudice is quite possible
here—but so is any story where the finger of “public morality” is wagged
judgmentally. With the “travel” associations of the ninth house, we may be
looking at a shared piece of unresolved prior life material that had to do
with geographical and cultural dislocation: pioneers, immigrants, refugees.
As always, details emerge only as we bring in all the various past-life
indicators, building upon the foundation laid by the lunar Nodes.
One last piece: with Pluto in their composite ninth house, part of the
soul-intention of the couple in this lifetime is to return to the physical place
where the karmic wound was laid down. A kind of cathartic healing comes
simply from seeing it again. It’s like a woman returning to the scene of a
rape, or a Woodstock-generation soldier returning to Viet Nam. Where is
this place? We can’t know from looking at the composite Pluto, but the
couple will find it—it may haunt their imaginations, or figure in their own
intuitive processes when they first fall in love. They may even be drawn
there “by chance” while they are “vacationing.”
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN THE TENTH HOUSE
Plutonian topics, are by definition, nervous subjects we talk about carefully,
if at all: sex, disease, death, money, ageing. In social relations, we approach
them with great diplomacy and almost Oriental indirectness—or with the
marvelous, buffering illusions of emotional honesty that humor creates. The
tenth house, on the other hand, is absolutely public. Nothing can hide there.
It represents what we appear to be to the social world. It’s the tribal
definition of our identity: our work, our relational status, the hat we wear in
the eyes of people who don’t really know us in any other way.
So, with their composite Pluto in the tenth house, these two people are
dealing with a paradoxical combination of forces: something that is
normally kept hidden is as obvious as a pornographic hot-air balloon
floating over a funeral parlor. At the soul level, these two signed a contract:
together, they are going to bring something shocking and uncomfortable to
the attention of their community. If they get it right, they’ll make a
difference in this world. They’ll bring something to light that needs to be
seen. And if they get it wrong, they’ll be targeted for projection—people
will gossip about them, or worse.
Underlying these patterns, there is a Plutonian wound trying to be healed.
We view that wound as karmic; that is, as leftover damage from a previous
lifetime together in the reincarnational sense.
If the idea of reincarnation doesn’t work for you, it’s easy enough to just
stay with the present tense and not worry about the origins of the wound.
What matters anyway is healing it, not explaining it. Using reincarnational
language, we can see that in a prior lifetime together, this couple was hurt
by the worldly powers of the day. An evil king. Dark government. Fascism.
Institutionalized persecution or prejudice. Perhaps they were killed; perhaps
they were driven into poverty or hiding. A detailed analysis of their
composite lunar South Node will open up the story for us, but just seeing
this Plutonian configuration is enough to lead us to know three things. The
first is that deep in their karmic memory banks is a fear of being seen or
noticed—and this fear runs counter to their soul-intentions in this present
lifetime. They simply cannot let it make decisions for them.
The second point is that, this time around, they need to stand up bravely
and effectively for something that will make people nervous, uncomfortable
and angry—telling the truth about what’s happening to our ecosystem, for
example, or describing the sweatshop realities that keep us supplied in toys
and cheap clothing. The third point is that if they don’t make a positive
response to the destiny’s call, then they’ll surely slip back into the old
karmic pattern: somehow, some way, someone will decide to make them a
victim—again.
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN THE ELEVENTH HOUSE
We humans are all a little scared of the dark, but some of us are a bit less
afraid than others. With their composite Pluto in the traditional house of
friends, this couple is drawn to claim membership in a Plutonian tribe—that
is, among people who are engaged in exploring perspectives and
experiences that make the general run of the population jumpy. That
phenomenon can take a lot of forms. At the sophisticated end of the
spectrum, we might find them attending a psychological lecture. More
simply, we might see them standing in line to take in a horror flick. Why?
Because such movies represent an artistic attempt to deal with questions of
darkness in the world, and Plutonian types are overrepresented among those
who attend them.
Another dimension of the eleventh house is that any planet there tends to
grow in power over time. Simply said, the longer these two stay together,
the more intense and spooky they will become! There are reasons for that
evolutionary trend, and we’ll understand them in a moment.
Underlying those developmental patterns and social behaviors, there is a
wound. To grasp its nature and its impact upon their present life together,
we need to recognize that the eleventh house refers to the impact of tribal
collectives upon individuals who are swept along by them—just think of the
mad energy of 30,000 people screaming at a football game, and you’ve
tuned into the right channel. These two are wounded there. We view that
wound as karmic; that is, as leftover damage from a previous lifetime
together in the reincarnational sense. If the idea of reincarnation doesn’t
work for you, it’s easy enough to just stay with the present tense and not
worry about the origins of the wound. What matters anyway is healing it,
not explaining it. Using reincarnational language, we can see that in a prior
lifetime together, this couple experienced some trauma connected with
pressures from the collective. A detailed analysis of their composite lunar
South Node will open up the story for us, but just seeing this Plutonian
configuration is enough to lead us to know that either they were targeted by
a group, or that they themselves were swept into beliefs or actions that
compromised them.
Together, their soul-contract is to heal this wound. That work is difficult.
It comes later in their relationship; their first years together are essentially
about building a foundation of trust and a network of supportive
relationships in the world that will allow them, when the time is right, to
uncover the core karmic pattern. We don’t know its specific form, but we do
know this: once they’ve dug it up, they’ll realize that, systematically, they
have allowed the social and cultural world around them to make too many
decisions for them. As they evolve together, they reach a point where they
feel that they can either wither or reclaim their lives. If they make the latter
choice, which is of course the right one, their truth will go off like a bomb
in the context of their community: they will break the rules.
COMPOSITE PLUTO IN THE TWELFTH HOUSE
A friend who had nightmare wartime experiences as a solider once said
simply, “Some things can never be forgiven.” The look in his eyes brooked
no debate. That wasn’t because of hostility or defensiveness on his part; that
was because of a pain so deep and so personal that any comment would
have been nothing but warm, wet, meaningless air. A client lost her husband
and two children in an airplane crash. What can you say? That’s transiting
Pluto for you? No. All you can do is sit together and try to feel your
common humanity. Life is bigger than us. Life eats us. Those are facts so
real that sometimes silence, patience and faith are the only responses with
any dignity.
Pluto in the twelfth house is an astrological reference to such extremity.
With that configuration in their composite chart, there is an ingrained depth
of compassion in these two. There is also a deep sense of life’s tragic
dimension. Underlying this poignant feeling is a wound. We view that
wound as karmic; that is, as leftover damage from a previous lifetime they
shared together in the reincarnational sense.
If the idea of reincarnation doesn’t work for you, it’s easy enough to just
stay with the present tense and not worry about the origins of the wound.
What matters anyway is healing it, not explaining it. Using reincarnational
language, we can see that in a prior lifetime, these two almost certainly
faced some kind of ultimate loss. In some sense, they lost everything, even
hope. A detailed analysis of their composite lunar South Node will open up
the story for us, but just seeing this Plutonian configuration is enough to
lead us to speculate that in coming together in this lifetime, they remind
each other of unresolved, painful issues from a previous one. They are
haunted and deepened by this ghost from the past. Maybe they were
refugees. Maybe they experienced the death of a child. Perhaps they were
victims of a genocide. We don’t know. But we do know that in this lifetime,
they trigger certain vulnerabilities in each other: gloomy, unfocused
feelings of foreboding, possibly depression, a propensity toward shared
patterns of numbing escapism—into overwork, drugs, alcohol, soporific
media addiction. Those are the traps. Those are the soul-cages.
What about the higher ground? First, we must honor the maturity of
compassion in these two. With composite Pluto in the twelfth house, they
can bridge across the isolation that is felt by people in serious psychological
or existential extremity. Thus, they are natural counselors with the energetic
stripes of people who’ve really, truly “been there themselves.” God will use
them to comfort others, and that is part of their soul-contract. More
personally, they’ve made a deal to face this wound together. They may not
“remember” it specifically, but sooner or later issues will arise in their
relationship that reflect their adaptive numbness relative to the unresolved
wound. If, for example, they lost everything materially in the past life, they
will recognize that they’ve made too much of a virtue of poverty in this
lifetime—or that they’ve paid too much for their fear-driven financial
security. If they lost a child, they will fear having children—or experience
exaggerated anxiety in terms of their children’s well-being.
Ultimately, of course, all of us will lose everything we have. That is the
nature of life. Sooner or later, death comes and we leave this world. And
what comforts us then? The only real answer is our knowledge of our innate
spirituality. And, in the final analysis, a deeper, shared sense of that eternal
divinity in each one of us is the aim of these two souls. When someone
faces grievous loss, we cannot preach to them—and those who do are
typically coming more from a place of fear than a place of faith. But we can
know that, finally, a spiritual perspective on loss is the only one consistent
with sanity and soul-survival. No one can be rushed into it; for these two,
with their composite Pluto in the twelfth house, it’s better late than never.
Chapter 16
The Composite Lunar Nodes
W e tease out the past life story underlying a present life relationship by
analyzing the Nodes of the Moon, both in the composite chart and in
the charts of the two individuals. In many ways, this process is the heart of
modern evolutionary astrology. The full interpretive process is complex,
entailing a revisioning of virtually every configuration in the composite
chart from this new nodal perspective.
In Chapter Four, we presented a detailed overview of the relevant
strategies and techniques. There, we learned about the richness of past life
detail that arises from going beyond looking only at the lunar Nodes
themselves. We learned how important it is to understand the message of
the planetary ruler of the South Node, and to analyze any planetary aspects
to the nodal axis.
Every planet in the composite chart hints at a piece of the karmic drama.
What we’ve not been able to do in these pages is to keep perspective on the
individual importance of each of those planetary placements. For one
couple, a Libran Mars may be the key to our understanding of their prior
life dynamics. For another, it might be a minor detail. Determining the right
perspective depends absolutely upon grasping the message of the lunar
Nodes. They are what put the planets in context.
In the pages that follow, we present “cookbook” interpretations of the
composite lunar Nodes in terms of each of the twelve signs and houses. We
believe these ideas can provide you with a good interpretive foundation—
but you’ve got to build the temple on that foundation yourself. If a couple
has, for example, a composite South Node in Pisces, you can count on there
being an underlying pattern of drifting. They might surrender too much of
what they legitimately need for their lives. But in what prior-life context did
they develop that pattern, and where might it hurt them again? Go to the
houses. Maybe their South Node lies in the ninth house. If you turn to that
section, you’ll read about prior-life experiences in a religious context. Put
that together with the Piscean information, and you’ve got the outlines of an
answer: perhaps they were involved in a religion (ninth house) that
encouraged too much surrendering (Pisces). Maybe their South Node lies in
the fourth house, not the ninth. Then, as you’ll see, the evidence points
more toward self-sacrifice within the context of family or clan.
The trick lies in seeing the psychological and motivational issues
represented by the South Node’s sign expressing themselves in the
circumstantial context of the South Node’s house.
Then of course we need to add the message of the South Node’s
planetary ruler, weaving its story into the package. Perhaps this couple with
a Piscean fourth house South Node has composite Neptune in the second
house. As the ruler of that Piscean South Node, Neptune might introduce
pressing concerns of a financial nature in a past life: wealth or poverty was
the specific trigger that pressed them into that high degree of self-sacrifice
for the family. But which one was it—wealth or poverty? Well, that leads us
to wonder whether Jupiter (wealth) or Saturn (poverty, more likely) is
aspecting that Neptune. Or maybe there are other planets in the composite
second house, giving us a clearer picture.
You can see how quickly all this ramifies into complexity—and, thus,
into rich detail. Again, to learn the interpretive procedures, please review
Chapter Four. Here, our intention is simply to provide you with solid
starting points in terms of the basic meanings of the Nodes in the signs and
houses.
One final consideration: in what follows, you will notice two distinct
biases. We focus on negative interpretations of the South Node and positive
interpretations of the North Node. That is quite intentional. It is not that the
South Node is “bad” and the North Node “good.” But the composite South
Node, while it definitely alludes to some real strengths in the couple, also
primarily focuses our attention on areas where they have issues left
unresolved from the past—issues which tend to haunt them in the present.
By thinking negatively about the South Node, we focus our attention
narrowly and effectively on those issues. Similarly, the North Node
represents answers and solutions to those prior-life dilemmas.
Concentrating on positive interpretations there is the whole point: that’s
where the healing liberations and attitudinal paradigm-shifts can happen.
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN ARIES
(Composite North Node in Libra)
Interpreting the Moon’s South Node is like taking a defining moment out of
a prior life drama, and putting a stethoscope on the condition of the two
human hearts in that instant. We know what they were feeling—but we have
no idea what they were seeing, thinking, or doing. We take the emotional
message and, using hints from other places in the composite chart, we
attempt to discern the outlines of the actual story.
With the composite South Node in Aries, we know that these two people
were feeling the effects of a lot of adrenaline! In some sense of the word,
they were involved with war. Often, given the human enthusiasm for war as
evidenced in our collective history, we can take that allusion to the violence
of battle literally: these two may very well have actually been in a do-or-die
situation of combat together. But “war” can also be a metaphor for any
human situation involving danger, intensity and competition: climbing
mountains, sailing a Spanish caravel through uncharted waters, even being
locked in business or political competition.
One interesting question lies in determining whether these two were on
the same side or enemies in this “war,” although the distinction is less
important than it might seem at first. It’s very common for beings who
actively hated each other in a prior life to become attracted to each other in
this lifetime—and then of course to have their ancient issues make
themselves felt in their present life interactions. Hard aspects between the
Nodes in their personal birthcharts tend toward this latter interpretation.
Where we see softer aspects, we can make the assumption of comradeship
under fire, with its attendant emotions of fierce loyalty—and often a rather
startling ignorance of each other in a multidimensional human way. People
huddling in a London underground station with Luftwaffe bombs raining
down may feel real love for each other in a primal human way, and yet have
almost nothing in common.
In any case, knowing that the North Node lies in Libra helps give us
perspective. The evolutionary intent of this couple lies in the general area of
calming down, and specifically in making peace with each other. We might
even add simply getting to know each other, and taking their time with that
process—the Arian air of urgency tends to press these relationships into
premature intimacy, and sometimes premature apocalypse! To accomplish
that aim, they need to understand the insidious way each one of them
conspires with the other to keep their existential situation more dramatic,
intense and exhausting than is good for either one of them. They need to
learn to listen to each other. They must weed out a kind of competitiveness
that creeps in through the cracks in their self-awareness. They need to resist
turning each other into cartoons, and instead take the time to know each
other really well as nuanced, complex human beings. They benefit from
exposing themselves to civilizing influences: painting, music, graceful
people. Above all, they need to absorb the notion that love is a bigger
concept than passion.
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN TAURUS
(Composite North Node in Scorpio)
Taurus is the most primal of the Earth signs. It echoes the nature of those
earthy denizens of our planet we call the members of the animal kingdom—
and the natures of all of us two-leggeds who haven’t strayed too far from
remembering our natural roots. Taurus is about instinct, and all the simple
truths we know in our bones. Like an animal, it is concerned with the
basics: food, warmth, shelter, and love. It prefers the familiar. It avoids the
unexpected.
With the composite South Node of the Moon in Taurus, a couple’s
karmic past may very well have been agrarian, or otherwise connected to
nature. They might be carrying soul-memories of shared membership in a
so-called “primitive” culture—Hopis or Druids or Ashanti. That’s far from
certain, but it is consistent with the Taurean signature. So is any “simple”
life: the farmer, the craftspeople, the fishermen. We’ll often see a natural
way with animals in such a couple, or real ability as gardeners or
naturalists. Commonly, there is some capacity to work with their hands
together.
Generalizing a bit further, we can observe the Taurean South Node
signature in any shared lifetime that was motivated by the desire to keep life
stable and predictable—and therein lies the pitfall. An attachment to
stability and predictability has suffused the logic of this soul-bond; in the
present life, they run the risk of stasis. One manifestation of that issue in the
context of modern society lies in being overly concerned with financial
stability, to the point of “paying too much for money.” Another lies in the
avoidance of natural developmental conflicts within the context of
relationship: being so preoccupied with being happy together that the work
which actually maintains happiness in a relationship is avoided.
There is plenty of simple, instinctual goodness in Taurus. It represents a
kind of natural morality, without elaborate philosophical embellishment. By
instinct, something inside us knows that killing for pleasure is wrong, or
that it is wrong to take sexual advantage of children. Thus, a kind of
unstudied righteousness exists in this couple. One down side to that positive
quality is naïveté—a vulnerability to the predations of more Machiavellian
types. We might be looking at the “city slicker” tricking the “simple Indian”
out of possessions, land or sexual favors.
All of this leads us to understand the significance of the Scorpio North
Node for such a couple. Their evolutionary intention lies in making peace
with life’s complexity, irony, and moral ambivalence. They are ready for a
psychological leap forward. In this lifetime, they intend to dance with their
Shadows, and to integrate parts of them. This is a very delicate step for their
evolving souls. Emphatically, the aim is not to become “bad”! Rather, it is
to make peace with their own pre-existing “inner Scorpions.” Like Adam
and Eve, it is time for them to “eat of the fruit of the tree of the knowledge
of good and evil.”
Together, much of this work revolves around accepting their own needs
for power, their sexual hungers, their jealousies, their control issues—all the
“dirty games” people play. They must learn to accept these qualities in
themselves and, even harder, in each other. In this lifetime, as a couple, they
are going beyond goodness. They are going into wholeness, which is really
the highest form of love—a love that excludes and shames nothing. In the
jargon of psychology, they are learning to withdraw their projections, which
means to recognize in themselves the qualities they are most inclined to
judge in others. In the end, what they are aiming toward is an intimacy so
profound it will startle them.
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN GEMINI
(Composite North Node in Sagittarius)
Quick intelligence and lightning reactions—those are Geminian qualities.
Think of a fast-paced conversation, and how rapidly your mind free-
associates. Now think of driving a car in heavy traffic on the freeway:
again, stimulus, response. These improvisational skills, this sense of making
it up as you go along, is absolutely basic to our understanding of the Twins.
With the composite South Node in Gemini, the past-life experiences whose
mood still overshadows our couple embrace all those speedy mental
energies and inner states. In the past, these two were shaped by situations
that required light-speed reflexes, and a capacity to recognize opportunity
and seize it faster than a cat can bat at a passing hummingbird. This focused
their psychic energies in a rational, cerebral, rather stressed-out way—a
necessary adaptation to their circumstances then, but perhaps too narrow a
way of being human for them today. And yet, as soon as they meet again in
this lifetime, the gravitational field of the old associations makes itself felt.
Gemini often refers to siblings, and while we shouldn’t be rigid about
anything, it’s easy to imagine these two as brothers or sisters in a prior
lifetime. Throw in a tale of their being abandoned at an early age and
having to live by their wits, and you’ve got the right Gemini South Node
feeling. The sheer speed and flexibility of Gemini also links it to youth.
Being literal would be inappropriate here, but the composite South Node in
Gemini does often correlate persuasively with karmic experiences that are
uniquely linked to the perils and opportunities of youth—it would strain
credulity, for example, to imagine a traumatically premature marriage
occurring at age forty! But it could be indicated by a Gemini South Node
linked to relationship symbolism in the composite chart.
In the present life, the couple with the composite South Node in Gemini
must guard against a state of chronic overextension, where they have plenty
of effective tactics but no overarching purpose or strategy. There are
relentless pressures toward chatter and running around in circles. They will
resolutely believe those pressures to be external, but that’s really just the
hangover of the karmic mood. The truth is, those pressures are mostly
psychological and internal.
The composite North Node in Sagittarius, the sign of the philosopher,
emphasizes the present tense need for this couple to think deeply and
intuitively about what is truly important in their lives. Values, beliefs and
personal philosophies need to guide them. Religion, in the broadest sense,
might help them keep perspective. A helpful “yoga” is to spend some time
every year in something like a retreat together, talking about where they are
in their lives and in their relationship—and where they would like to be at
the same time next year. Travel is an excellent Sagittarian vitamin for them,
in that it helps extricate them from the clutches of their immediate dramas.
They may also be guided by their intuitions to visit the scene of the prior
life Geminian trauma. The eerie experience of simply seeing the place, and
half-recognizing it, can have a liberating impact on the relationship.
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN CANCER
(Composite North Node in Capricorn)
Tell a decent mother and father that their child is in peril and immediately
nothing else matters. It’s such a natural reaction that if we were to see any
other parental response, most of us would probably feel judgmental. Certain
instincts are so elemental to our humanity that they bypass the higher brain
functions. Most of them have a lot to do with species survival, and form the
basis of our moral and legal systems.
Cancer, ruled by the Moon, is the astrological epitome of instinct in
general, and especially of the instincts associated with home, hearth and the
protection of the vulnerable. With their composite South Node in Cancer,
this couple carries the profound mark of having been “family,” and
probably of being linked by parenthood—either as parents together or in a
parent-child relationship. Should we see a chronic patten of one nurturing
the other, we have a compelling clue about who was the parent and who the
child! If instead we see equality but also a deep, easy familiarity, then it’s
more likely we’re seeing two who were partnered in a domestic situation. In
either case, from the outset there’s typically a deep, unreasoning and
unquestioning feeling of loyalty and bondedness.
Always with the South Node, it’s helpful to be concerned with the
potentially blinding or limiting effects of the karmic past, however laudable
it might be. Family is generally a cautious institution. So much focus
naturally rests on the demands of nurturing that a deadening stability can
arise. We can see complex, passionate human beings reduced to roles and
functions. There can be a kind of paradoxical invisibility—people who see
each other every day in predictable circumstances are often less alert and
savvy about each other than strangers conversing on a train.
Unconditional love, forgiveness, long-suffering acceptance of each other:
these are precious qualities common with the composite South Node in
Cancer. But they can breed psychological pestilences! These two people
must strive to see each other as multidimensional adults. They need to
guard against the temptations of working out the relationship a little too
effectively, letting it get too comfortable. They need to come to conscious
decisions about where the boundaries should exist between themselves and
their kinship groups. Similarly, they need to navigate carefully around the
risk of friends, especially needy ones, becoming their “children.” Even pets
can be an issue here. The point is that, with the composite South Node in
Cancer, these two carry a tendency to escape from facing each other as
naked souls through the device of focusing attention on the needs of others.
Naturally, having children together, while it might feel desirable and in fact
be quite appropriate and rewarding, underscores these risks unless they’ve
first had sufficient time to establish their adult bond.
Their composite North Node lies in Capricorn, suggesting a kind of
“toughening” occurring in this lifetime. This is the sign of the Elder. It
represents a developmental stage beyond parenting and nesting. There’s
more hard truth in it, and more willingness to be alone and separate. The
evolutionary intentions for this couple embrace a kind of maturation in their
bond. They are learning to love each other’s solitude, and to defend it. They
are learning how not to be “cute,” both in public and privately with each
other. The nurturer is giving way to the truth-sayer.
There is no incubator of psychological wisdom—and dysfunction—more
powerful than family. These two have been there, and they’ve learned a lot.
With their composite North Node in Capricorn, the time has come for them
to move out of the narrow framework of the inward-looking family and to
share this wisdom with the larger community.
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN LEO
(Composite North Node in Aquarius)
Leo is the Lion—the King of Beasts—with dominion, at least in folklore,
over all other creatures. The folklore is easy to appreciate—one look at
even a small house cat, and we see the “royal” qualities our ancestors
noticed in the feline branch of the animal kingdom. With the composite
South Node of the Moon in this sign, thinking of the couple as “royalty” in
a prior life gets our minds aimed in the right direction. With symbolism, it’s
of course essential to avoid the pitfalls of literalism: this doesn’t mean the
pair necessarily sported crowns in another lifetime. But they were surely in
a position of some privilege, and probably envied to some degree by others.
Sometimes people attain such positions of prominence through effort and
accomplishment, but throughout history it’s often been the circumstances of
birth that determined one’s place in the social pecking order. Thus, the
imagery of privileged birth enters our equations. Given the often grim
realities of poverty and powerlessness throughout history, a lot that’s
positive can be said about the implications of a Leo South Node! But
always, with this Node, our bias is toward the pitfalls rather than the joys of
any situation. Being born into privilege entails severe social expectations in
terms of role, marriage, work, values and behavior. It can be a
straightjacket, stifling the natural intentions of the soul.
In the present life, the couple with their South Node in Leo may not be
born into wealth or hereditary privilege, but they will tend to shine
somehow anyway. Often, they carry the burden of being the “perfect
couple” in the minds of others. Many times, together, they are able to create
considerable success: money may be part of it, but we should also be
sensitive to the idea of success in creative areas or other vocations where
the bank account isn’t always the final criterion of having “made it.” A
simple observation, but one that carries important clues, is that they often
like to present themselves in dressy clothing, and look not only good but
also natural that way.
Understanding Leo’s South Node traps is easy in the light of the North
Node, with its Aquarian evolutionary intentions. Aquarius always carries
the energy of true freedom; it is the astrological reference to real
individuality. Immediately, we understand the vulnerabilities inherent in the
Leo karmic pattern: the creation of a kind of success that is shaped more by
a capacity to fulfill the expectations and values of others than by authentic
soul-expression. Easily, these two can manifest a kind of empty theatricality
in some area of life. Typically, they haven’t set out to do that. It “just
happened.” But a deeper analysis reveals the core issue: they allowed
themselves to be swept along by the currents of other people’s projections.
The Aquarian solution? To do as they please! To cultivate a blasé attitude
regarding the opinions of others. To find the inner freedom to make “bad”
decisions in terms of the eternal “pecking order” logic of human society.
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN VIRGO
(Composite North Node in Pisces)
Poor Virgo gets teased a lot. That’s just an astrological manifestation of pop
culture, with its tendency to project negatively onto anything threatening. In
common with the rest of the zodiac, there is something sacred and precious
here: jokes about Virgos alphabetizing their socks notwithstanding, this sign
carries the human drive toward competence, precision, and humility. It is
the archetype of the Servant, with all the attendant implications of
helpfulness. It’s the part of us willing to make the effort to get good at
something. Still, since we are looking at the composite South Node of the
Moon, it behooves us to look at Virgo a bit dubiously in this context. For a
couple with their South Node there, it’s time to move beyond the blinding
and limiting dimensions of the sign of the Virgin. What are they?
Perfection is a harsh and exacting standard. No one can ever live up to it.
And yet this couple, in a prior life, attempted it. And, of course, failed. To
call this their “fault” is like lamenting the existence of gravity or taxes. But
they internalized a feeling of inadequacy and its dark cousins: shame, guilt,
and a penitential, self-punishing attitude. Repressive, shame-based religion
may be the culprit—but just as easily we might be observing the results of
cultural puritanism, racial or ethnic shaming, the ego-shattering impact of
discipleship under an overly exacting master, or sexual abuse. We may
possibly be looking at “real” guilt, in unresolved response to some actual
dark deed. That latter point must be handled with delicacy, since most of the
time a composite Virgo South Node is more reliably correlated with the
“phony” guilt created by unnaturally demanding external standards. As
usual, details of the karmic story only emerge through a more complex
analysis involving the house position of the Node and its planetary ruler, its
aspects and so forth. All we see here in terms of the Virgo South Node itself
is a self-doubting, hassling, endlessly fussing mood that can leach the joy
and magic out of life, if it’s allowed to stand.
The Moon’s North Node, and thus the evolutionary intention of these
two souls, lies in Pisces. To understand the meaning of this configuration,
we must start with a line that almost inevitably goes in one ear and out the
other: God’s love is absolute. What that signifies is that there’s nothing a
human being can do to affect God’s love—being absolute, it’s beyond
conditioning. Thus, God doesn’t give a merry damn whether we feed
hungry children world or murder people at random. We state the principle
in shocking terms like that in the hopes of awakening ourselves to the sheer,
liberating Piscean power of the idea. This couple has reached a point in the
journey where they need to let go of their identification with struggling to
evolve. They need to play—to “become as little children.” They need to get
out of their own way.
That said, let’s add a dangerous concept: these two need to meditate
together. Why is that so dangerous? Because, by instinct and by karmic
reflex, they will interpret meditation as more struggle, more of their endless
shortfall. But this Piscean meditation is relaxing. It ends when we are tired
of it. It has no aim or goal. And in the end, meditation and everyday
consciousness become the same long dance under the benign eyes of a God
who loves us already.
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN LIBRA
(Composite North Node in Aries)
We humans are dangerous primates, with aggressive qualities, strong
emotions and sharp teeth. Can anyone imagine a relationship—or a
civilization, for that matter—thriving without a generous dose of respectful
compromise, tact, and courtesy? Let’s throw in grace, empathy and love’s
blessed ally: a sense of humor. These are all Libran qualities, and with the
composite South Node in Libra, no matter how heated this couple’s
negotiations may become, an inner compass needle pulls them back toward
this pleasant civilized mood. In the karmic past, they were very clearly
partnered in some way. To assume that they were, if not married, at least
lovers is probably a safe bet. In significant ways, this is a relationship that
dawns in this present lifetime already worked out and established.
Furthermore, given Libra’s natural associations with the more sophisticated
aspects of civilization, they probably carry into this world a soul-
momentum of interest in the arts, in justice, and in the dissemination of all
that is lofty and uplifting.
So what’s wrong with all that? Nothing! But we do need to recall that the
core meaning of the Moon’s South Node is that it represents patterns that
have already served their purposes, and which lead to evolutionary stasis
unless challenged. The “fair” middle ground can be dead for everyone.
Compromise can mean answers that please no one. Courtesy and respect
can hide truth, and provide cover for the parts of these two people that fear
it. Aesthetic experience—music, film, television, beautiful clothing and
beautiful people—can be used in escapist ways, helping to avoid those
nose-to-nose, eye-to-eye moments that are the heart of shared soul-process.
These are the traps facing the couple with the composite South Node in
Libra. For all their long soul-history together, there are ways in which they
barely know each other. So much reality has been hidden behind walls of
“appropriateness.” Justice, reason and dignity have robbed them of love.
The mask associated with their place in society has hidden their true faces
—even from each other.
Now, with the composite North Node in Aries, the evolutionary intention
of this couple lies in embracing fire, stormy passion and, when necessary,
anger. It’s time they got to know each other, warts and all. One piece of
good news is that they are building on a deep foundation of trust. Their love
is hardy enough to cope with some stress and strain. In fact, stress and
strain are far less threatening to it than the prospect of the bond foundering
on a lack of drive and heat. Together, they benefit enormously from shared
adventure—anything that gets them into situations that frighten them a bit.
They don’t need to take foolish risks, but they do need to see how they look
to each other in situations where their conventional roles are stripped away.
They need to learn that their love is strong enough to digest anger, even
bitter anger. They need to make room in their discourse for each other’s
wilder sexual edges. They are learning that love doesn’t mean agreement or
even harmony. They are, at last, making room for each other’s separate
individualities. As partnered souls, they are evolving toward a time when
they could let each other go—and, paradoxically, it is that realization which
allows them to remain together.
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN SCORPIO
(Composite North Node in Taurus)
There are parts of life that can make our blood freeze in our veins: human
depravity and incomprehensible human suffering. A child in fearful agony.
Dreadful bodily dysfunction. Sadistic violence. A person’s state of mind
one minute before jumping in front of a train.
None of us want to get very close to those places, but sometimes,
unbidden, they get close to us. Terrible, dark events do happen, and when
they do, they leave marks on the souls that experience them. The couple
with the composite South Node in the sign of the scorpion has known such
extremity. One possible response to such experience is to become numb, but
Scorpio does not symbolize those kinds of dissociative responses. They lie
more in the dark side of the Aquarian vein. Here, we see the imagery of the
heart as an open wound, shocked and dumbfounded, but still taking in the
nightmarish perceptions.
There is an atmosphere of seriousness here, and a corresponding
vulnerability to loss of perspective, gloom, and suspicion, especially
regarding the lighter, more playful dimensions of human experience. There
is also wisdom and, potentially, compassion. The key here, from the
evolutionary point of view, lies in recognizing that souls often evolve
rapidly when faced with extreme hardship. A couple captured and chained
on a slave ship, even one that sinks en route, may learn more about life and
themselves in a year than a more fortunate couple learns in a safe lifetime
together. Still, such a path of soul-growth obviously entails serious wear
and tear on the attitude, and the persistent scars that tragedy always leaves
in its wake.
Taking it one step further, we must recognize the fascination that the dark
side of life exercises upon our psyches. A quick perusal of what’s playing at
your local movie houses will quickly confirm the existence of this weird,
ambivalent attraction. Strange as it may seem, the very realities we most
fear seem to pull at us the most. Along with the wear and tear, it is this
attachment to heaviness that constitutes the deepest obstacle for the couple
with the composite South Node in Scorpio. The gravitational field of their
unresolved karmic wounds pulls them into ever deeper waters—even when
the higher path is a simple, pleasant stroll along the beach.
And that brings us to their composite North Node, which lies in Taurus.
Here the evolutionary emphasis lies in the area of calming down—of
getting over the processes that brought them to their present state of
agitated, psychologically complex wisdom. As always with the North Node,
the work is challenging, and it goes against the natural grain. These two
have come together to comfort each other. In earthy Taurus fashion, that
comfort must be concrete—a timely hug rather than a pithy insight. A bath
and nap, not a serious talk. This couple benefits a lot from living away from
a city, if possible, or at least in getting out of town as often as they can.
Animals have a lot to teach them; it would be good for them to have a cat or
a dog, with the homey comforts these creatures imply. They need to move
their relationship toward a simple, instinctual acceptance of each other. We
hear so much about how complex relating is; however, for two people with
the composite South Node in Scorpio, that’s the last notion they need to
emphasize. What they need is more the idea that life is easier with a
partner, and that of course we humans are happier with a mate than without
one! That last line may not apply to everyone on the planet, but for these
two it conveys the right attitude. Calm, naturalness, and a return to the
senses are the path forward.
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN SAGITTARIUS
(Composite North Node in Gemini)
Sagittarius is the sign of the Quest, and with their lunar South Node there,
this couple had already logged many a searching mile together by the time
they met in this current lifetime. An exuberant spirit of possibility suffuses
their relationship. It’s as if their backpacks were loaded, the secret map
carefully folded in their pockets, and the wandering road open before them.
In the karmic past, they’ve shared a commitment to seek an understanding
of life, and they’ve known instinctively that such understanding can only be
gleaned through the total immersion of one’s senses in all creation. Thus,
they share a patterning of breaking out of predictable molds, of doing the
unexpected and the extreme. In prior lifetimes, they’ve shipped out together
for far shores. They’ve left their homes behind and gone on crusades.
They’ve met under the date palm when the moon rose in the wee hours to
join the caravan. Their prior lives together would make a great movie.
Sometimes, the underlying Sagittarian hunger for an understanding of
life has been eclipsed behind their sheer appetite for adventure. Even then,
the furnaces of philosophy were being stoked and fed—and that point is
even more true when their adventures have led them into spectacular
miscalculations and errors, as they often did! Other times, this philosophical
hunger has been more obvious: together, these two have been deeply
marked by religion and by adherence to compelling belief-systems. They
may have shared monastic lifetimes or been involved with religious
movements. With influences from Pluto or Mars, we may recognize that
they might have been martyred together. Often, the religious impulses in
Sagittarius combine with its geographical restlessness to produce utopian
beliefs involving mass migration to a New World. They may, for example,
have been Mormons heading for Utah, Jews returning to Israel, or dissident
Protestants heading for colonial America.
With the South Node, we must always be especially alert to the darker
side of these old patterns. Even where they are intrinsically healthy, there’s
still something tired and worn-out about them. Believing in values and
philosophies can be blinding. Even believing in our relationship can dull
our sensitivity to the need for processes of negotiation and adjustment. It’s a
short step from faith to a kind of unconscious editing of life’s true
complexity. In common with many religious people, in prior lives these two
have fallen into patterns of collusion regarding the denial of truths that ran
counter to their expectations—and it’s a short step from fundamentalist
Islam or Christianity to fundamentalist New Age thinking today.
Karmically, the issue they’ve come together to resolve is their compulsive
addiction to certainty.
That brings us directly to their evolutionary intention, as symbolized by
their composite North Node of the Moon in Gemini. Here, we find a basic
focus on listening and receiving, and a willingness to be surprised. They
need amazement and wonder, and ideally it starts at home with their
openness to surprising each other. Two people, shoulder to shoulder,
agreeing on everything—how deadening! The soul-growth of this couple
depends on vigorous, respectful disagreement, followed by long
conversation. Without differences, they have nothing to teach each other
anymore. Let the Buddhist sleep with the Christian. Let the Existentialist try
to love the astrologer. Their formula this time around is endless dialogue,
fueled by floods of unexpected, mind-stretching experience, and seasoned
with an appreciation for their differences.
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN CAPRICORN
(Composite North Node in Cancer)
Necessity is a stern teacher. We rise to it, or we are destroyed by it. With
their composite South Node of the Moon in Capricorn, there is a grown-up,
no-nonsense attitude in this couple. Their survival skills are superb. They
can add two plus two and come up with four, even when the numbers would
put tears in anyone else’s eyes. In prior lifetimes together, they have
squarely faced hard reality and steeled themselves to do the right thing.
Nowadays, our pop psychological culture places a great premium on being
in touch with our feelings. And of course only an ignoramus would argue
against that idea. Still, circumstances arise in which the higher ground
demands that we set our feelings aside and take a course that our conscience
can accept in the long run. Anyone who has ever resisted a temptation
understands this territory—and our couple with this South Node
configuration understands it very well. Together, in prior lifetimes, they
have faced grim moral and practical requirements. Perhaps they were
pioneers eking out an existence in an unforgiving land. Perhaps they gave
birth to a crippled child—or to a large, hungry brood of healthy ones.
They’ve known grinding poverty—or the relentless demands of power and
position. As always, we can get a better handle on the actual circumstances
through a consideration of the house that contains the South Node, along
with the various associated planetary configurations. What we see here is
simply the basic Capricorn signature: strength, self-denial and character,
bred in a harsh environment.
Slogging along, putting one foot ahead of the other, becomes a habit. So
does self-denial. So does hopelessness. After a while, we stop noticing pain
or need. With their South Node of the Moon in Capricorn, friends can rely
on this couple. If they have children, the kids will have their physical needs
met. If they move into a new neighborhood, they might find themselves
chairing the Neighborhood Watch committee. If they work together, as they
might very well do, their business runs efficiently—and survives downturns
that catch their competitors unaware. They are a magnet for duty and
responsibility, and they handle them with maturity, realism and aplomb. As
those duties and responsibilities proliferate, our couple rises to the
challenges without outward signs of distress.
But are they having any fun? Are they soothing the ancient wound that
binds them together in this wintry landscape of necessity? Are they giving
themselves permission to feel, to cry, to need? Are they reaching out to their
streetwise inner orphans? Those are the questions that bring us face to face
with this couple’s composite North Node of the Moon in Cancer. These two
have come together for mutual healing. In the karmic past, they did not
have the luxury of tears. We certainly don’t need to shame them for that,
only to recognize that they were adapting realistically to inhumanly harsh
realities. Their intent now is to soften. They have made a soul-contract to
integrate weaker, more emotional, gentler parts of themselves into their
relationship, and then into their lives as individuals. They must cry those
old, unfallen tears, and do so in each other’s arms.
Underlying the karmic mood of the couple with the composite South
Node of the Moon in Capricorn is an abiding hunger to be safe—at last.
That hunger is inseparable from a need to establish an emotionally secure
home. Physical and financial safety are part of it, but even more central is
the feeling of emotional safety that comes from being committed to their
relationship for the long haul. Their guardian angels smile when they see
these two planting trees together instead of seasonal marigolds. They jump
for joy when these two feel safe enough to express sorrow or fear or need or
other “weaknesses” to each other. Perhaps the ultimate barometer of that
security is the feeling that it might be “safe now” to have children. Or at
least a spoiled cat!
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN AQUARIUS
(Composite North Node in Leo)
Could an ancient Egyptian have imagined a world without a pharaoh, or a
medieval European a world without kings and dukes? The wheels of history
turn. We look back over the pages of the history books and so much seems
inevitable, as if there really were “wheels” of history, turning like gears in
some impersonal mechanism. But the truth is that the world changes
because of individual people shaking things up. Those people are almost
always a tiny minority of the population. Very typically they pay a price for
the gift they give us—the figures of authority in the pre-existing culture are
fiercely opposed to anyone who challenges the status quo. When these
“revolutionaries” reincarnate, they’ll often have the South Node of the
Moon in Aquarius, the sign of the Rebel or the Exile. When we see that
South Node signature in the composite chart, we know that in a prior
lifetime, these two people were outsiders together, existing in tension with
consensual reality. There was a feeling of “us against the world,” although
often the “us” could also be defined as a movement of which they were a
part. In other words, we might be looking at a couple who were among the
slaughtered Cathars in thirteenth century France—or slaughtered civil rights
activists in twentieth century Alabama.
If we are going along with the herd, believing what we are told to
believe, our brains don’t get a lot of exercise. But if everyone we meet
imagines us to be wrong, that “muscle” between our ears gets a lot stronger.
For our couple with the composite South Node of the Moon in Aquarius,
there is an instinct to do things their own way, to question the received
wisdoms of their culture, and to follow less-trodden pathways. They think
for themselves and tend to be drawn toward the familiar ground of
subcultures that are at odds with the social mainstream. Far more than most
of us, they truly write their own script. Still, because of their unconscious
karmic soul-conditioning, they may reflexively ignore the comforts and
wisdoms of “normalcy.” They may become so identified with a set of
colorful, rebellious ideas that they lose touch with their own natural
feelings and instincts. They may needlessly alienate or isolate themselves
from the human family. Furthermore, because they may share soul-
memories of persecution or even torture, they carry a dissociative tendency
—basically a reflex to “go away” emotionally. That too can drive them into
a cerebral orientation which, while intellectually impressive, can also entail
the opening of a gulf between the mind and the soulful “belly” of our
common humanity.
With their composite North Node of the Moon in Leo, the couple with
this configuration shares the Lion’s soul-intention: To roar! To be heard!
Something was left undone in the karmic past. Part of the reason they’ve
come together again in this present life is to finish their business from long
ago. The exiled heretic must make its presence felt in the world. To be
“right” is one thing; to be heard is another. The first requires mental
freedom and a willingness to question authority. This couple has those
bases covered. The second goal, actually being heard, requires a different
set of skills—ones they did not master in their prior lifetime together. Most
of them are more theatrical than mental. They must find ways to look
plausible and convincing, especially to the “unconverted.” They must build
effective bridges this time around. They need to be appealing, non-
threatening except where absolutely necessary, and to radiate confidence.
Even the message their clothing sends must be calculated. Ditto for their
language and word choices.
Don’t be misled by the emphasis upon outward appearances here, even
though much of it is quite intentional. There is an inward breakthrough
happening for the couple with the composite South Node of the Moon in
Aquarius as well. For them, it is time to “come in from the cold.” As they
have been judged by others, they have become judgmental. As they have
been isolated, they have separated themselves from the larger community.
Their soul-contract is to find a way to make a positive difference in the lives
of people who, formerly, would have burned them at the stake. This
represents motion in the only direction higher than truth, and that is the
direction of forgiving, unconditional love. Together, they are moving
beyond rightness into effectiveness.
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN PISCES
(Composite North Node in Virgo)
Mystical traditions universally encourage us to look beyond the appearance
of the world. They teach us the ancient Piscean truths: our true natures are
not these transitory physical bodies; our true home is not this endless, three-
dimensional passion play. For our couple with the composite South Node of
the Moon in Pisces, these ideas are the glue that joins the two of them
together. But if they truly observe the world as if it were a dream, does
anything they do matter? Feeding imaginary starving children—or
slaughtering imaginary rivals: does either action carry any significance? Is
compassion any more relevant than hatred?
In prior lifetimes together, this couple has experienced a hallucinatory
loss of self. They have seen the world as a dream, and felt themselves
moving like ghosts through it. There is a good chance that they have
entered into spiritual practices together: long meditations, devotional ritual,
fasting. That they have been in monastic orders together is a fair guess.
Those perspectives make them sound officially holy, and perhaps they
deserve that title. Just as likely, we may see them drinking together in a
prior life bar, or floating together through socially-defined roles in frivolous
elegance, or experiencing the dull dream of lives defined purely by the
expectations of others. It is very possible that all the scenarios above apply
to them—and that the monastic existence came first. That might seem
counter-intuitive, but spiritual practice is serious medicine. A soul that is
not ready for the changes becomes disoriented.
Before we look at the actual evolutionary intentions for the couple with
the composite South Node of the Moon in Pisces, we should spend a
moment counting their treasures. They’ve brought with them into their
secret world a deep, authentic sense of magic. Their psychic connection is
extraordinary—they often feel as if they are reading each other’s minds.
Together, they have an incredible faculty of imagination and creativity.
They “get the joke” about human egos, their own included, and that helps
them keep perspective on their conflicts.
What they have come here to do together this time is symbolized by their
composite North Node of the Moon, which lies in Virgo. One big part of
this intention leaps out when we realize that Virgo is an Earth sign: these
two have a soul-contract to get down to earth. They are learning to function
in more effective, orderly, efficient ways. Virgo is the Servant—but we need
to be careful of that language. The aim here is not to become servants in
any literal sense, nor is it necessarily so lofty as becoming servants of
humanity. It is really about simply becoming skilled enough at something to
be of use to other people. Accepting specific responsibilities and
discharging them competently is central to Virgo. Making little things
matter is a huge part of the work of the Virgo North Node.
Underlying these practical impulses to be helpful is an evolutionary
strategy. With the composite South Node of the Moon in Pisces, this couple
has become curiously self-absorbed. They have fallen into the dreamlike
trap of the “spiritual path,” with its subtle reinforcement of the ego.
They’ve reached a stage in their evolutionary trajectory where they need to
take that ancient medicine: service. They need to make other people’s
dilemmas more central and compelling to them than are their own
dilemmas. In becoming useful to others, they are profoundly useful to
themselves.
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN THE FIRST HOUSE
(Composite North Node in the Seventh House)
Freedom: we all value it—and dread its constant companion, which is
uncertainty. In every truly free situation, we must make choices. Sometimes
we’re free to choose between pleasant, positive courses. Other times, we’re
between a rock and hard place. Most of the time, we have no idea what kind
of outcomes our choices will bring. Will marriage bring joy or sorrow?
What about having a baby? Or moving to the coast? With the composite
South Node in the first house, these two have felt the weight of that kind of
freedom over and over again. When they have been together in prior
lifetimes, they have typically faced circumstances that demanded decisive
action. They’ve hardened themselves to burn their bridges behind them.
Very often, their choices have affected not only themselves, but also the
lives of others. First house energy correlates with leadership—and while
leaders often appear to be clear and certain, their inner reality is often far
shakier: they must make life-shaping decisions without any way of knowing
if they are right or wrong. This has created a self-contained, inscrutable
quality in this couple, as if no one outside themselves can see their inner
processes with any clarity. They can be impressive and radiant together, yet
elusive.
Choosing—or not choosing—a mate is one of our ultimate, inalienable
human freedoms. Once the hormonal veil of falling in love begins to lift, we
recognize that, in loving, we give up a lot of precious freedom. With their
composite South Node in the first house, these two have often come to that
crossroads—and chosen to go down separate roads. They’ve been too
strong to surrender to each other. Their prior life conditioning had pumped
so much energy into their natural authority and their compulsion to take
personal responsibility that the delicate interpersonal balancing act of
partnership was incomprehensible to them. With this nodal configuration, it
is even quite possible that these two have been rivals, enemies or
competitors in previous lifetimes. If so, we will see plenty of evidence for
that tension in the present lifetime as well.
Their composite North Node lies in the seventh house, the traditional
house of marriage. While it would be dogmatic to say that they must marry
in this lifetime, it is fair to recognize that their evolutionary intention lies in
the direction of partnership and cooperation. Countering that intention is the
weight of the karmic pattern, pulling them toward self-sufficiency and
clueless isolation. These two need to learn to listen to each other, to depend
on each other and to surrender to each other. The core evolutionary issues
between them are trust and commitment. The great Intelligence of the
universe has provided them with a set of dreams and desires which they can
only fulfill together. Each one has talents and skills the other one lacks.
Each holds half of the treasure map. Only by seeing through each other’s
eyes and listening through each other’s ears can they do what they’ve come
into this world to do.
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN THE SECOND HOUSE
(Composite North Node in the Eighth House)
Calling the second house the house of money is like saying orchestras make
loud noises—it’s true, but it leaves out all the music! Resources, not just
dollars, are the issue here. Food and shelter are on the list. So are skills that
empower us to survive—and that includes everything from the ability to
start a fire without matches right up through professional talents that pay
the bills in a complex, high tech culture. With their composite South Node
in the second house, issues around these resources have left a mark on this
couple. Depending on the extremity of the South Node’s sign and planetary
connections, it is possible that these two have known literal starvation
together. It is possible that they have been exposed, perhaps fatally, to
extreme climatic conditions. Reliably, in prior lives, they have known the
distorting impact of financial extremes on their well-being. Poverty may
have taken its grinding toll on them—but great wealth can twist lives
almost as easily, creating a spiderweb of expectations, manipulations, and
mistrust. All these prior-life experiences have threatened their actual
survival, physically or spiritually or both. And that has left a mark of fear,
self-doubt, and insecurity upon their souls.
What resources support committed love? Obviously, food, shelter and a
few dollars in the bank all help. But we must also recognize that loving is
difficult, and that it requires mental health and maturity as well. Reading
history, we recognize that the concept of “marriageable age” separated
significantly from puberty only in the last century or two. That’s in the
industrialized world; in the Third World, it’s still common to see people,
especially female people, married in their early teens. From a modern
reincarnational perspective, it follows that in prior lifetimes many of us
have been cast off in the matrimonial boat without the oars of maturity.
Patterns are then established between people which reflect their childish
lack of self-knowledge, their inevitable sexual ineptitude, and the role-
playing behaviors that attempt to veil the vacuum. Even when love is
potentially real between two people, this kind of karmic experience leaves a
mark: with the composite South Node in the second house, the relationship
doubts itself. It can feel doomed, or like a ritualized trap.
How do these two get on with fulfilling their soul-intentions? With their
composite North Node in the eighth house, they are attempting to surrender
sexually to each other in full, self-aware maturity. There is a pent-up need
to consummate their love. Sex, for these two, can function as a kind of
evolutionary yoga. Paradoxically, they must bring their spiritual maturity to
their sexual relationship and, at the same time, allow the ancient mysteries
of committed sexuality to trigger maturation and gender-wisdom in each of
them.
Kids kissing in the backseat are all excited, but we know they’ll be
broken up by the end of the school year. What do the wise old lovers, with
eyes that go back forever, know? With the composite North Node in the
eighth house, these two are moving toward the answer.
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN THE THIRD HOUSE
(Composite North Node in the Ninth House)
Maybe you’re driving in the middle of six lanes of heavy, fast traffic.
Maybe you realize that you’ve got only a quarter of a mile to get over into
the right lane. Maybe at that moment the person riding shotgun next to you
asks about your philosophy of life.
Probably you ignore him. If you think about anything other than
navigating through the traffic, you will likely have an accident. If you make
any response to his question, it’s certainly short, and probably humorous or
cynical.
Life gets like heavy traffic sometimes. Things are moving so rapidly and
unpredictably that we simply do not have time to reflect. We are thinking,
but the thoughts are focused on immediate concerns. We are practical,
concrete and reflexively logical. With their composite South Node in the
third house, this couple carries the mark of that kind of mentally-driven
reactivity. In prior lifetimes together, their pattern has been one of
acceleration, improvisation and rapid adaptation. Perhaps they were
orphaned siblings together, picking pockets in the marketplace to survive—
with a belly full of hunger pressing harder than a moral analysis of thieving.
They have remained alive by recognizing opportunity and seizing it before
it shifted away from them. They have collaborated and communicated well;
they’ve mastered teamwork like two brilliant basketball players sneaking
the ball into the paint. Often, this configuration suggests literal sibling
connections in a prior lifetime.
Trouble is, they could run on sheer momentum in this lifetime. As
always, the South Node represents a pattern that has served its purpose. We
need to recognize its dead-end qualities and move forward. If they fail in
that challenge, then their lives together will be swept along by currents
outside themselves. They’ll be fast and efficient and maybe astonishingly
productive, but they won’t have a real strategy. They’ll communicate glibly,
but never get down to the soul of things between them.
The good news is that they do not need to remain locked in the
gravitational field of that composite South Node. With their composite
North Node in the philosophical ninth house, their evolutionary intention is
to go “sit on a mountaintop” together. They need to talk about why they are
alive in the first place. What are their values? What kinds of lives do they
want to look back on from the perspective of old age? What happens when
their souls are included in the existential strategy sessions? Religion, in
some sense of the word, may help give them perspective on these questions.
Almost certainly, as they move toward this more reflective style of thinking,
they will realize that one fundamental goal that unites them is the desire to
travel—and instinct will then guide them to the literal scene of a shared
prior lifetime in which events happened too fast for reflection and
integration: back to that “marketplace,” where they contrived to survive.
Seeing the “scene of the crime” can have a liberating effect on them,
which is why we must view travel in sacred terms for these two: it is one of
their spiritual disciplines in this lifetime.
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN THE FOURTH HOUSE
(Composite North Node in the Tenth House)
Cities only came into existence a few thousand years ago. Nations are
practically a brand new concept. Throughout most of human history, our
fundamental sense of place in the world was defined by kinship groups:
families, clans and tribes. Those are fourth house realities. When we are
thinking about a couple with their composite South Node in that house, we
must think carefully. The idea that they came out of “family systems” in the
karmic past is surely true. But so is the idea that they probably walked
around on two legs! What we need to recognize here is that these two were
defined by family, and that the impact of familial expectations and familial
mythology upon them was severe and limiting.
One immediate hypothesis is that, in a prior lifetime, this couple was
literally born into the same family—that they might have been siblings, in
other words. For emotional reasons, it’s often hard for people in a sexual
relationship to think of themselves in those terms, but it can easily be the
case. We can say the same for other possible kinship connections between
them: one was the other’s grandparent or niece or nephew. In any case,
there is typically a quality of unquestioning, total loyalty between people
who share this composite South Node. Often, there is an uncanny sense of
familiarity between them right from the start of their present relationship.
Living together feels very natural, and tends to happen quickly.
The karmic trap lies in the ease with which their individual identities can
be subsumed by the requirements of the “family system.” That pitfall can
take two forms. The first lies in being crushed beneath the expectations of
their literal families: enmeshment in the family dramas, and enslavement to
the life-limiting realities of the family myth: “We Smith women always
marry drunks;” “We Simon men always wind up working on cars for a
living.” The second lies in their creating such crushing expectations all by
themselves—having children too quickly, having too many of them, or
becoming so preoccupied with being a couple they forget to be individuals
with separate lives.
With the North Node in the tenth house, there is a great soul desire to
come out into the world. Together, these two know something which can be
of use to strangers. It’s time to offer their gifts to the world, not hide them in
their private, unexpressed imaginations. The essence of their evolutionary
strategy lies in simply launching themselves into the white water of life
lived in the context of community rather than in the withdrawn context of
family. Prioritizing their professional lives is often a very big part of this
intention, in practice. “Will we move across the country to take these great
jobs—or stay where we are to be close to mom and dad?” In this case,
moving would reflect the evolutionary intention, while staying home would
reflect the now deadening karmic pattern.
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN THE FIFTH HOUSE
(Composite North Node in the Eleventh House)
Creativity, children and issues around hedonism are a trinity of factors that
define the karmic circumstances in which this couple found itself. The
balance among the three is generally discernible through a consideration of
the rest of the nodal factors, although all of them are worth exploring in
every case.
Where we see significant involvement with the Moon or Saturn, or with
the signs Cancer and Capricorn, look especially to karmic entanglements
involving children. This is a very common pattern. For all the joys and
rewards of raising kids, it’s useful to remember that over and over again in
human history, people have sacrificed much that was potentially important
to them on the altar of parenthood. Unintended pregnancies have always
been plentiful—and often bound people into premature, ill-fated marriages.
Once children exist, their needs tend to eclipse the needs of their parents.
This may be natural, but it can also be tragic. With our bias toward the
South Node always leaning toward suspicious perspectives, these darker
readings of the impact of children in prior life experiences are generally
productive. In the present life, the couple may simply reproduce the old
pattern. Or there may be a lot of tension and questions around whether to
have children, with obscure fears and resentments complicating their
decisions.
With the composite South Node in the fifth house, the couple may very
well have been involved with the arts in some form in a prior life as well.
Perhaps they were partners in such endeavors, or met there. One of the
easiest ways to confirm that possibility is to see if the pattern is reproduced
in their present life together. If they are drawn to creative work together in
this lifetime, it clinches the karmic roots of the behavior. Generally, artists
serve an experimental role in a society, going out to the ragged edges of
emotion and experience that other, more cautious citizens find fascinating
but too risky to assay themselves. Thus, we have an observable linkage
between the creative life and the “issues of hedonism” to which we alluded
a few lines back. Freud famously observed that the libido never forgets a
pleasure. Most addictions and compulsions are far easier to create than to
shake, and this couple may very well have fallen into prior-life patterns
involving debauchery or dissipation together. And of course they need not
have been artists to go down that road!
“Love affairs” is another classic fifth house correlate, and often play an
important role in the nodal interpretation. Love affairs can lead to
pregnancy of course, tying in this theme with all the issues around children.
Even without thinking of children, it’s worth considering that this couple
“broke rules” to be together in a prior life.
In the present life, with the Moon’s North Node in the eleventh house,
the core of the healing process for the couple revolves around learning to
think strategically together. It’s about taking a longer view, realizing that
they have time to make decisions and develop their dreams. They benefit
enormously from pressing toward long-term goals: saving to build a home
together or to have a major adventure. If children are on the radar screen,
it’s helpful for them to delay pregnancy for a while, putting it more under
their own intentional control. In matters of creativity, there’s a need to
nurture their development as artists over time—perhaps taking instruction
from masters and honing their craft over decades. In terms of friendships,
positively, they need to develop discernment in terms of which kinds of
people help them become what they most want to become—and, negatively,
to recognize people who, while fun, lead them nowhere or worse.
It would be profoundly misleading to think that a couple with their
composite North Node in the eleventh house is trying to get past the need to
enjoy life! It’s really more that they are learning to be a little smarter about
wringing the maximum amount of joy out of living, given the twin realities
of pleasure’s dark, compulsive side and of our need to live strategically
given life’s brevity.
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN THE SIXTH HOUSE
(Composite North Node in the Twelfth House)
Responsibilities have defined the relationship of these two human beings
for many lifetimes. Always, their own personal needs have been eclipsed by
the dark moon of duty, self-sacrifice and humility. This is the traditional
house of servants—and they may have literally been servants together.
Given enough planetary harshness around a composite South Node in the
sixth house, and we might even imagine them as slaves. (By “planetary
harshness,” we mean hard aspects involving Pluto or Saturn, for example.)
Bondage is not always coerced. These two may have chosen their chains,
and done so without masochism. In the days before birth control, a couple
might simply find themselves swamped with children, with all the attendant
duties and necessities. They—and probably the eldest siblings—would then
live lives defined by the needs of the young ones. A beloved mate can
become ill or incapacitated; again, duty calls. In that case, the flow of
service is tilted from one partner to the other, creating karmic impressions
of imbalance, and perhaps resentment in one and guilt in the other.
A disciple or an apprentice is profoundly bound by duty and obedience
toward the master. Again, this is a voluntary situation, but no less restrictive
for that. Autonomy is sacrificed; devotion and surrender are the themes.
And once the student “graduates,” he or she is then compelled by another
set of duties, those of passing on the torch to the next generation in the
lineage.
Traditionally, loving self-sacrifice is considered to be good karma. And
even the suffering of a slave is viewed as “burning away bad karma.” In a
slightly blasphemous nutshell, God owes this couple something! All that
service has created an imbalance in their universe. There must be a flow
back to them in this lifetime. They must receive something. This brings us
directly to their soul intention as a couple, which is symbolized by their
composite North Node in the mystical twelfth house. Now, in the present
life, it is pivotal that they wean themselves away from their karmic
compulsion to lose themselves in a labyrinth of duties and responsibilities.
They have served others; now they need to serve themselves. How? By
withdrawing from their total engagement with the needs of others, and
ensuring that they have plenty of solitary, soul-nourishing time as a couple.
Spirit wants to give them a gift of magic and insight. More precisely, they
have already purchased such a gift with their karmic pattern of service. All
they have to do is claim it. Where? In the silence. On the mountaintop. In
the wilderness. In the cathedral. In their peaceful bed together.
There is nothing they have to do first. They only need to get out of their
own way—and think carefully before complicating their lives any further.
What about their existing responsibilities? Given the nature of their karmic
pattern, we can assume that such duties do exist unless the relationship is
just beginning. Certainly, we all have obligations we cannot in good
conscience ignore. But, in this symphonic universe, very often for a couple
with the composite South Node in the sixth house, those people towards
whom they are feeling responsible have actually reached a developmental
stage where trying to help them actually does more harm than good. Some
little birds never learn to fly unless they are tossed from the nest. The higher
ground is not always defined by duty and self-sacrifice.
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN THE SEVENTH HOUSE
(Composite North Node in the First House)
When people are involved sexually in the present life, it is natural that they
imagine themselves to have been lovers in a previous incarnation. For
obvious psychological reasons, it is unsettling to imagine that the person
with whom you are presently having sex was once your mother or father!
God bless our forgetfulness, but of course metaphysically we must
recognize that the long dance that souls do with each other often involves
playing many different roles: siblings, enemies, kind strangers, aunts,
uncles, comrades, and so on. Even this couple, with their composite South
Node in the traditional house of marriage, were not necessarily married in a
prior lifetime. They may have been partners in some other way. But of all
possible house positions for the South Node, this is the one with the most
reliable natural correlation with literal matrimony. Very likely, with these
two, we are looking at the reincarnation of a prior-life marriage.
If they’ve done it before, why do it again? Always, with the South Node
of the Moon, we know that the answer lies with something left unfinished,
wounded, or incomplete from the past. We understand that the soul-contract
underlying the current relationship can only be fulfilled once the old
patterns are recognized and released. What are they? Start by imagining a
man and a woman, both single, both living sanely and independently. They
become involved. Within a few years, he has “forgotten” how to cook. She
has “forgotten” how to get the oil changed in their car. Both loses pieces of
their wholeness, projecting them onto the other person. Some of this
division of labor is natural and healthy, one of the practical comforts of
partnership. But there is a fine line between such division and pathological
fragmentation. In the karmic past, these two lost themselves in each other.
They became mutually dependent in ways that inhibited their own
individual growth. Probably, they were known as a “cute couple” and
widely viewed as in a happy relationship. Thus, they carried not only each
other’s projections, but also the projections of their community—and the
fact that those projections were positive does not diminish the distorting
impact of other people’s expectations upon them.
Where to go from here? The aim is not to break up or to stop loving each
other. Instead, it involves making more room for the true self in their
dialogue. With their composite North Node in the first house, together they
are aiming for a kind of enlightened selfishness. They are separate souls, on
separate journeys. Sometimes they will need different experiences. Often, it
boils down to each of them being in different places on a Thursday evening
—or in different continents on their vacations this year. The fear must be
taken out of separation. A respect for each other’s autonomy needs to be
seen as a precious gift of love. Naturally, as they evolve in this first house
direction, there will be some butting of heads. And their guardian angels
will be cheering! Love revels in human differences; it can thrive on creative
tension between people. Light and dark give meaning to each other. Female
and male become conscious of themselves in each other’s presence.
Oneness is a deep wisdom, but Spirit knows itself through duality. For these
two, the time has come to let there be some breathing space between them.
And in that separation, their love evolves into a deeper spiritual maturity.
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN THE EIGHTH HOUSE
(Composite North Node in the Second House)
Storminess, strong emotion, and enormous intensity define the mood of this
couple. With their composite South Node in the eighth house, their
relationship has been forged in fire—and probably in nightmare. Whether in
a prior lifetime together the relationship itself became a nightmare is an
open question. We certainly don’t need to assume that—drama can bring
people closer or drive them apart, depending on how they respond to it. But
we can safely assume that together they have had experiences which were
extreme, as revealing as a psychic X-ray, and probably tragic.
The eighth is the traditional house of death. Mortality is not the only
issue here, but it probably figures prominently in the prior-life picture.
Perhaps nothing creates such strong emotions in us as death—just think of
the movie scenes that have put tears in your eyes. Imagine two young men
drafted into war seeing mangled, decaying corpses for the first time.
Imagine two medieval women loading the dead onto the plague-wagons.
Imagine a man holding his dying wife in his arms, hearing the cries of their
newborn infant.
What do such shared perceptions do to the relationship between two
people? How do they respond? The answers, of course, are as varied as the
individuals. Perhaps we see profound, emotionally naked bonding. Maybe
we see shell-shocked denial. Maybe evolution is accelerated; possibly it is
stalled, overwhelmed by the horror of its experiences. And in every case,
the mark of deep wounding is left: fear, grief, anxiety.
And fantastic sex. This is not a spurious remark. One of the greatest
enemies of deep sexuality is emotional distance. Everything in the eighth
house pulls in the opposite direction: toward soul nakedness. Even when the
couple were not in fact lovers in a prior life, with their composite South
Node in the eighth house, they will probably feel that way. Their level of
familiarity with the normally hidden layers of each others’ psyches startles
them from the outset of their present relationship. Whether that familiarity
was forged in a bed or in a battle-trench is immaterial.
The soul-contract this time around? Their composite North Node lies in
the second house, which is typically seen as the house of money. Actually, it
is pertinent to a far broader range of concerns, all of them related to the
resource base upon which survival depends: food, shelter, appropriate skills
and social alliances. One piece of the puzzle for this couple is that to heal
the wounds of the past, they absolutely must create an environment which
feels safe to them. To be precise, it must not only seem safe according to the
logic of the human intellect, but it must also feel safe to the “inner animal.”
The human intellect understands that most of us feel safer in this world if
we have established financial security, live in a reasonably secure home,
and have a supply of existential “parachutes:” life insurance, health
insurance, a retirement plan, and so on—and it would be positively
diabolical to suggest to this couple that such concerns were somehow
unspiritual. Their “inner animal” needs the assurance and comfort of quiet
and stability; it benefits from living in a natural environment, if possible. It
likes to see food available. It wants escape routes.
If this couple can create that reassuring second house environment, then
in that ambience of security they begin to regain confidence in themselves
and in life.
And that is the whole point.
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN THE NINTH HOUSE
(Composite North Node in the Third House)
Kids in school learn that Christopher Columbus “believed the earth was
round,” contradicting the flat-earthers’ fear that if we sailed far enough out
into the ocean, we would sail catastrophically off the edges of the world.
Even though the historical truths are more complex, the childhood imagery
conveys a visceral sense of the power of belief—and therefore of the ninth
house. If we believe in something, we can accomplish great feats. Belief
empowers people, just as surely as believing in nothing weakens them.
With their composite South Node of the Moon in the ninth house, this
couple’s soul-memories are characterized by the life-shaping impact of
compelling belief. Given the realities of human history, we can make one
more conjecture: most of the belief-systems that have shaped cultures in the
past have been at least partly religious in nature. Thus, with considerable
certainly, we can affirm that this couple has been powerfully and indelibly
marked by religion. Were they in “holy orders” together? That is a
possibility. We would look to other dimensions of nodal analysis to confirm
it—the planetary ruler of their South Node lying in the twelfth house
(monasteries) would encourage such an interpretation, for example.
But we need not assume an ecclesiastical past for these two. Religion can
impact life in many other ways. One very natural line of reasoning weaves
another dimension of the ninth house into the picture: journeys. How often
in history has religion caused people to travel and experience other
cultures? We might invoke the notion of their going off on the Crusades
together, or on a pilgrimage to Mecca, Rome, Macchu Pichu, Benares or
elsewhere. We might imagine the Puritans coming to the New World, or
Mormons heading west. Or Jews banished in the diaspora.
With the composite South Node, it always sharpens our inquiries if we
look askance upon the prior life orientation, seeking any limiting or
distorting effects it might have upon the present experiences of the couple.
The need to believe fogs our ability to see what is before our eyes. Arguing
with “true believers” is demonstrably impossible; they cannot imagine
themselves wrong, regardless of the evidence. They will kill, and fail to see
the humanity of those they are killing. They will deny the evidence of their
own senses. They will “sail off the edges of the world” without stopping to
consider their folly. How many pioneers simply disappeared into the
wilderness? How many pilgrims and crusaders never made it home again?
This couple has been blinded by their own zeal in the past. They’ve jammed
themselves into the tight shoes of unnaturally repressive moralities. Out of
“faith,” they’ve lost their groundedness in instinct and common sense.
With their composite North Node of the Moon in the third house, this
pair of human beings shares a soul intention in this lifetime to believe only
what they can actually see and experience. They are returning to direct
knowledge, sensory wisdom, and discovery. Their guiding star is curiosity.
They benefit from learning experiences, especially confusing ones! That
may sound strange, but it comes down to this: if they meet an impressive
Buddhist teacher, they immediately need to seek out a Christian or a
Muslim or a Physicist. Giving life permission to be complex—and then
comparing notes, sharing perceptions and endlessly conversing, with no
perspectives taboo or forbidden: that is the way forward for this couple.
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN THE TENTH HOUSE
(Composite North Node in the Fourth House)
A reasonable criticism of reincarnation is that far too many people
“remember” lifetimes in which they were somehow famous or participated
in pivotal historic turning points. Logic dictates that nearly all of us have
lived mostly humdrum lives and, once gone, were forgotten relatively
quickly. There is of course no shame in that anonymity—souls can do deep
evolutionary work in absolute obscurity. But the same logic that compels us
to accept that most of us aren’t listed in the history books also declares that
some of us must be listed there! The most obvious astrological indication of
that condition is having the South Node in the tenth house—the traditional
house of honor. When it’s the composite South Node, then we take the next
logical step: the couple was well-known and somehow symbolic to their
wider community. Saying that they were “Antony and Cleopatra”—or
“Bonnie and Clyde,” for that matter—gets us roughly on the right track.
Still, there aren’t enough famous couples to go around, so we need to
penetrate the mystery of the tenth house a little more deeply. The issue here
is not whether or not we are remembered historically. It is the question of
becoming part of the collective mythic symbolism of a community—and it
doesn’t matter if the entire community is subsequently washed away to sea
and forgotten, nor if the entire community consisted of 92 people in an
isolated medieval German village.
With their composite South Node in the tenth house, this couple is
marked by a prior life experience of prominence and leadership within
whatever their society was. Given historical realities, the chances are
excellent that they were born into this prominence—famous dukes
outnumber famous serfs by a wide margin here. Fame and power have
obvious attractions, but always with the South Node of the Moon, our
approach begins with recognizing that, from an evolutionary point of view,
something is hung up here. There are unresolved issues from the past that
haunt these two in the present tense. Is there a negative side to power? Are
there soul-cages built into prominence and high birth? For this couple, we
must consider the damage done to them by constant role-playing, feigning
affection for people whom they neither liked nor trusted, and constantly
jockeying for position. And we must be cautious regarding their legacy of
skills when it comes to improving their present-life status: they might pay
too much for their careers and their status, for example.
One of the most uncomfortable perceptions we need to consider with this
nodal structure is that perhaps, in a prior life, these two married without any
particular love for each other. Such “political” marriages are common
historically. These partners must make sure that what they are feeling for
each other in this lifetime is real, and that they are not carrying the
projections of their community—every time they hear someone say, “you
two belong together,” they need to recognize that any such decision is
purely their own.
With their composite North Node in the fourth house, the soul-contract
between these two, first and foremost, is to go down into their deep hearts
together. The fourth house is where “psychology” starts to unfold within us:
our innermost feelings and needs reside there. They aim to put a high
premium on honesty and reflectiveness, and thus truly know each other. Our
domestic needs are symbolized by the fourth house as well. If, in their
inward searching, they choose to love one another as partners, then the goal
here is to create a home together. Literally having a place to live that
reflects their natures and their long-term commitment is a large part of this.
Perhaps they buy a house. But a house is just a building. A home is a place
of nurturance, safety, and the sentiments created by shared history. Opposite
the tenth house, it is the place most removed from the world “out there.” It
is the secret world, behind the walls. And it is where this couple may freely
choose to go. But remember: their soul-contract is actually to make that
choice, not to go there out of duty or anyone else’s expectations.
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN THE ELEVENTH HOUSE
(Composite North Node in the Fifth House)
Ready for a little math? Stand back: here comes The Forrests’ First Law of
Group Dynamics. To determine the IQ of any group of human beings, take
the average IQ of the members and divide it by the number of people in the
group.
Okay, maybe it’s not rocket science, but the formula does explain a lot of
human history. The power of the lowest common denominator is always
palpable in crowds. The darkest expressions of the principle are visible in
lynch mobs, marauding armies, and in newsreels of fanatical preachers,
mullahs, and rabbis. One can even feel it in a more benign form at major
athletic events—thirty thousand people howling for blood is a formidable
display of monkey-power.
With their composite South Node of the Moon in the eleventh house, we
are looking at the life-shaping impact of that collective social force upon
the soul-memories of a couple. Somehow, in a prior life, they were swept
along by broad historical or cultural currents. These currents carried them
away from authenticity, away from their actual soul-intentions, and away
from their natural values. They lost their individuality in the context of the
will of the group. Our fanatical images from a few lines ago may be quite
relevant, but we don’t necessarily need to assume such drama unless there
are also serious Plutonian or Martial signatures connected with the Moon’s
South Node. Given Venusian signatures, for example, we might be looking
at the far more insidious impact of “polite society” on a couple—the
civilized pressure to “marry well,” to live “normally,” and to believe what
others believe. Given Jupiter signatures, we might be looking at the way
what we call success can rob people of their direction in life, and even of
their souls. As always, in other words, details emerge only in the larger
nodal context.
What we can count on, regardless of context, is that in this present
lifetime, these two human beings intend to claim more freedom from
outside influences. That much is perhaps obvious, but their fifth house
North Node takes us in some directions we might not anticipate quite so
readily. The fifth is the house of joy. We learn a lot about it simply by
affirming that it refers to the natural human need for fun—the pleasure
principle. For this couple, it has become imperative from an evolutionary
point of view that they do as they please. That’s harder for them than it
might seem. Why? Because, with their South Node pattern, they are
vulnerable to accepting collective beliefs about what will please them—the
new car, meditating in Sedona, losing weight . . . whatever their cultural
susceptibilities and socialized values dictate.
The necessary foundation of their healing process lies in recovering their
capacity to know and recognize their own desires, and to act upon them.
This process often starts out with very simple things: listening to music
that’s not particularly popular, vacationing in places no one has ever heard
of. As they evolve together, they will increasingly experience a desire to
express themselves creatively. Perhaps they take up painting or acting
together. Maybe they write poetry. In so doing, they find themselves in the
company of artists. And at that evolutionary juncture, they have reached a
crossroads—and a serious rite of passage in terms of discrimination.
On one hand, there are their natural soulmates—artists who are truly
life’s experimentalists, affirmative of exploration and risk, celebratory of
life, and slow to judge others. These individuals represent the polar opposite
of “group think.” They therefore apply a lot of useful tension to the couple’s
South Node pattern by encouraging them simply to be themselves,
spontaneously and unselfconsciously. On the other hand, they will surely
encounter “artists” who epitomize that outworn, conforming tribal
consciousness. There’s nothing so conservative as the avant garde. There’s
no one less cool than someone overly concerned with looking cool. If they
fall in with these people, they’ve fallen back into the old South Node
pattern, except that now it’s congratulating itself on being something other
than what it really is.
COMPOSITE SOUTH NODE IN THE TWELFTH HOUSE
(Composite North Node in the Sixth House)
Terrible loss and soul-growth: so often, they are a matched set. A marriage
ends, a career collapses, our doctor proffers ominous news—and we turn to
Spirit. The change can be completely authentic. Hospices are often full of
luminous eyes. With their composite South Node in the twelfth house, this
couple has known loss and grief in a prior lifetime together. They have
probably also forged a bond rooted in deep, shared spirituality.
A close consideration of the sign of the South Node, along with the
planets ruling it or in aspect to it, can fill in the details of the story. Just
knowing that the moon’s South Node lies in the twelfth is enough to invoke
imagery of bereavement, imprisonment, wasting illness, and the loss of
whatever gave these two joy in a prior lifetime. It is also consistent with the
notion that they “met in a monastery or a convent,” or in the context of
some mystical institution—a mystery school or a secret society, for
example. Clearly, as this world became emotionally unacceptable to them,
they put their faith in the next world.
Much that is rich and inspiring flows from this fountain of tragedy. The
connection between these two people is profound. Still, with the South
Node, our focus must always be on the issues left unresolved from the prior
lifetime and on the ways those issues might interfere with the actual soul-
contract in the present life. “Loss of self” haunts this couple. Easily, they
can fail to claim the outward, existential supports of simple happiness,
instead losing themselves in their inner lives. They could disappear into
their imaginations, feeding them with endless film or reading. They could
dissolve into escapist spiritual practice. The underlying soul-memories of
pain can trigger a dependency on alcohol or drugs. They can move through
their lives like grieving ghosts.
With their composite North Node in the sixth house, the soul-contract
between these two people involves coming back into their bodies. The sixth
has much to do with health and the physical realities of life. Exercising
together is helpful. So is making a happy ritual out of their meals together.
Even more helpful is touch; these two need simply to hold each other.
The sixth house is also about service and our need to feel competent and
useful to others. With their North Node there, this couple’s soul-contract
involves giving a gift to the world. Despite their shared pain, they also carry
real wisdom. Certainly, in a prior lifetime, they at least began to integrate
the lessons of unthinkable loss. Probably, in response to that pain, they
found true teachers. They were given guidance, both from human sources
and spiritual ones. They carry something precious inside them: an
understanding of life, and very likely the karmic memory of specific
spiritual practices and perspectives. Thus, along with their hurt, there is
gratitude—and that gratitude naturally wants to express itself as generosity
toward other people. Their pain wants to abandon this world, while their
gratitude wants to serve it. Their shared evolution in this lifetime depends
completely upon tilting the balance of those two conflicting emotions
toward service.
Chapter 17
The Composite Chart in Action:
The Fitzgeralds
T he ghosts of the seminal American novelist, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and his
wildly creative wife, Zelda, will forever haunt the parts of the astral
world where God recycles the Roaring Twenties. It’s rare that two human
beings can so perfectly represent and encapsulate an age. Scott and Zelda
stand out like Caligula, Queen Victoria or James Dean, their names
inseparable from an era, and their glory and their tragedy taking on the
iconographic quality of myth.
In Skymates: Love, Sex and Evolutionary Astrology, we explored the
Fitzgeralds’ marriage from a conventional synastric perspective. We looked
at each of them as separate individuals through the lens of their birthcharts.
We considered the interaspects and house transpositions that bound their
charts together. And we tried to coax a sense of “wholeness” out of the
symbolism in an effort to glimpse the texture of their secret world.
To avoid undue repetition, we’ll assume that you’ve read the previous
volume and are thus familiar with their story: how they swept the world off
its feet with their dashing style and their fairy tale romance—and how, in
the end, madness, unbridled passion, and alcohol brought them first to their
knees, then early to their graves. Now we’ll focus exclusively on their
composite chart, which follows. It is set up for Montgomery, Alabama,
where they first met.
A composite chart is ultimately no different than a birthchart. Like a
birthchart, it details the kinds of experiences that best nourish the spirit of a
particular pair of human beings. It describes their available resources, their
joint strengths, and their potential weaknesses and blind spots. Like a
birthchart, it illuminates the happiest, most rewarding patterns of experience
for the relationship, while it cautions us about darker possibilities. If there is
any trick to working effectively with composite charts, it lies in
remembering that the “entity” of the composite chart is only a distant
cousin to the personalities of the two separate individuals. It has a life of its
own—and needs of its own. You have to see it, first and foremost, as
standing on its own two feet.

Composite: The Fitzgeralds, Montgomery, AL


Sun and Venus
Beginning an interpretation with the Sun is a useful approach. It represents
the couple’s core identity and their ultimate source of vitality. If two people
fail to take care of their Sun, their bond simply withers. They become petty;
they lose faith in themselves as a couple, and they turn dull and predictable.
If they get the composite Sun right, they can endure almost anything,
even dumb mistakes. With the Sun healthy, we are resilient. We bounce
back from love’s darkest hours.
Zelda and Scott had their composite Sun in Virgo in a nearly precise
conjunction with Venus. Their identity (Sun) as a couple was dependent
upon exposure to healthy Virgo experiences: craftsmanship, competence,
meaningful responsibilities, accurate self-appraisal. At the archetypal level,
perfection is the endpoint of Virgo; its shadow is a collapse of confidence in
the face of that goal.
The Venus-Sun conjunction is a common feature in composite charts
drawn for people with romantic connections. The “goddess of love” (Venus)
fuses (conjunction) with their shared identity and self-image (Sun). They
naturally think of themselves as lovers.
Would the Fitzgeralds’ Venusian love survive the pitfalls of time? The
composite chart cannot answer that question, but having their Sun-Venus
conjunction in Virgo does set a condition: their love would last only if they
nourished it with Virgoan virtues and experiences—a long-term
commitment to personal growth, humility, lots of meaningful, hard work,
and serious attention to reality. And if they fell short? Then they would fall
prey to Virgo’s shadow, losing faith in their marriage and descending into
self-punishment and mutual psychological assassination through criticism
and antagonism.
Significantly, the Fitzgeralds’ Sun-Venus conjunction lies in the fourth
house (the deep unconscious; roots; the house of the home). Scott and Zelda
were meant to draw much of their solar vitality from experiences of
withdrawal from the noisiness of the world into the sweet shelter of a
“home base.” As a couple, they were in desperate need of roots: a solid
domestic life and perhaps a family. The fourth house is the truest
astrological expression of commitment ‘til death do us part. It refers to
bonded relationships. That means relationships that cannot be broken. The
vow must be radical for it to work at all.
What actually happened? Those solar needs were at best only partially
met. Despite their wealth, the Fitzgeralds never really had a home, living
instead in hotels and transitorily in rented houses. In 1924, to gain hiatus
from their hectic Manhattan lifestyle, they sailed to France—but
immediately duplicated there the same screaming social pace they had
maintained in New York City.
They did have a daughter, Scottie, in 1921—but the child was raised
primarily by nannies. Subsequently Zelda had several abortions. By
appearances, it seems they punished themselves (Virgo shadow) by
withholding home and family (fourth house) from themselves, thereby
robbing their relationship of an elemental source of renewal and energy.
It would be dogmatic to suggest that children and a traditional home life
are essential to the happiness of every couple! But in the Fitzgeralds’ case,
we can be certain that roots of that sort could have had a healing, vitalizing
effect on their partnership. Reduced to its elements, the message of their
composite chart is crystal-clear: their solar vitality depended upon enacting
the fourth house archetypes of nest and clan. Instead, they apparently
succumbed to the darker, self-punishing side of Virgo. They never
developed the skills (Virgo) of home life, thereby allowing their confidence
(Virgo again) in their union to erode—and opening the way for the self-
sabotaging aspects of that sign’s negative manifestation.
The Ascendant, and the First House Moon, Mars, Pluto
and Neptune
An individual with a fourth house Sun is typically hard to get a fix on.
Often such a person is shy or withdrawn, as if we saw only a facade behind
which lurked a very different character maintaining an impeccable poker
face. If we were very sensitive, that is the way it would have felt meeting
Zelda and Scott Fitzgerald. As a couple, they were essentially indrawn and
quiet, even humble—but you wouldn_t know it to look at them! They wore
a mask about as subtle as a ticker tape parade.
The Fitzgeralds’ first house—representing the face they presented to the
world—is highly charged. Their Ascendant is Gemini, which typically
suggests an active, engaging, open outer “persona.” But their Ascendant is
heavily modified by the presence of three planets in the first house: the
Moon, plus a triple conjunction of fiery Mars, intense Pluto, and glamorous,
slippery Neptune, all of them in Gemini as well. Put it together, and these
two buzzed and sparkled in any social arena. Such a combination
guarantees that lunar imaginativeness and whimsy, Martial verve, Plutonian
drama, the aura of magic associated with Neptune, and above all, Geminian
animation and glibness would characterize their social behavior.
The Gemini Ascendant, under these modifying circumstances, simply
adds an aura of youthfulness, verbal dexterity, and avid engagement in
experience. Likely, their intelligence as a couple was quite palpable. And
since Mercury rules Gemini, this Ascendant adds more juice to that planet
—which is already critically powerful for other reasons. It rules (disposits,
to use the old technical term) all the Fitzgeralds’ first house planets. It also
rules their Virgo Sun.
And Mercury itself is placed prominently—it’s in Virgo and in the
expressive, playful fifth house. Thus, this frenetic, restless, eloquent planet
played a central role in portraying the tone of Scott and Zelda’s life
together. Unsurprisingly, their quickness and verbal fluidity (Mercury) was
as legendary as their mesmerizing charisma (that huge first house). These
qualities blended synergistically with the appealing whimsy of their Gemini
Moon.
A friend, Edmund Wilson, describes their impact upon people in these
terms:
“The remarkable thing about the Fitzgeralds was their capacity for
carrying things off and carrying people away by their spontaneity,
charm, and good looks. They had a genius for imaginative
improvisations . . . ”
Perhaps the most obvious statement we could make is that the
Fitzgeralds are remembered as figures in American literary history—a
classic Mercury signature. As the ruler of their Ascendant, we would expect
Mercury to be deeply imprinted upon the image they projected outwardly
onto the social world.
Scott and Zelda’s fabled unpredictability, as well as the fertility of their
imaginations, we can also trace to Mercury’s centrality, along with their
prominent first house Gemini Moon. They were always changing, always
making it up as they went along. Mars in the first house added passion and
an edge of anger, belligerence, even violence—in 1925, Scott described
their “four-day rows.”
And Pluto? Among other things, this is the planet through which
individuals embody the forces of history. It is here that we observe the
uncanny way the Fitzgeralds came to symbolize the Zeitgeist of the 1920s
—in the first house, their Pluto really showed. But Pluto means more than
that. It is also a place where we are challenged to go down into the
psychological dark, to face unpleasant truths, insights and realizations.
Sometimes this material is pertinent to the traumas of childhood, in the
fashion of psychology. Always, it reflects the scars on the soul whose
origins we can only understand in metaphysical terms.
We’ll learn more about the specific nature of the karmic wound the
Fitzgeralds brought into the world with them, when we get to the analysis
of their lunar Nodes. For now, it is sufficient to recognize that there were
three areas in which deeply honest self-scrutiny was absolutely necessary,
lest they be brought down by their own character flaws in the fashion of
Greek tragedy. The first area was simply egoism and the abuse of power:
classic first house Shadow material. The second derives from Pluto’s
conjunction with Mars. It was the caustic effect of an attachment to anger
and passion upon the human soul. The third had to do with Neptune—and
warns of dire consequences if they didn’t bring Plutonian psychological
honesty to bear upon their relationship with their own glamour and, perhaps
above all, upon their need to escape from psychological or emotional pain
through addictive or compulsive behaviors.
Let’s add that with Pluto in their composite first house, there was an
“intimacy zone” around Zelda and Scott. Anyone who got near them would
be inclined to reveal their deepest secrets. Typically, the Fitzgeralds would
learn a lot more about the people around them than anyone would learn
about them, except for when they revealed their own natures through the
transparent window of their actual behavior.
Sun/Moon (Dis)Integration
A colorful Geminian mask. And behind it, a quiet, possibly insecure fourth
house Virgo core. The introvert wearing the mask of the extravert. The
tensions are obvious. Even if we were to miss them at first glance, a glance
at the aspect grid would quickly correct our oversight. The Fitzgeralds’
composite Gemini Moon was less than four degrees away from a perfect
square to their Virgo Sun: the aspect of friction. What they appeared to be
outwardly (their first house stellium) and what they really needed in order
to sustain their spirits (their fourth house solar configuration) were working
at cross-purposes. Integration was the aim, but it wouldn’t come easily or
automatically—and it would depend absolutely upon their establishing a
sacrosanct home base, away from the glitzy temptations created by their
first house “ticket to everything.” Home was to be the alchemical furnace in
which the ironies and paradoxes of their relationship were made to dance
together. It could only happen there.
Understand this elemental Sun/Moon clash, and you’ve found the key to
unlocking Zelda and Scott’s composite chart—and the painful story of their
marriage.
Scott: “We were the most envied couple in about 1921 in America.”
Zelda: “I guess so. We were awfully good showmen.”

Those lines, taken from a transcript of a talk with their counselor, Dr.
Rennie, in 1933, capture the power of their outer persona . . . and also the
falseness they themselves perceived in it when viewed from the deeper
perspective of their fourth house Virgo center.
Balance was possible. Squares are not “bad” aspects; only challenging
ones. For example, the Fitzgeralds could have evolved a pattern of quiet
home life in an isolated locale and punctuated it with stimulating blitzes
into the cosmopolitan worlds of New York and Paris. That is what an
evolutionary astrologer would have suggested, had they consulted one.
The secret with squares is to feed both sides of the question, creating
reasonable compromises between contrasting legitimate needs, and
raising both pieces of the puzzle to their highest potentials. Their Moon
needed stimulus; their Sun needed a steady home base. These are not truly
opposites!
Even though the dominance of mask over core is what led to the erosion
of their marriage, it would be misleading to imagine that the Fitzgeralds’
colorful, impassioned behavior is what killed them. Just as easily, they
could have starved their outer Geminian self, living a quiet, responsible,
middle-class life—and wound up just as alienated from each other.
The whole is greater than the sum of the parts, and it is the whole that
must be fed.
Here’s an excellent rule of thumb to apply when you find yourself
stumped with a composite chart: just pretend that you’re looking at an
ordinary birthchart belonging to one individual human being. The idea of
some intangible entity or meta-personality hovering bodilessly in the ether
between two partners may be confusing. But people—you see them every
day. You’re accustomed to watching them, figuring them out. You have a
lifetime of practice there. So start your interpretive work with the composite
chart by trying to imagine that it represents a flesh and blood individual.
Who is that person? What’s his style? What are her secrets? Why did that
soul come into this world? Then apply all those insights to that bodiless
entity that may have been befuddling you a moment before.
If the Fitzgeralds’ composite chart were the chart of a person, what
would he or she be like? Witty, sharp, charismatic, theatrical . . . yet
somehow slippery, distant and unavailable. Those words translate into plain
English the astrological ambiguities we’ve just analyzed in terms of their
Sun-Moon square. And that translation moves us from a baffling world of
abstract symbolism to familiar daily life—a world where you have
reservoirs of wisdom based on your own years of living among the human
family. And a world in which you’ve already met people whose feet would
fit the shoes we just described! What would you say to them, should they
ask you for counsel?
If the Fitzgeralds’ composite chart were a person, one observation leaps
out: he or she would be awfully tough to get to know well. Pleasurable,
light social contact would come readily. But achieving real intimacy and
true knowledge of his or her inner workings would challenge the wiles of
the most cunning psychologist.
The elusive quality of the Fitzgeralds’ ambiguous “extraverted introvert”
composite chart is confirmed by the words of their (temporarily) close
friend Gerald Murphy:
“I don’t think they cared very much for parties . . . and I don’t think
they stayed at them very long . . . They usually had their own funny
little plans—they’d be with you for a while and then they’d disappear
and go on to some other place—and then you’d see them again
somehow—they’d seek you out again.”
Scott himself, perhaps saying more than he knew, wrote: “There never
was a good biography of a good novelist. There couldn’t be. He is too many
people if he’s any good.”
F. Scott Fitzgerald, September 24, 1896, 3:30 pm, St. Paul, MN
Democracy, Feudal System or Culture Shock?
Scanning the Fitzgeralds’ birthcharts, comparing them to the composite,
we’re now ready to wrestle with the question of which one of our three
major interpretive “bins” we should reserve for Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald.
Each of them has a very strong Gemini signature, with three planets each
in that sign. Each of them has a major Venusian influence. Both of those
qualities match the composite chart and thus could suggest a rather
homogenous expression of “Democracy.” But this is just one piece of the
puzzle.
The fourth house focus of the composite hooks nicely into Zelda’s
Cancer Moon-Venus conjunction, but it doesn’t find much resonance with
Scott’s chart—implying the possibility of a bit of “Feudal System,” leaning
toward Zelda. But, again, this is just one piece of the puzzle.

Zelda Fitzgerald, July 24, 1900, 5:33 am, Montgomery, AL


All the observations above effectively rule out “Culture Shock.” There is
just too much of both Zelda and Scott in this composite for that “bin” to be
relevant.
Confused?
Take your glasses off. Don’t look for any more details. Let it get fuzzy,
so you just see the broadest patterns. What we want with this mode of
analysis is the big picture, and only that. Sun, Moon, and Ascendant are our
most reliable sources for that kind of perspective.
The composite chart shows the Sun in Virgo and the fourth house, the
Moon in Gemini and in the first house, and Gemini rising.
Zelda’s chart shows the Sun in Leo and the twelfth house, the Moon in
Cancer and in the eleventh, and Leo rising.
No matches.
Scott’s chart shows the Sun in Libra and the eighth house, the Moon in
Taurus and in the third, and Aquarius rising.
Again, no matches.
Take a step back. What elements are represented in these primal triads?
The composite—two Air signs and one Earth sign.
Zelda—two Fire signs and one Water sign. No matches at all.
Scott—two Air signs and one Earth sign. A perfect match to the
elemental balance of the composite’s primal triad.
And there you have it: with the Fitzgeralds, we see a distinct tilt toward
the “Feudal System,” with Scott supported and Zelda disadvantaged. The
composite chart “feels” more like him than it does her. “Democracy” has
some relevance too—as usual with our three diagnostic categories, it’s not
totally clear which box to put them in. But “Feudal System” fits better than
any other—we just have to tilt our language in bit in the direction of the
“king” being in control, but that the “vassal” is not without some clout!
Lucky Scott? Absolutely not. To make this marriage work, he’ll need to
develop a lot of sensitivity toward Zelda, making sure that her voice is
heard and that his life does not eclipse hers.
Let’s continue with our analysis.
Saturn and Uranus
Consistent with our deductions so far, there is further astrological evidence
that the Fitzgeralds might well have existed in a state of relative isolation
from intimate human contact—or at least that such authentic contact would
arise only as a result of substantial efforts on their part. In Sagittarius, we
see a conjunction of Saturn and Uranus. It straddles their seventh house, the
traditional house of marriage. Saturn is solidly placed in that house, while
Uranus is down a little below the horizon, in the sixth house. Its conjunction
with Saturn makes it relevant to the seventh house, and we’ll investigate it
in those terms first.
In the context of an individual birthchart, a traditional astrologer would
say that Saturn (“the Lord of Solitude”) in the house of marriage means
loneliness and frustration in intimacy, while having Uranus (independence;
individuality) involved there signifies marital instability and erratic sexual
behavior.
In a composite chart, the couple itself would experience that isolation and
instability in its relations with other people—if we are to trust the fortune-
teller.
A healthier, more accurate reading of the configuration would not be so
fatalistic. As always, there are higher possibilities, but reaching them
requires determination. The fortune-teller’s prediction of instability in
friendships and dangerous degrees of isolation becomes reality only if Scott
and Zelda are unwilling to make honest effort—always Saturn’s
evolutionary requirement.
Couples, like individuals, usually benefit from the perspective and
support that comes from friendship. Marriage is not always easy, but just
watching another couple face their own dramas can help it along. We can
learn from their mistakes, benefit by their realizations, compare notes. This
interdependency is especially productive when our composite chart shows
seventh house planets, as did the Fitzgeralds’. In metaphysical terms, we
can say that they, as a couple, had soulmates.
Their seventh house influences at once show the natures of the
Fitzgeralds’ soulmates and the lessons they needed to learn from them.
To form and maintain such supportive bonds, the Fitzgeralds would have
needed to develop self-control, dignity and seriousness (Saturn at its best),
and a free-spirited willingness to hook up with people of whom others
might disapprove or upon whom they might look askance (Uranus at its
best). Loneliness and frustration (Saturn) and erratic, crazy behavior in
relationships (Uranus) are just the shadows those two planets cast.
Predicting such circumstances would only make them that much more
likely to manifest. But recognizing that they could easily arise is wisdom—
provided we also indicate the path to the higher ground.
An evolutionary astrologer would have suggested that the Fitzgeralds
make a strenuous effort to sustain certain human bonds and to be willing to
make sacrifices for them—that’s Saturn—and also simply to be themselves
there (Uranus), without pretensions or any of the walls erected by the
human need to be perceived as cool. The astrologer would also give them
some clues and “signs” by which they could recognize these kindred souls.
All of this advice would be phrased as a strategy for their psychological
survival as a couple.
Did the Fitzgeralds succeed? Only partially. They did form a close bond
with an expatriate American couple, Gerald and Sara Murphy, who were
living in France. The Murphys were older than the Fitzgeralds, quieter, less
flamboyant, which fits the Saturn profile. And yet they were colorful—they
had left a prosperous familial commercial empire, choosing instead to live
abroad on a relatively modest income, studying art. That eccentric behavior
bears the stamp of Uranus. The Murphys had Saturnine sobriety mixed with
Uranian rebelliousness, and thus they bore perfectly the “soulmate
signature” foretold in the Fitzgeralds’ composite chart.
At first the bond between the two couples was profound. In a letter to the
Fitzgeralds written on the occasion of a temporary leave-taking, Gerald
Murphy wrote: “Ultimately, I suppose, one must judge the degree of love
for a person by the hush and the emptiness that descends upon the day after
the departure . . . We four communicate by our presence . . . so that where
we meet and when will never count. Currents race between us regardless:
Scott will uncover for me values in Sara, just as Sara has known them in
Zelda through her affection for Scott.”
Those last lines especially emphasize the soulmate quality of the
interaction between the Murphys and the Fitzgeralds. Through their mutual
sharing, each couple helped the other to see itself more clearly, thereby
promoting the intensification of self-awareness characteristic of this kind of
human love.
Sadly, within a single year the Fitzgeralds’ crazed “mask” and its wild
behavior had at least partly soured the bond with the Murphys. Drunken
driving, violent quarreling and endless competitiveness took their toll.
Sensing the defensive quality of Scott and Zelda’s histrionics, Sara Murphy
wrote, “If you can’t take friends largely and without suspicion—then they
are not friends at all.” And in reference to a situation in which Scott, drunk,
threw a fig at one Princesse de Caraman-Chimay, a guest at a Murphy
dinner party, she added, “We cannot—Gerald and I—at our age and stage in
life be bothered with sophomoric situations like last night.”
Note that the Fitzgeralds here appeared to be rebelling against normal
adult responsibilities. That pattern fits perfectly the darker potential of
Uranus’s presence in the composite’s sixth house (although it conjuncts the
composite’s Descendant). Wherever this planet lies, we have a tendency to
question authority and to avoid “doing as we are told.” This is necessary
from an evolutionary point of view, but once we throw away the rule book,
we are on our own. Earlier, speaking of the Fitzgeralds’ fourth house Virgo
Sun, we emphasized the benefit that would have come to Scott and Zelda
had they established some kind of domestic normalcy. Uranus in the sixth is
dead square that Sun, implying that rebelliousness against responsibilities
could undercut the very center of their marriage. That’s what happened,
both with the Murphys and elsewhere. Let’s also recognize the higher
ground: these two were never going to fit into a totally conventional model
of 1920s home life. They needed to approach their definition of
responsibility with creativity, originality, and respect for each other’s
freedom and individuality. Those are higher Uranian qualities, and they can
be integrated effectively with getting the dishes done.
The Murphys’ support, so critical to the stability and sanity of the
Fitzgeralds’ marriage, was squandered. With their solid Saturnine sense of
responsibility and their simultaneously colorful Uranian style of living, the
Murphys held out an ideal to Scott and Zelda: they had a proven blueprint
for the kind of marriage toward which the Fitzgeralds were aspiring. Had
the Fitzgeralds been able to learn the lesson the Murphys offered by their
simple presence and their love, Scott and Zelda might have achieved the
integration of their pyrotechnical lunar mask and their conservative solar
core, thereby balancing the opposing forces that threatened to tear them
apart.
It is worth noting here that such a seventh house configuration in the
composite chart guarantees that the soulmates will in fact appear. What is
does not guarantee is that the couple will trust them and accept them and
surrender to them sufficiently for the alchemical processes of love to work
their magic.
Tragically, the Fitzgeralds refused that gift. Why? The question is
fundamental. To answer it, we must return to the most elemental
observations about the Fitzgeralds’ composite chart. We must return to the
Sun.
Back to the Sun
In their deepest solar self, Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald were shaped by the
archetypal fields of Virgo and the fourth house. As we have seen, the
maintenance of their solar vitality as a couple ultimately rested upon their
ability to deal precisely, effectively, and competently (Virgo) with the dual
fourth house territories of personal psychology and simple home life.
Should they fail, then their vitality would gradually erode, tossing them into
a Virgoan spiral of escalating self-doubt and self-sabotage.
That they took the second course is a matter of history. That the first
course was open to them is the keystone of modern evolutionary
astrological theory.
As the solar core of the Fitzgeralds’ marriage fizzled, they increasingly
attempted to compensate for the resultant Virgoan insecurity by pumping up
their first house mask. It was that thin defensiveness that finally made
sincerity with the Murphys—and everyone else—impossible. And with
their mounting desperation, that walled-in tension began to resemble
madness. When, for example, Scott flirted with dancer Isadora Duncan,
Zelda wordlessly threw herself head first down a flight of stone steps. One
night Scott allowed Zelda to challenge him to a series of dangerous high
dives from the Riviera cliffs into the sea. Both anecdotes reveal the self-
destructiveness characteristic of Virgo when its intense evolutionary drive
turns to self-punishing shame.
The fourth house is a realm of unbridled subjectivity. It can be a source
of creative inspiration. It can also represent a kind of psychic black hole
into which the healthy adult personality can collapse. As the Fitzgeralds’
marriage gradually succumbed to self-imposed strangulation, it is no
accident that Scott and Zelda both fell into pathological fourth house states,
out of touch with outward reality: he, to alcoholic torpor; she, to
schizophrenia.
Could they have done differently? Of course. That at least is the only
legitimate astrological answer to the question. Slowing down a bit, giving
themselves more privacy, establishing a home life—all of these were pieces
of the puzzle. Any one of them would have helped establish an existential
framework within which the Fitzgeralds might have undertaken the real
fourth house work: self-administered psychoanalysis, triggered by and
supported by the reality of psychological surrender to hearth and home.
Their Venusian love for each other, had it been coupled with humility rather
than humiliation, might have catalyzed a healing of the dark forces within
each of them, the forces that instead drove Scott to the gin bottle and Zelda
to the madhouse.
Remember that we are looking at the “Feudal System” here, so there is a
danger that Scott would have too much influence over the shape of the
marriage. Note that when we were attempting to sort out which “bin” to
place them in, we briefly noted the resonance between Zelda’s Cancer
Moon-Venus conjunction and the fourth house Sun-Venus conjunction of
the composite. For a moment, we considered the possibility that the
relationship would emerge as a “Feudal System” tilted toward her. But then
that thought was eclipsed by the perfect resonance between the elements in
Scott’s primal triad and those in the composite chart. Still, Zelda, far more
than Scott, had a natural feeling for the joys of domestic life. In a
“Democracy,” she would have been the natural caretaker of that critical
part of the relationship. But under the logic of the Feudal System,
“circumstances” sided more with Scott. Swept along by his own destiny and
shaped by his own limitations, he never heard the voice that could have
saved the marriage. Perhaps that voice never spoke, and was only felt inside
Zelda’s heart.
Ultimately, fourth house work is spiritual. That is, it pertains to deep
consciousness. Zelda and Scott might have healed each other’s haunted
spirits. Instead they bought drinks for the drunkard, while taunting and
dazzling the madwoman.
Jupiter
A relatively minor feature of their composite chart, at least at this level of
analysis—Jupiter in the fifth house—adds corroborative evidence to what
we have already seen.
Joining chart-ruling, all-powerful Mercury in the celebratory fifth house,
Jupiter further underscores themes of playfulness, creativity, joy—and
possibly of debauchery. The relevance of those themes to the realities of
Zelda’s and Scott’s life together is irrefutable. They were both artists; they
often lived large and playfully, and they tended toward excess. On the
brighter side of the equation, this placement affirms that they could affirm
their basic faith in their bond by celebrating it and sharing creative projects.
On the dark side, demons of immoderate indulgence lay ready to pounce.
Where Jupiter lies, we often have a “gift from the gods.” For the
Fitzgeralds, that gift was centrally linked to their shared creative potential.
We need to be careful here not to confuse this statement with the obvious
fact that these two people were artists. What this configuration refers to is
their potential for joint creative work—and the joy and faith that would
come to them through that process. The fifth house also relates to children,
and the apparently squandered delight that could have come to Scott and
Zelda through their bond with their daughter—not to mention the children
who were never born.
The South Node’s Tale
The Fitzgeralds were public figures. As such, they lived in a house of glass.
Libraries the world over have alphabetical files of their darkest secrets and
their most trivial failings. For that reason, everything we have explored so
far can be tested against their actual history, even very intimate material.
But now we come to “the chart behind the chart.” Now we come to the
Nodes of the Moon and their various planetary correlates. In doing that, we
enter a less directly verifiable world: the realm of reincarnation.
As we described in Chapter Four, past life material, while inherently
slippery, does make itself felt in “testable” ways in the present tense. It
works exactly like the unconscious wounds connected with forgotten
childhood damage. In the same way, traumas left over from prior lifetimes
have a predictable—and observable—impact upon our lives today.
(Please note that, if you’re uncomfortable with the notion of past lives,
almost all that follows can be understood in genetic, ancestral terms too.
Call it an expression of the interactions among data stored in a couple’s
DNA, if you prefer. Then past life material can be taken as an evocative
metaphor.)
We begin with one arbitrary assumption: Zelda and Scott Fitzgerald had
indeed shared at least one prior lifetime together. Every one of us has a
composite South Node with everyone else on the planet—it’s simply a
mathematical construction that exists potentially between any two charts.
Most of the time it’s an empty symbol: our species has not existed long
enough for everyone to have even had time to shake hands! And of course,
given lower population levels in the past, far fewer bodies were available,
so the “lines” for them were longer and they moved slowly.
But when we see two people meeting as strangers and moving quickly
into a complex, intimate relationship, we feel safe in assuming that it is not
the first time their souls have touched. The Fitzgeralds passed that test—
we’ll assume their South Node is active and meaningful.
Scott and Zelda’s South Node lies in Cancer. Immediately, this suggests
that their karma together existed in some kind of family context.
The Moon always rules Cancer, but its placement in the always-
prominent first house further emphasizes this “lunar” dimension to their
bond: hearth, home and clan. A Cancer South Node and an inherently
strong Moon: these factors thus reinforce each other. Clearly, these two
have been “related” in the past. The overlapping symbolism of both Cancer
and a strong Moon suggest that possibility quite vividly.
The South Node lies in the second house, which brings in circumstantial
themes connected with money—or with what money represents, which is
food, shelter and the material basis of survival. Psychologically, it refers to
feelings of personal insecurity.
That Node-ruling Moon lies in Gemini, where it is mightily reinforced
by its conjunction with the Gemini Ascendant and its association with three
other powerful, edgy Gemini planets in the first house: Pluto, Mars, and
Neptune. Thus again there is a pattern of overlapping symbolism. The
natural associations of all this Geminian energy are communication,
improvisation and mobility. They relate to curiosity and to speed. Because
of the latter two qualities, they also connect with the theme of youth—
young people tend to be quicker, more nervous, and often more curious than
older ones. Heresy is a traditional association with these Geminian symbols.
Why? Because they both “ask too many questions.” Language skills are
spotlighted. Another traditional connection is that Gemini and the third
house both relate to siblings—to brothers and sisters.
One of the tricks for prising the karmic story out of the astrological chart
lies in finding places where the various archetypal fields invoked by the
symbols overlap each other—where separate symbols seem to be saying the
same thing in different ways. We can usually count on such symbolic
overlaps’ pointing to important material. Under the Cancer and Moon
symbolism, we’ve seen a strong reference to prior life family bonds as a
theme that binds Scott and Zelda together—and “family,” of course, refers
to a wide range of possible relationships: aunts, uncles, cousins, children,
grandparents, married couples, and so on.
Now, under the Gemini and third house symbolism, we see a possible
reference to siblings. And we’ve hit paydirt: we now must seriously
entertain the notion that Zelda and Scott were siblings in a prior life.
Gemini and the third house symbolism further emphasize a theme of
improvisation and intelligence, probably in the face of shifting, uncertain
circumstances—remember that the second house placement of the South
Node suggests concerns with material survival and the accompanying
feelings of insecurity that often go along with such situations. They also
highlight a tremendous acceleration of shared thinking and an enhanced
communication function, probably in response to those same challenges:
these kids were having to invent responses to complex circumstances. They
did it together, as a team, relying on each other. Thus, this past life pattern
of youthful, high-stakes decision making leaves its mark in the present
composite chart.
The fact that the Moon (ruler of the South Node) lies in the first house
does more than highlight the lunar themes. The first house has its own
specific layers of meaning: leadership, decision-making, personal
responsibility and initiative. Generally, people strongly impacted by first
house symbolism find themselves in positions where others are counting on
them—or, at least, where they have no one to count on but themselves. In
the first house, we are either simply on our own or “the buck stops with us.”
Wait a minute! Everything else pointed to Zelda and Scott being children
together, either brothers, sisters, or a sister and a brother. Note the
ambiguity: children generally don’t fit the first house paradigm. Children
more commonly have parents and extended families; they are protected and
nurtured. They don’t have to lead or take any ultimate responsibility. Adults
watch out for them.
Confusing? Reframe the confusion as understanding: we’ve hit paydirt a
second time. These two, as young siblings, were very much on their own,
improvising their own survival. Scott and Zelda begin to look like orphans
—or like kids in what we would today call a dysfunctional family or at least
a highly debilitated one.
What’s the worst case scenario for a child? Most of us would say
abandonment. And what planet represents worst case scenarios in general?
What planet rules nightmares and catastrophes? The answer lies just ten
degrees from their Node-ruling Moon: it is Pluto—and the conjunction of
“the Lord of the Underworld” with the Moon adds a theme of trauma and
extremity to our emerging story. As siblings in a lifetime long ago, Scott
and Zelda faced a child’s worst nightmare—abandonment—and they faced
it together with pluck, curiosity, and improvisational intelligence, although
underlying all that were terrible feelings of self-doubt and concern with
survival, as reflected in that second house placement of the South Node.
Sound familiar? Outward “you and me against the world” bravado,
hiding a core of sheer terror?
Pluto, in turn, is conjunct Mars, further spotlighting the stress and
tension of the situation. And both Mars and Pluto are ominous of violence
and rage.
Did Scott and Zelda run away from a violent home? Was their family
sundered by the collective violence of war or persecution? (Remember we
did see the Gemini signature of heresy in the mix . . . ) Did some Plutonian
physical catastrophe—volcanic eruption, earthquake, famine, plague—
leave these two as hungry waifs in the ruins?
Any one of those scenarios could be made to work consistently with the
symbolism. And, really, any one of them would tell approximately the same
story from a psychological perspective. That’s enough for our purposes.
With that, we can get a kind of parable—a story that, while not necessarily
factual in a rigorous sense, parallels the facts with sufficient accuracy to be
thematically applicable, illuminating and useful.
Despite the horror of this story, an essential part of it centers on the
Fitzgeralds’ victory over these dreadful, unnatural circumstances. Together,
they seem to have gotten through it. They were winners. They engineered
their survival creatively, intelligently, and perhaps, violently. They landed
on their feet. And, with Geminian symbolism so prominent, we can assume
they achieved this through cunning, verbal dexterity, and an amoral use of
sheer quickness.
Yet we must remember one immutable principle: the karmic story that
emerges through nodal analysis represents something at least partly
distorted or wrong. Perhaps it is a mistake we made in the past that still
haunts us today—something we have come back together in new bodies to
resolve. It’s either that, or it’s something we actually got “right,” but the
process left us damaged: some acts of courage and heroism leave real scars
on the psyche. Sometimes winning hurts us. Sometimes we make the best
of a bad deal. With Scott and Zelda, we’re inclined toward the second
hypothesis: they got through, but they got hurt.
How? How did their victory hurt them? The question is really an easy
one, provided we remember to forget about astrology and just engage our
human wisdom for a minute. Think about it: what happens to kids who have
their world collapse, even the ones who survive. How long does it take
them to trust anyone again? And “trust” is a big word—it means not only
trusting other human beings, but also trusting life, even trusting God. How
long does it take for the human heart to thaw, once it has frozen as the price
of staying alive? And what if we have hurt others so that we can live? What
kind of deal do we have to make with our consciences to do that? How long
does that deal take to undo? How long does it take to get over the “high” of
war and violence? Once we have made a justifiable moral compromise,
how hard is it to return to a stricter standard? How long does hyped passion
take to drain out of the system?
Earlier in this chapter, when we first mentioned the Fitzgeralds’ first
house composite Pluto, we wrote: For now, it is sufficient to recognize that
there were three areas in which deeply honest self-scrutiny was absolutely
necessary, lest they be brought down by their own character flaws in the
fashion of Greek tragedy. The first area was simply egoism and the abuse of
power: classic first house Shadow material. The second derives from
Pluto’s conjunction with Mars. It was the caustic effect of an attachment to
anger and passion upon the human soul. The third had to do with Neptune
—and warns of dire consequences if they didn’t bring Plutonian
psychological honesty to bear upon their relationship with their own
glamour, and perhaps above all, their need to escape from psychological or
emotional pain through addictive or compulsive behaviors.
Now, through our nodal analysis, we can understand those words with
vastly more precision. When Zelda and Scott came together, they triggered
shared karmic memories in each other. These memories were emotional, as
always, rather than factual or informational. For them, it was immediately
“you and me against the world.” Immediately, they knew that together they
could “conquer the world.” They knew they could “trust no one.” They
were hardened into a posture of anger and withdrawal. They were attached
to passion and escapism, and inclined toward paranoia. And they were
brilliant, forceful and highly verbal.
There’s one more big piece to the puzzle: Jupiter in Libra and the fifth
house squares the nodal axis. Any planet square the Nodes represents
something that blocked or vexed the couple in a prior life, something
therefore left unresolved from the past, and a “skipped step” that must now
be gotten right if they are going to proceed in their evolution.
Being in the fifth house, the Fitzgeralds’ Jupiter is really in its element.
The “King of the Gods” enjoys a good party! At its best, this configuration
refers to a celebration of life—the Fitzgeralds’ famous affinity for the “high
life.” At its worst, a fifth house Jupiter is ominous of dissipation. That trap
had obvious relevance to them in their present life, but now we must
recognize that it also represents something that touched them long ago, in
another lifetime. A vulnerability to dissipation “blocked” or “vexed” them
back then, and was something “left unresolved” as they entered this
lifetime. Thus, we have another glimpse into the forgotten past: as a couple
of siblings in another life, improvising their survival in a world gone hard,
cold, and hostile, Scott and Zelda got hooked on a few pleasures—and the
siren-song of those pleasures haunted them in the present life. The easiest
concrete metaphor here would probably be the abuse of alcohol, although
the abuse of anything—or everything—pleasurable would fit the imagery.
That they brought this addictive, compulsive, ecstasy-driven, escapist karma
forward into their life together as Zelda and Scott is of course exceedingly
plausible, based on the observed realities of their biography.
Let’s also recognize that as a “skipped step” this fifth house Jupiter takes
on another very poignant interpretation. The fifth house is, among other
things, the house of children—and these two, in a prior life, were robbed of
their childhood. They never got to be young, at least not in a healthy way. In
this present lifetime together, they carried forward a need to have something
akin to “a second childhood.” To celebrate and enjoy themselves in a wide-
open, pagan way would be perfectly appropriate. They would also benefit
from having children, and giving those offspring the kind of experience that
they themselves did not have in the prior life. Generosity of spirit toward
their own kids would be an act of healing for them. But the darker side of
this Jupiter aspect lies in the Fitzgeralds’ pent-up need for extremes of
ecstatic release. With the glamour and money they attracted, combined with
the permissive spirit of the Roaring Twenties, Scott and Zelda were like two
sailors hitting a fleshpot port after six months at sea.
All this is the past. And the Fitzgeralds’ challenge—and yours and ours
—is to stop getting on with it!
The North Node’s Answer
So how did F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald intend to go forward? That
question brings us to their composite North Node, which lies in Capricorn
and in the eighth house.
As always, we need to recognize that for every couple the North Node is
the ultimate challenge, for the simple reason that it is precisely opposite
everything they know and believe by reflex. There is absolutely nothing
natural about North Node activity! Always, it asks us to go where we have
never gone before. Always, we are clumsy and prone to error there. And
invariably, it holds the key to an ultimately meaningful relationship and to a
self-affirming feeling of motion and growth—not to mention a resolution of
the ancient karmic dilemma.
Capricorn represents maturity, hard work, and self-discipline. It is linked
to character, personal honor, and the ability to resist temptation. Like all
the other signs, it has a dark side: repression, self-denial, the need to control
everything. But as the sign of the North Node, we don’t need to think about
the dark side at all—unlike with the South Node, where we need to focus
more exclusively on the darker side. Here, we only need to recognize that
getting to Capricorn’s higher ground is the answer to Scott and Zelda’s
questions and the aim of their shared soul contract.
The composite North Node lies in the eighth house. One of the main
meanings of this sector of the chart, especially in the context of synastry, is
sexuality. Here, the word doesn’t simply refer to specific physical acts, but
rather to the larger context of mating and bonding. A couple who are three
weeks into a passionate affair know a little bit about the eighth house, but to
really understand it, ask a couple who’ve been together for a few years. Ask
them about how sexual love is tempered by disappointment and hurt—and
by forgiveness and healing. Ask them about the pearl of sex that hides
inside the oyster-shell of simple romantic heat.
We should emphasize that there is no evidence that the Fitzgeralds’ prior-
life relationship was sexual. We don’t even have any impressions of gender.
Their loyalty toward each other had a “comradely” feeling, more than the
psychological intimacy characteristic of sexual bonds. In this lifetime, with
their North Node in Capricorn and in the eighth house, they aimed to
continue their traditional of loyalty to each other, but to carry it into a more
mature expression.
Let’s add that when souls are accustomed to a sibling relationship, the
maintenance of sexual charge and sexual activity in the present life is often
problematic. Passion, with all its renewing impact, can fall by the wayside
once the hormonal and emotional hype of courtship fades.
Capricorn always refers to some kind of “great work.” In the eighth
house, that great work has something to do with the deeper kinds of
bonding experiences available to human beings past the age of puberty. In
order to find the focal point of this evolutionary activity, we need to
consider the planetary ruler of the North Node: Saturn. Always, simply by
the nature of rulership, the planet that rules the Node will have a nature
similar to that of the sign of the Node. The result is that the planet itself
doesn’t tell us anything we didn’t already know: we’ve already seen that the
Fitzgeralds’ soul intentions had to do with discipline and effort. Where the
planetary ruler of the Node might actually open some doors for us is with
its sign, house, and aspects, especially any conjunctions.
In the Fitzgeralds’ case, Saturn lies in Sagittarius. The natural
associations are religion and law, moral and ethical principles, and belief-
systems, as well as travel, cross-cultural experience, and anything that
stretches them. Any of these areas could be healthy goals and meaningful
types of evolutionary activity for Zelda and Scott. But our technique here
with the North Node is similar to the one we employed with the South
Node: we look for overlap between the themes of the sign and the themes of
the house, knowing that such overlap represents the heart of the matter.
That overlap leaps out: there is symmetry between Capricorn’s moral
focus on resisting temptation, and the Sagittarian orientation toward moral
and ethical principles. There is also a natural synergy between Capricornish
hard work, and education and effective engagement in expansive
experience. Once again, the strategy of seeking overlap has brought us to a
central point: the Fitzgeralds’ soul contract was to build a sexually bonded
life together in which they could take pride, and to achieve moral dignity
and self-respect through great works.
The overlap jumps out when we consider Saturn’s house position. It lies
in the seventh, which is the traditional house of marriage. Thus, the moral
“great work” of self-discipline and maturity which the Fitzgeralds had
signed up to accomplish was to build both a marriage and a set of
supportive, long-lasting friendships of which they were proud. To share life,
ethically, morally, and for the long term. To resist the temptations which can
corrode the heart of intimacy. Sexual fidelity, rather obviously, is high on
the list. But we must also recognize the discipline and maturity it takes to
resist pettiness, defensiveness, and cheap shots. We must honor the
commitment to choosing the path of simple fairness with a partner, even
when we can get away with less. Underlying this austere, demanding
symbolism is M. Scott Peck’s notion that “Love is not a feeling.” (Of course
any fool knows that love is a feeling! But what Peck meant was that love is
more than just a feeling—it is also a vow to treat one’s partner with dignity
and sensitivity, even when no one is feeling very loving.)
Going further, we recognize that the seventh house in a composite chart
always refers to the soul partners of the couple—that is, to other people
outside the primary relationship. Again, with their North Node ruler in the
house of relationships, we see a reference to the fact that the Fitzgeralds
needed help. To achieve the kind of lasting, ever-expanding marriage to
which they aspired, they needed guidance. In modern language, they needed
role models: older couples who had gone before them and achieved what
they themselves were trying to achieve.
Uranus is conjunct Saturn, adding a detail: these partners would help the
Fitzgeralds move beyond their own unconscious, internalized cultural
assumptions about marriage. These soulmates would help them experience
more freedom, rather than less, as a result of their commitment to each
other.
Let’s remember Jupiter too. Any planet square the South Node is of
course also square the North Node. It represents not only a problem in the
past, but also one in the present. We must resolve the square in order to gain
access to the North Node. That’s simply the price of admission to North
Node work. Without “squarely” facing the issues symbolized by that nodal
aspect, we’re simply stuck there. To go forward, the Fitzgeralds needed to
get past their visceral instinct to “eat, drink and be merry, for tomorrow they
might die.” They needed to face and break their deep-seated pattern of
escapism and addiction to ecstatic release. Self-discipline has obvious
relevance in those sober arenas, but we can also take a gentler tack. Jupiter
wants to express itself creatively (Libra; fifth house). The full expression of
their potential for shared creativity would give them a lot of joy—and it
would also take some of the load off the darker side of the equation.
Be careful here: it is tempting to brush this insight aside, knowing that
the Fitzgeralds were in fact both highly creative people—it seems as if they
“got it right,” in other words. But remember that we are talking about
shared creativity, not work they did as individual artists. Part of building the
idealized marriage their souls intended to create depended upon their
capacity to cooperate artistically, and to trigger previously unknown
imaginative potentials in each other. It is worth noting that F. Scott
Fitzgerald’s name became legendary, while Zelda was mostly forgotten. To
what extent did Scott’s “Feudal System” edge eclipse his wife’s voice,
driving her toward madness? And, equally importantly, what work might
have emerged from the incubator of their shared Jupiter-function?
In looking at the synthesis of the composite North Node’s sign, house
and ruler, we immediately focused on their points of overlap and mutual
reinforcement. That’s an effective technique, but let’s recognize that there
are more details present there. They help us flesh out the picture.
Saturn’s position in Sagittarius emphasizes the beneficial impact of
cross-cultural experience on Zelda and Scott. Since Saturn rules their North
Node, traveling would be simply be good for them, and they clearly did
quite a lot of it.
In general, we should emphasize how partnership can enhance freedom.
With the subjective feeling of safety provided by a healthy relationship,
aren’t we more open to risk? Aren’t we more likely to travel? Take
professional risks? Trust people? Learn things? The answers to those
questions are not necessarily universal or obvious. But the point is that we
can imagine positive answers to them—and that’s the kind of marriage
toward which Scott and Zelda were aspiring.
First the hard work, then the joy: it’s an old formula.
Conclusion
Could an evolutionary astrologer have saved Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald’s
marriage? It is tempting to react reflexively to that question and say “Of
course not!”
Perhaps that’s the correct answer. The giddy, self-flattering “high” of
their early years must have been blissfully addictive—and like most
addictions, it led inexorably to a painful crash. But were there seeds of
wisdom in this man and woman, even amidst the glorious fantasy of their
first years together? We cannot know. Were they bound inextricably to the
nose-diving patterns of their biographies? Or was the equilibrium between
insanity’s gravity and love’s uplifting touch so delicate that a featherweight
could have tipped the scales of fate?
These questions are imponderable.
No astrologer need wrestle with them. Our work, in unraveling the
message of a composite chart, is not to make pronouncements, be they
baleful or full of hope. Our work is only to help, only to offer a gesture
toward the higher road and to point an incisive finger at the Shadow in all
its seductive guises. Beyond that, the couple itself must choose.
Maybe an astrologer could have helped Zelda and Scott. Maybe he or
she, arriving at precisely the right instant, wielding the weight of a feather,
could have upset the balance, planting seeds of peace and regeneration.
Again, we cannot know. But if astrology ever regains a place of honor
among the allies of humanity, it will be because of individuals like you,
reader, lying in bed wide-eyed late at night, struggling to find the words that
might have made the difference.
Do such words exist? Not if we believe in ironhanded fate. But perhaps
“fate” is an empty concept, only a lie, only a device we use to hide from a
notion a thousand times more awesome: that the featherweight which truly
tips the balance of our lives is not mechanical destiny, but rather our own
innate capacity to make choices.
Maybe Zelda and Scott Fitzgerald, even deep in their pain, given a little
help and a little hope, could have wielded that feather. No matter how true
or how false that statement might be, if you’re the type of human being
who’s cut out to be an evolutionary astrologer, you probably at least half
believe it.
And for anyone who feels that holding out that kind of faith is like
writing letters to Santa Claus, we quote a letter from Scott to Zelda. These
words were written in 1934, in desolation, while she was in the mental
asylum and he was trying—and failing—to ration himself to an ounce of
gin per hour.
“The sadness of the past is with me always. The things that we have
done together and the awful splits that have broken us into war
survivals . . . stay like a sort of atmosphere around any house that I
inhabit. The good things and the first years together . . . will stay with
me forever, and you should feel like I do that they can be renewed, if
not in a new spring, then in a new summer. I love you my darling,
darling.”
Chapter 18
Conclusion
O nce upon a time there was a very holy man, a Swami renowned far and
wide for his great saintliness. Everyone sang his praises and
enumerated his many virtues. People traveled far and wide to seek his
darshan. One day a troubled young man decided to pay the Swami a visit,
and set off to find the holy man’s very isolated home. When he knocked on
the door after a lengthy and arduous journey, a woman answered. He
humbly told the woman that he was looking for the swami and would like
nothing more than an audience with him.
“Him!” said the woman. “Why do you want to see him? I’m his wife,
and I can tell you a few things about this so-called holy man.” And she
proceeded to describe all the Swami’s faults in detail, with many
devastating stories of his various misdeeds. Finally the young man said,
“Well, I must have the wrong house. I’m very sorry to have bothered you.”
And he left, wondering what he should do now, and how to find the Swami.
A few minutes later he passed a man upon the road, and stopped to ask
directions to the Swami’s house.
“Why, I am he,” said the Swami. “I’d be happy to speak with you. I’m
going home now; would you care to accompany me there?” And he pointed
in the direction of the house that the young man had just left, the only house
for many miles around.
The young man was so startled that his manners abandoned him, and he
blurted, “But sir, I just met a woman there who said she was your wife, and
she also said the most dreadful things about your character.”
The Swami beamed. “You’ve met my wife! Isn’t she wonderful? Without
her, I’d never be who I am today.”
This story, shared with us by a friend, helps illustrate that nothing
impacts our souls so profoundly as our meetings with “significant others.”
Nothing else so shakes up our lives or so recalibrates our existential
compasses. Nothing except love so opens the evolutionary doorway—or
offers us such an opportunity to demonstrate how stuck we are.
We hope that we have cast some light on how best to navigate the
evolutionary processes that intimacy can trigger. We hope that we have
assisted you in seeing specifically how the “whole is greater than the sum of
the parts,” and how psychospiritually complex the waltz of two souls can
be. We hope that you, like ourselves, have felt humbled by the exquisite
intricacy of the process. We hope that you have felt some wise laughter at
yourself—and maybe a tear in the corner of your eye from time to time.
Sometimes, through transits and progressions, we can actually foresee
one of those life-altering human encounters. They are so spiritually pivotal
that astrology tends to signal them rather reliably. It’s illuminating to watch
people’s responses when we announce that they are likely to “meet
someone” soon. Some get excited at the news. Others turn pale. And
typically the older the person is, the paler they become!
Not to be cynical about it, but by the time we’ve made a few trips around
the romantic mulberry bush, we understand a basic truth about life—that
“meeting someone,” however much joy it may bring to us, is also going to
rattle us right down to our bones.
Sexual love is so many things all at once. Since the beginning of human
time, it has been a source of creature comfort and ecstatic release. It has
also typically led to the births of children, and thus been the foundation of
family. And as soon as “lovers” become “family,” sexual partnership has
always been required to evolve beyond its natural predilection for privacy.
The magic, secret world of the young lovers begins to send tendrils into the
community—and the community holds them tightly. The couple has been
recognized as a new nexus in the clan network. Economic and social
realities descended upon them. After a while, the stormy passions of love’s
beginnings typically faded. The cultural mythology kicked in, assuring the
couple that the ending of their brief sojourn in paradise was to be expected.
It was time for them to turn outward, to assume their rightful
responsibilities, and to consider their early body-and-soul encounters as a
naïve sweetness to be simultaneously treasured as a precious memory—and
half-dismissed as immature fantasy.
Those days are gone. The idea of settling down to a life of numbing,
soulless boredom together is appalling to most modern people. Not to say
that it doesn’t still happen! All of those eternal quagmires remain—kids,
economic entanglement, participation in the social network. Easily, a couple
can find itself mired in the same old mud pits that have been ensnaring men
and women for millennia. Caught between a rock and a hard place, they
soldier on together as their grandparents did. The difference is that for their
grandparents, all the social mythology told them that this state of affairs
was normal. That probably comforted them a bit. Nowadays, we experience
it as either a personal failure or as an existential tragedy.
And maybe it is.
We feel robbed. And maybe we were—although the thief may be there in
the mirror.
In this world of change, it’s so easy to think of sexual love as one of the
few human constants. But that isn’t the truth. Everything changes. As soon
as our understanding of sexuality expands beyond the most utilitarian
notions of “Tab A in Slot B,” we recognize that intimacy is inseparable
from mythic and cultural realities. And nowadays at that level everything is
different. Single people of all ages have a respectable place in the world.
They can make a living, raise children, hold their heads high. Sex without
marriage raises eyebrows only on the margins of mainstream culture.
Divorce is common, and carries almost no stigma. With the practical and
social pressures to remain in an unsatisfying relationship so reduced, we
find ourselves increasingly faced with broken relationships. That reality is
lamentable for the pain it causes—and profoundly exciting for the
possibilities it creates.
If we no longer settle for deadness in our intimate lives, that leaves only
one possibility: aliveness, of course. But aliveness means evolution.
A little while ago, we spoke of people’s responses to the prediction that
“they would soon meet someone.” Some were excited; others turned pale.
And we observed that typically the older the person was, the paler they
became. There is obvious humor in this, but there is also a deeper truth. It’s
easy to say that Mother Nature plays hormonal tricks on us in order to
ensure a steady supply of babies. But we prefer to say that God created
human sexuality for more reasons than mere procreation. Sexual love can
upset us, but behind that fact is a deeper truth: love is an evolutionary
catalyst, and it works by first giving us a taste of something greater than
ourselves—then holding that memory before us like a carrot at the end of a
stick.
In chasing that carrot, we find ourselves stumbling over our own egos,
our own wounds, our own self-importance. Gradually we chip away at all
of them, trying to get to that carrot. The carrot perhaps never gets any closer
—but its nature changes before our eyes, turning from naïve hopes of
eternal ecstasy into a deeper appreciation of life’s exquisite evolutionary
machinery. And we learn that the chase itself is precious. We learn to
treasure the process. We are changed by it, lifted up to the higher ground.
We come to understand that intimate disagreements trigger growth in us,
and that growth triggers deeper happiness. We accept one of life’s greatest
paradoxes—that “living happily ever after” is a contradiction in terms.
Times of stress and sadness and anger are times of revelation. Without
them, there is no growth; without growth, there is only deadness. Thus,
without the sadness of love, in the long run there can be no happiness either.
In these pages, we have tried to describe how to avoid deadness; we have
tried to describe the path toward that intimate aliveness we all crave.
If these two volumes of Skymates can help any loving couple to hang in
there with a little more self-awareness, informed compassion for each other,
and faith in the wondrous enterprise upon which they are embarked, the two
of us will curl up in our bed together with a deeper feeling of happiness and
gratitude.
Thanks for being part of the journey.

Love and Mischief,

Steven Forrest and Jodie Forrest


Autumnal Equinox, 2004
More Books by Steven Forrest and Jodie Forrest
The Inner Sky (Steven Forrest)
The Changing Sky (Steven Forrest)
The Night Speaks (Steven Forrest)
The Book of Pluto (Steven Forrest)
Measuring the Night (Steven Forrest and Jeffrey Green)
Measuring the Night 2 (Steven Forrest and Jeffrey Green)
Stalking Anubis (Steven Forrest)
The Rhymer and the Ravens (Jodie Forrest)
The Elves’ Prophecy (Jodie Forrest)
The Bridge (Jodie Forrest)
Skymates (Steven and Jodie Forrest)
The Ascendant (Jodie Forrest)
Yesterday's Sky (Steven Forrest)
The Book of the Moon (Steven Forrest)
About the Authors
Steven Forrest is the author of several astrological bestsellers, including
THE INNER SKY, THE CHANGING SKY, THE BOOK OF PLUTO, THE
BOOK OF THE MOON, and the new classic YESTERDAY’S SKY, written
with support from a grant by the Integrative Medicine Foundation.
Steven’s work has been translated into a dozen languages, most recently
Chinese and Italian. He travels worldwide to speak and teach his brand of
choice-centered evolutionary astrology – an astrology which integrates free
will, grounded humanistic psychology and ancient metaphysics.
Along with his busy private practice, he maintains active astrological
apprenticeship programs in California, Australia, North Carolina, and
Europe. He is a founding member of the Ethics Committee of the
International Society for Astrological Research (ISAR).
The musician Sting calls Steven’s work “as intelligent and cogent as it is
poetic.”
About Steven’s readings Jungian analyst Robert Johnson says “I have
had several charts done in my lifetime and none of them - but yours - have
escaped the astrologer mistaking so much of the chart as a sounding board
for his own ego. You have recovered the divine art to its noble status.”
Callie Khouri, who wrote the screenplay for Thelma and Louise, praises
his “humor, insight, poetry, and astute, articulate observations of human
nature.”
O: THE OPRAH MAGAZINE writes, “Forrest’s approach...stops the
blame game in its tracks...we’re warriors fulfilling our turbulent
evolutionary paths.”
Actor Robert Downey Jr. says, “I marvel at the accuracy of Steve’s
readings. He insists that nothing is so grave as to be beyond repair, and
correspondingly that there is no rainbow that won’t be evaporated by poor
judgment in the now. I can’t recommend him highly enough.” And
astrologer Rob Brezsny simply calls him “the most brilliant astrologer
alive.”

Jodie Forrest is an astrologer, writer, editor and teacher/tutor who travels


internationally to lecture on astrology. She earned a B.A. and an M.A. at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Original founder of Seven
Paws Press, Jodie is the author of The Ascendant (astrology) and The
Rhymer and the Ravens (historical fantasy trilogy), and the co-author, with
Steven Forrest, of Skymates I, Skymates II, and three computerized
astrological “report writers.” Her articles have appeared in all the major
astrology magazines and journals. Her thirty years of astrological
consulting practice includes electionals (choosing an event’s date), horaries
(yes/no questions), thematic analysis, relocations, and birth time
rectifications
Jodie lives and humbly serves her Feline Masters in Southern California,
where her uppity creative Muses fight for her spare time. For information
about consultations, teaching, tutoring, speaking, article proposals, or
editing, please visit her website www.thestarryroad.com or email
jodie@thestarryroad.com.

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