|
Shortcuts in this article...
REPRINT NOTE:
Uranus was in Aquarius from 1996 until 2003. Since then, it has been in Pisces,
where it will remain until 2010. Although Uranus in Aquarius is no
longer a current influence, I have chosen to include this article
here because it is still interesting and useful to look back and see how it
affected us all, personally and globally. Also,
if you have children who were born while Uranus was in Aquarius, it will
be helpful to see how that generation expresses and is influenced by that planetary energy.
You can also learn a lot about Uranus and Aquarius energy from this article.
With an orbit of 84 years, the last
time Uranus was in Aquarius was 1912 to 1920. Uranus is the planetary ruler
of Aquarius, so it is a very special and important sign for Uranus to be in.
This means we had a double dose of the rebellious, liberating and
freedom-seeking Aquarian/Uranian energy for the 7 years it was there. This
article explores what that energy was like and how we might identify its
influence in our collective and personal lives.
Return to Articles Index
|

URANUS IN AQUARIUS
The One And The Many
©
Wendy Guy (originally published in Transitions Newsletter, 1996)
The Invention of Uranus
The year is 1781, and Uranus has
just been discovered! The American Revolution has been underway for 6
years and will come to a resolution in another 2 years. The French
Revolution will reach a crisis point in 8 years and see the rise of
Napoleon. Serfdom is being abolished all over the world, and in 11 years
Denmark will be the first nation to abolish slavery. Science is now a
useful and honourable discipline in the Age of Reason. The seeds of the
Industrial Revolution are being sown through inventions like James
Watts' rotary steam engine in 1782. With the coming technological boom,
industry will never be the same.
The themes running through these
events are those of science, technology, revolution, humanitarianism
and the inherent right to freedom—all fundamental Aquarian and
Uranian keywords. Uranus is the guardian angel of groups and the
individuals that compose them. After its discovery, Uranus saw the
liberation of whole groups of people from slavery and oppression. It
stimulated the rise of Capitalism in the western world, enabling the
common people to pursue a level of freedom and personal choice in
their lives previously reserved for the elite and the rich.
The growth of technology
facilitated changes which eventually revolutionized the entire world
economic base and the worker's place within it. And the shock waves
from this explosion of Uranian energy are still expanding and
evolving. It has lead to an unprecedented era in which we have so
much leisure time that leisure is now a major industry in itself.
Our vision of who we are as a species has expanded. We are now
starting to see ourselves, not merely as "us" peering warily at
"them," but collectively as a Global Village. The potential in our
lives has changed so radically that we can even realistically
imagine living on the Moon!
Only in an economically and
technologically progressive world could individualism flourish as it
has in the western world, particularly in North America. Capitalism,
an economic and cultural cornerstone of the western world, places
both the opportunity and the responsibility for prosperity squarely
in the hands of the independent individual. We are free to pursue
our dreams, but it is up to us to make this happen.
This is radically different from
the old days when individuals were mere components of a mute,
undifferentiated and dependent work force. The masses were expected
to pledge service to an elite upper class whose responsibility it
was to ensure the survival and prosperity of the system as a whole.
However, the individual was neither encouraged nor expected to
follow dreams that s/he was assumed not to have in the first place.
This radical change in the role
of the individual and specific groups of people began with the
world's deliverance from slavery and the feudal system. It continues
today with the feminist movement and our quest to bring together our
Global Village and treat its citizens equally, with fairness and
dignity.
Today, as individuals, we have
enormous freedom to pursue our dreams and visions. We have
financial, educational and other support systems available to anyone
pursuing an upwardly mobile career path. It is now unusual for a
person to have only one job (or even one career!) in their lifetime.
In fact, a certain amount of diversity is almost mandatory for those
who wish to sculpt the optimal résumé.

Costs and Benefits
Have we really come so far? We
often joke bitterly about feeling like slaves to our mortgages,
RRSPs, the rising cost of living, and taxes, taxes, taxes! In a very
real way, we are symbiotically bonded to an economic and political
system that all too often pursues only its own collective survival.
Its workers become manipulated like so many dispensable pawns on a
win-or-lose chess board.
The current surge of technology
has ensured that we are willing serfs to this corporate machine so
that we can afford the latest and greatest technological toys. And
while we live in a society that may espouse many humanitarian ideals
(civil rights, social programs, etc.), racism and other forms of
prejudice still abound. Clearly, we still have a long way to go.
Now, it is certainly true that
our standard of living is far better today than for the masses of
200 years ago, and the modern moral climate has far more tolerance,
enlightenment and flexibility than when Uranus was discovered.
However, the battle for individual and collective freedom is still
being fought.
We often blithely accept or
aren't even aware of the ways in which we are still held captive.
How free is the individual when s/he must conform to certain
standards and trends of fashion, appearance, attitude, beliefs,
intelligence, orientation and/or aspirations in order to be
accepted, respected and supported?
If you doubt how powerful these
ethics are in western culture, try going to work on Bay Street in
your blue jeans. Try feeling confident in a singles bar if your body
size or appearance is not considered "attractive." Try being a gay
or lesbian person who, in many places, is still subject to legal
discrimination and vigilante violence. Try surviving in a high-tech
world if you have little education or if you are a slow learner.
Those whose priorities don't include climbing the corporate ladder
may be seen as lazy, dull or incapable. And although religious and
philosophical freedom is considered a basic right in the western
world, a belief in astrology is often still met with discrimination,
ridicule and contempt.
Individuality requires us to
continually harmonize individual and group perspectives. In learning
the lessons of Uranus, we must constantly adjust the ever precarious
and fragile balance between the needs and rights of the individual
and those of the group. In the swinging pendulum of social change,
we must monitor and respond to the phenomenon whereby the solution
becomes yet another problem.

The World Economy
We've experienced a number of
sign changes with the outer planets lately. (Reminder:
This article was written in 1996, when Saturn, Uranus, Pluto and Chiron all
changed zodiac signs within a year and a half of each other, to be followed
by Neptune two years later. It is quite rare to have so many slow-moving
planets change signs in so short a time.) Pluto moved into
Sagittarius last year (1995), and Saturn entered Aries just last
April (1996). Neptune, not far behind Uranus, will enter Aquarius in
1998—only 2 years away. It is therefore a time of considerable
energy flux in the world.
The last time Uranus changed
signs was 1989 when it entered Capricorn and started to play serious
havoc with the world economy (Capricorn). Neptune had been there
since 1985, dissolving us into a confused state in which we weren't
quite sure what was happening to our economy!
In 1989, Uranus and Neptune also
came very close (within 8 degrees) to conjoining each other and will continue
within that orb until the end of 1997. (Note:
Uranus and Neptune were in exact conjunction in 1993, but remained
within an 8-degree orb for several years before and afterwards.)
This has been a period of persistent economic hardship and crisis.
In 1993, the exact conjunction of Uranus and Neptune occurred at 18
and 19 degrees of Capricorn, arguably marking the lowest point of
this economic slump.
We keep hearing that the economy
is (finally) beginning to recover, but as long as layoffs and
cutbacks persist as the norm, it just sounds like political
double-talk to the individual. When Uranus and Neptune separate
beyond the 8-degree orb in another year, will we (finally) begin to
see this alleged economic recovery filter down to the common folk?
Perhaps, but I somehow doubt it will be that straightforward.
I do, however, think it is
significant that during the worst of this economic nightmare, Uranus
(chaos) and Neptune (dissolution) have been closely aligned in
Capricorn (economy). I also think it is meaningful that they have
only been aligned primarily while in Capricorn, and that they'll
both be in liberating Aquarius by the time they separate from this
8-degree orb. How you
will experience this, however, will probably vary widely depending
on your circumstances.
I believe we are being
challenged to affect a fundamental change in the global system of
commerce. We can't survive using the old rules that were designed
for a fragmented world. Subsequently, the individual's perspective
of the end solution could look very different from what we have been
used to.

A Celebration of Uniqueness
Over the next 7 years (1996-2003), as Uranus
travels through Aquarius, I believe we will experience a reawakening
of how we approach individuality and group involvement. This
involves rebalancing the individual and group perspectives, moving
out of the old ways and exploring new ones—a process already begun.
Archetypally, Capricorn precedes
Aquarius. In Capricorn, we form the societal structure which
requires the individual to conform to a consensual reality in order
to be included and accepted. However, the real world doesn't always
neatly match the structure we try to impose on it. In Aquarius, it
is our job to go back and pick up the lost threads of those who have
been left out of the primary structure.
A humanitarian, freedom-oriented
position is essential for this, since the "outsiders" will never
become fully homogenized as "insiders"—nor should they have to
sacrifice their uniqueness to do so! Neither should the "insiders"
remain cloistered away in their cultural ivory towers, isolated from
the wealth of worldviews and perspectives around them.
The highest vibration of Uranus
seeks to champion our freedom of expression, not by changing us into
clones who all have the same thing to express, but by expanding the
boundaries to include those individuals and groups previously left
out. This means preserving the freedom to express oneself through
culture, nationality, gender, philosophy and other defining
qualities that we share with some and not with others.
Aquarius is a celebration of
that which makes us unique; the qualities that differentiate us from
those around us. This includes acknowledgement of the groups we
belong to (nation, race, culture, religion, philosophy, family,
peers, etc.) However, ultimately we must also be free to go beyond
the bounds of those established circles. Without that freedom, we're
stuck in an unchanging, dying Capricornian structure, trying to make
the square peg of our souls fit into the round hole of the
established Collective.

Experiencing Uranus
As Uranus begins its journey
through Aquarius, let yourself explore how you celebrate and honour
yourself as an individual and as a group participant. How do you
distinguish yourself from friends, family, coworkers, neighbours and
significant others? What groups do you align yourself with? Do you
feel free to share aspects of yourself rooted in one group with
people from another group? (For example, how many coworkers know of
your interest in astrology?)
Explore how you do or don't
express this uniqueness. How often do you stay silent about
something you disagree with—or agree with? When you have a strong
reaction to a TV news story, do you ever write a letter to those
involved to share how you feel? Have you ever let yourself be
inspired to take action of some kind? When was the last time you did
something daring, risky, even shocking, that liberated a
non-conforming part of you? How often do you participate in and
support the groups you're involved in (like volunteering in your
community)?
Explore, too, your Aquarian
humanitarian nature. What stimulates your sense of fairness,
goodwill or spirit of human kinship? What evokes your sense of
outrage, rebellion or the desire to change the world? What are you
doing to encourage or support the formation of the best world you
can imagine? Or the best You that you can imagine?
With Uranus in Aquarius, we have the
chance to hone our individual and collective edge, cutting through the
trappings and encrusted layers that surround us in the name of survival,
prosperity and conformity. We must each find our own special voice and
speak our highest truth if we are to emerge and progress beyond our
current hardships. Let your most humanitarian and unique Uranian voice
ring out!

© Wendy Guy, 1996, 2004, 2005.
All rights reserved. Reprinted with permission from Transitions
Astrology Newsletter, Aries-Taurus 1996 Issue. |