When you understand symbolic language, you add depth and meaning to events in your life. It's time to open the door to your Imagination and let meaning in.
We are at the end of a decade (see NYTimes) as well as a year, and it seems significant that 2009 ends with a lunar eclipse. (While modern usage of the term "Blue Moon" is being applied to this 2nd full Moon in a calendar month, there's really nothing special about it. It is significant when there is a 2nd full Moon in an astrological sign, which happens about every 2 years. The last one occurred in May 2008.)
During a lunar eclipse, the Earth, Sun and Moon are in alignment and the Earth slips between the Sun and Moon, creating the shadow of the eclipse. The energetic light stream from the Sun cannot be reflected back to us by the Moon there is an eclipse (eclipse means a failure or to leave out) and something goes missing.
So maybe for a moment during this eclipse (December 31, 2009 at 2:13pm EST/11:13 PST), you might lose yourself or at least your conscious image of yourself. You might find that your Shadow is showing!
As much as our society associates negative images with the Full Moon (werewolves, lunacy, magic anyone?), it is the light of the Full Moon which shines her imaginative consciousness on us and shows us who we really are madmen or werewolves, vampires or wise women.
Like a bad acid trip, the only monsters we tend to meet are the ones we create inside ourselves. Or on a collective level, those we refuse to acknowledge as our own. The shadow of the eclipse mirrors the shadow of our individual and national identities. (This is especially true for Americans since this eclipse is conjunct America's Sun in the 4th of July birth chart.)
It is so important for each of us to deal with our personal Shadow, because to change the world we have to take on and transform our collective Shadow. In Jungian psychology, the Shadow is the part of the unconscious psyche that consists of repressed aspects of the personality those parts of our unique energies which are seen as weaknesses, shortcomings, or often just our instincts. "Everyone carries a shadow," Jung wrote, "and the less it is embodied in the individual's conscious life, the blacker and denser it is." (Jung, C.G. (1938). "Psychology and Religion." In CW 11: Psychology and Religion: West and East. P.131)
According to Jung, since our ego cannot acknowledge the energy and perceptions of the shadow, we project it out onto someone else, turning our own feelings of inadequacy into someone else's (or another nation's) moral failings, all the while acting out those very traits unconsciously ourselves. And yet, once we do accept our shadow and integrate it into our personality, it brings us new creativity and energy.
So this eclipse can show us what we've left out of the equation. It can show us a quality that we never realized we possessed or it can show us what we need to let go of. Full Moons usually offer us the gift of awareness, if we can bare the tension of opposite energies and perspectives. Eclipses offer us an awareness of the darkness and shadows that we on Earth cast.
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