Guest guest Posted February 19, 2007 Report Share Posted February 19, 2007 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Michael Laughrin's North American Jyotish Newsletter February/March 2007 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Contents -- Jyotish 101 -- Music: As Above, So Below -- The Deep Meaning of Music -- The Path into Shastra Part II: Beginnings And Endings I offer you this newsletter to enhance and deepen your experience of Vedic Astrology. In these newsletters, expect to find a combination of helpful articles, book reviews, Jyotish links and more. The purpose of this newsletter is to educate and titillate the Jyotish- loving public. The opinions given within are solely those of the author. In this issue, go back to basics with a juicy article for beginning Vedic Astrologers: Jyotish 101. Deborah Allison and I each contribute an article on music. And enjoy a profound Part 2 of Deborah's series "The Path into Shastra" on beginnings and endings. Please visit my website at www.jyotish.ws at your convenience. The best articles I have written in these newsletters are archived on this site. I offer access to an excellent yagya program. - Michael Laughrin (Michael (AT) jyotish (DOT) ws ) Jyotish 101 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ By Michael Laughrin ( Michael (AT) jyotish (DOT) ws) To me, astrology is, essentially, wonderfully simple. For beginners: forget the yogas, the exceptions, the different dasha systems. It all boils down to several simple rules: 1. The good houses are 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 9, 10 and 11. If the ruler of a good house falls in any good house, that house brings good results. For example, if the ruler of the 1st house (the house of the self) falls in the 1st, 2nd, 4th, 5th, 7th, 9th, 10th or 11th houses, the health and self-confidence of the native will tend to be good -- all other things being equal. 2. If the ruler of a "bad" (3, 6, 8 or 12) house falls in a "bad" house, the results will be good. 3. Natural benefics (the Moon, Mercury, Venus and Jupiter) in a house bless that house. 4. Natural malefics (Mars, Saturn, Rahu and Ketu) in a house hurt that house. 5. Pay attention the significator of the issue being studied. For example, Jupiter stands for children. Jupiter being strong in the chart will significantly increase the chances of having children and deriving happiness from children. 6. Functional benefics (the rulers of houses 1, 4, 5, 7, 9 and 10) placed in a house help the affairs of that house (even if that functional benefic is a natural malefic). For example, Saturn in the 11th house in a Taurus Ascendant chart helps the finances and career prospects more than it hurts them because Saturn rules the 9th and the 10th houses for Taurus Lagna. That Saturn does more good than harm. 7. Functional malefics tend to hurt the house they are placed in even if they are natural benefics. To judge the strength of a house in the simplest way: 1. Is the ruler of the house strong? If yes, that covers 40% of the story. 2. Look at the planets in the house (or aspecting the house). If they are benefic, either natural or functional, that will tend to lift up the affairs of that house. Another 40% accounted for. 3. Finally, look at the significator of the house in question. For example: marriage. First, look at the ruler of the 7th house. Next, look at the planets in the 7th house (or aspecting the 7th house). 4. Last, but not least, how is Venus doing? If the ruler is well placed, perhaps in the 9th house, and we have the Moon in the 7th house, and Venus is in its own sign in the 5th house, we can confidently predict early marriage, happy marriage, fulfilling marriage. If you stick to these few simple rules, AND REALLY MASTER THEM, you will be able to amaze people with your astuteness and accuracy. However, there is a price for everything. First, you must memorize which planet owns each sign and where each planet is exalted and debilitated. Second, you must know the simple meaning of each house. Third, you must know the most important things ruled by each planet. AND, MOST IMPORTANT OF ALL, FORGET ALL THAT FANCY STUFF YOU'VE BEEN FILLING YOUR HEAD WITH AND STICK TO THE BASICS! Please note that this only applies to the beginning stages of Jyotish. It's kind of like music: practice the scales and arpeggios and the rest will tend to take care of itself. Music: As Above, So Below ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ By Deborah Allison Note: The charts for this aricle are posted at http://www.jyotish.ws/materials Man's music is a sublime expression of the harmony of the cosmos. The seers of the Vedic tradition cognized the very essence of creation and the operation of the laws of nature in verse form with a melody and meter. These are perhaps the oldest verses or "hymns" that are known to man. The significations for love of and proficiency in music are therefore explicitly given in the classical texts of this tradition. As time progressed, music evolved into the myriad of forms we know today, but the significations of old still apply. It is up to the intuition of the Jyotishi to properly apply these combinations to a particular individual in a particular society. Venus is the most important planet for proficiency in the arts and music. Mercury gives skill with the hands and, properly configured, can transfer that skill to an instrument. The third house signifies the classical arts in general and as it represents hands, it too indicates playing a musical instrument. The fifth house is also correlated with music and poetry and the second house can specifically indicate a singer as it can give a beautiful voice. The constellations that are the strongest indicators of the arts and music in particular are Gemini and Taurus. There is also an important yoga for arts and communication named for Goddess Saraswati. It is formed by Jupiter, Venus and Mercury. All three must occupy the kendras, trikonas or the second house and Jupiter especially should be strong in its own sign, exalted or a friend's sign. Let's check out the charts of three prominent musicians and see how the combinations apply. The first is the chart of the world-famous pianist Van Cliburn - Chart C1 http://www.jyotish.ws/materials Van Cliburn won the Tchaikovsky Piano Competition in Moscow, which launched his career. This event happened in his Mercury dasha. Note that Mercury is the lagna lord high in the mid heaven of the chart (the 10th house). It is creating a powerful Bhadra Yoga as it is not just in its own sign but simultaneously retrograde. Along with Mercury in this packed career house are Sun and Mars - both of which are strong by having directional strength. Mars is the lord of the third (hands) and is with that powerful lagna lord in the house of career. Note that the entire combination takes place in Gemini, one of the two rashis that happily support music. Venus, the planet of the arts, is in its own sign of Taurus where it aspects the third house. Taurus is the other sign that indicates the arts. The entire chart is exceptional in that seven planets are powerful - Jupiter, Sun and Mars with dig bala, Moon and Venus in their own signs, and Mercury and Saturn not only in their own signs but retrograde as well. The icing on the cake is the Saraswati Yoga. Note that Jupiter, Mercury and Venus are all in kendras or trikonas and all of them are strong. The second chart is the composer Carl Orff - Chart C2: http://www.jyotish.ws/materials - who is best known for his stirring composition Carmina Burana. However, he is even more significant as a music educator, having established a global movement through his work "Music for Children." Teachers worldwide embrace the Orff method and materials and it is the core music method for some of the most progressive children's education programs such as Waldorf and Montessori schools. Here again is a very powerful Mercury as lagna lord, this time sitting in the lagna in the sign of Gemini. It is three times as powerful because it is in its own sign, retrograde and with dig bala. Like the previous chart, it forms a Bhadra Yoga. Mercury represents dexterity and skill with the hands and is placed in the lagna with the 3rd lord Sun. The lord of career, Jupiter with dig bala, joins the combination, forming a powerful raja yoga. Venus is in the third house of the arts while owning the fifth house of creativity and music. Both the third and fifth houses are houses of publishing. Orff's musical compositions and works for musical education were published and performed. The third chart is of the famous folk singer and guitarist Judy Collins - Chart C3: http://www.jyotish.ws/materials . She got her start as a classical pianist debuting with a symphony orchestra at the tender age of 13. However, the call of the 60's and the beat generation transformed her into one of the leading voices of those times and indeed, she continues to perform actively today. There could not be a more outstanding chart to illustrate some of the combinations outlined in this article. First and foremost, the third house in this chart is completely highlighted. A very powerful bright Moon as the lagna lord goes to the third house where it is aspected by all the other benefics, including an exalted Venus and Jupiter in its own sign. Her skill with musical instruments and her career in the arts is assured. Her beautiful voice is well indicated by the lord of the second, the Sun, exalted and with dig bala in the 10th house of the career. This chart also contains a Saraswati Yoga. This time it is formed by all three benefics in the 9th house, anchored by the powerful lord of the 9th Jupiter and supported further by the aspect of the very bright Moon, who is the all-important lord of the lagna for a Cancer chart. The Deep Meaning of Music ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ By Michael Laughrin (Michael (AT) jyotish (DOT) ws) Music is the language of the heart, of the soul. Music, at least to me, more accurately shows us how the Universe works than all the wordy studies - philosophy, religion, poetry, etc. - ever engaged in by the mind of Man. For me, music is largely polluted by words. Music is the perfect emotional language. Words just get in the way. A poem may be given wings by music, but the words tend to keep music earthbound. One can say that a poem is a song for those who cannot sing, yet poetry is perhaps the finest of the "wordy arts." Why, and how, does music portray reality more perfectly than "wordy studies?" Life is ephemeral. Music is ephemeral. For both of them, blink and the situation is changed. Art, architecture, and books give a false sense of solidity, of permanence that, ultimately, has no basis in reality. For those of us who have not yet permanently crossed the River of Enlightenment, life is Maya (illusion). Music gives us the true flavors of that wonderful illusion while yet touching the Soul with intimations of liberation, heaven, and/or enlightened reality. Just as the absolute, unchanging aspect of creation underlies all we perceive, so the notes accompanying the melody are often ignored. Yet, they form the structure of the wonderful flights of spirit by the melody. Everything is rhythm -- breathing, heartbeats, walking, talking, wars, marriage, birth, death, even the rise and fall of civilizations. Music is the king of rhythm. Therefore, we could say that all of life is a gigantic piece of music that, perhaps, only mystics, seers, (and spaced out musicians!) can perceive. Music can be infinitely complex -- just like life itself. For example, five part fugues by Bach, or Renaissance pieces for two choruses, organ and orchestra. Music is perfectly orderly and mathematical, yet it is the most perfect means of soul expression ever invented. One might say, "Aha! Then mathematics is the real ultimate reality." Perhaps, but you stick to your numbers and I'll keep my guitar and CD player, and we'll see who is more emotionally fulfilled. Sound is primordial, according to the ancient Hindus. The Universe was sung into being. All the other senses derive from sound. Even books and philosophy and religion are nothing but frozen sound. Name and form -- there is a word in Sanskrit: Namarupa. It means name and form. The idea is that the true name of an object (in Sanskrit) has the same vibrations as the object itself. That implies that just saying the name of a thing will give you the essential energy of the thing itself. Applying this to instrumental music, I have come up with the idea that each note creates a "thing" in the subtle worlds. Therefore, a well composed piece of music is actually a whole small universe unto itself. Perhaps this means that to create music, or even just to play good music, takes us closer the Creator than, perhaps, any other activity, as we become creators (or, if playing someone else's music, "re- creators") ourselves. Herein, perhaps, lies the profundity, the joy, and the uplifting quality that music brings. Concerning music and astrology, both are mathematical and rhythmical. There are seven true planets in traditional astrology and there are seven notes to the scale. There are twelve signs of the zodiac and there are twelve notes to the chromatic scale. Each planet, and each note, has its own unique flavor, its own special color that musicians can taste and see. The laws of physics and the rules of musical composition seem to suggest each other to the wise. To me, astrology is the music of the spheres -- but one must have the ears of spirit open to hear it. Thanks to my spiritual teachers for inspiration. Thanks to music for a taste of reality. The Path into Shastra Part II: Beginnings And Endings ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ By Deborah Allison Notes: Part I appeared in the October/November 2006 issue of Michael Laughrin's North American Jyotish Newsletter. It is archived online at the Jyotish_ws group. The charts for this aricle are posted at http://www.jyotish.ws/materials Every good orator, lecturer, lawyer, author, composer and teacher knows: You have to start with impact and end with impact. If you are really good at your craft, you also know that what you say or write or compose must have internal consistency. You cannot contradict what you have stated at the beginning or end. A good example of this principle comes from the world of music. Almost everyone is familiar with Beethoven's fifth symphony and its powerful but unsettling opening notes. This opening motif is written in C-Minor, creating the "storm clouds" that give the composition its emotional impact. Everything that follows is magnificently woven into and integrated with that opening theme. It is a masterpiece with no note out of place -- everything belongs and works together. The pure genius is reflected even more in the ending. Beethoven resolves the whole angst of the work when he modulates the key to C-Major. It is as if the storm clouds have parted and the human hope and spirit triumphs having garnered wisdom from the journey. The first golden key to understanding not just Jyotish shastra (precepts and principles) but of all the works in the Vedic tradition is exactly the above principle. Shastra will state something at the beginning of the work or a chapter or a group of verses, and that statement should cause the alert reader to sit up and take notice. It is the signal that this is a seminal idea that carries great weight. The same careful observance should be given to the ending statement. Those who scan through a chapter or book and never get to the close will likely miss the emphasis and priority the sage who authored the work intends. It is important to remember that shastra is written in Sanskrit and in a script that does not have italics, underlining, capitalization etc. Emphasis had to be created in other ways. If we are not "initiated" into the ways emphasis is structured in shastra, we are impoverished in our ability to understand and utilize it properly. Unfortunately, this is often the state of Vedic Astrology as it is practiced in the West. (See Part I: Understanding Shastra from the October/November 2006 issue). All too often, the importance of the root principles as signaled by the golden keys of understanding the structure of shastra is not reflected in the interpretations of the charts. A couple of examples will be helpful to clarify this idea. All shastra in the Jyotish tradition opens with an invocation. The deity may vary but an acknowledgment of the divine source is invariably there at the outset. If we check out the end of these works, we also find the same. This is a flat out statement that Jyotish is a divine subject whose purpose is to help relieve human suffering. Anyone who states that Vedic Astrology is simply "mundane" or just "predictive" misses the boat entirely. Understanding what is a priority principle or idea, as indicated by its placement at the beginning or end of a work or section, is critical to proper chart interpretation. In Brihat Parashara Hora Shastra, a work that is considered to be the root material for Jyotish, the sage gives us the names of the planets following the brief opening two chapters on the origin and cosmology of the world. As soon as Parashara states their names, he immediately gives a shloka defining which ones are the natural benefics and which are the natural malefics. In "modern" Jyotish, it has become the trend to emphasize a concept known as functional benefics and functional malefics. A particular planet is categorized as benefic or malefic not based on its inherent nature but rather based on the particular rising sign or constellation under consideration. Where does Parashara explain this concept of functional benefics and malefics? Depending on what edition of this work one owns, it is somewhere around chapter 34! Without knowing this first golden key, a Jyotishi could be haphazard about what they primarily use as a benefic or malefic in chart interpretation. Unfortunately, that is the case not only in the chart readings but in the books and teachings by primarily Western Jyotishis who do not have direct access to the oral tradition and Sanskrit. A concrete chart example of the difference this could make in an interpretation should drive the importance of this principle home. Here is the chart of Christopher Reeve, the muscular actor who played Superman in his 20's, and died in a weakened condition a few years after a spinal injury in his 40's - Chart D1: http://www.jyotish.ws/materials . Note the beautiful Venus in his fourth house which is in its own rashi of Libra and also has directional strength (dig bala). It is forming a powerful Malavya Yoga (beauty, arts, wealth, refinement) as well as Raja and Dhana yogas (fame and wealth). In the classification of natural benefics and natural malefics, Venus is a first rate benefic. However, if you consult chapter 34, you will see that Venus is a malefic for a Cancer ascendant. If you prioritize incorrectly, you have no way to explain salient features of his life. It was in his Venus dasha that he rose to dizzying heights of fame through his Superman movies and made his fortune. He was born in a wealthy family with a society mother who was beautiful and was herself well versed in the arts. Furthermore, he had an excellent education at private schools, Cornell University and Julliard -- all shown by the beautiful placement of Venus in his chart. If we consider the chart of Carl Orff (Chart D2: http://www.jyotish.ws/materials and also featured in another article in this issue of Michael Laughrin's North American Jyotish Newsletter), we find a very powerful Mercury in the ascendant with the Sun and a powerful Jupiter. Consulting Parashara, we find that Jupiter is the best of the natural benefics. Mercury is also a natural benefic in this chart as per Parashara's definition and when a strong Jupiter influences Mercury, it elevates its benefic tendencies. However, if we consult chapter 34, we find that the only auspicious graha for a Gemini ascendant is Venus! Moreover, Jupiter, which powerfully influences the ascendant and ascendant lord, is regarded as a malefic. How can this account for a man who is famed for his music teaching (Jupiter) methods that have influenced countless children (Jupiter) all over the world? He has written and published music and books (Jupiter, Mercury). How can this account for his brilliant career (Jupiter) and the fact that he lived to 87 years old with such a "malefic" Jupiter in his ascendant? Clearly there is a gold mine of information about how to prioritize the material in shastra that one can glean from using this first of the six keys for understanding shastra. Watch for the others in newsletters to come. Contact Information ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ email: michael (AT) jyotish (DOT) ws business phone: (440) 582-9848; cell phone: (440) 263-2159 web: http://www.jyotish.ws ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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