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Therese,

There are some of us western siderealists who

cohabit with houses every hour of every day.

D*S

 

-

Therese Hamilton wrote:

 

> Actually many of the Tropoical house meanings are rejected by sidereal

> astrologers. And Jyotish astrologers have some house meanings that aren't

> used in the west. The whole house situation is wide open to controversy as

> we learn more about how astrology works.

>

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Many thanks, Therese - that's interesting, and it would make sense that

Tropical and Sidereal meanings are actually different. Thanks also for

offering to have a look at my Saturn and Jupiter - I'd certainly appreciate

any observations you have :)

 

Chris.

 

 

 

 

On Sunday, November 16, 2003 7:21 AM ,

Therese Hamilton wrote:

 

> Hi Chris,

>

> Actually many of the Tropoical house meanings are rejected by sidereal

> astrologers. And Jyotish astrologers have some house meanings that

> aren't used in the west. The whole house situation is wide open to

> controversy as we learn more about how astrology works.

>

> One of the concepts that I think works the best is that houses in

> trine to the ascendant are 'good' houses while those in adverse

> numerical relationship--the 6th and 8th for example, tend to bring

> more unpleasant results. I'm going to try to find time to set up your

> chart tomorrow to check the positions of Jupiter and Saturn. You're

> right--Jupiter should bring the best results according to sidereal

> tenets unless it's badly placed while Saturn is well placed. That

> would be a Jyotish idea rather than a western sidereal one--the good

> and bad placement of planets in relation to the ascendant.

>

> The western sidereal system isn't very strong on natal astrology. The

> emphasis is on solar and lunar return charts. On the other hand,

> Jyotish is extremely strong natally while being much weaker on the

> varshaphal (solar return) chart.

>

> Therese

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At 11:46 PM 11/15/03 -0800, Dark*Star wrote:

 

>There are some of us western siderealists who

>cohabit with houses every hour of every day.

>D*S

 

 

Hi...

 

I didn't know that you were primarily a western siderealist! Then how about

giving us your understanding of houses? Briefly, how do you interpret each

house? Do you use the Campanus system to mark off the houses?

 

The most important question is, " How do you use the houses in natal

astrology? "

 

Since there is no current western sidereal publication that I know of,

there's no way for most of us to know what is going on in the sidereal

community--except maybe this list and one or two others. If there's another

sidereal discussion list, can you give us the URL?

 

Thanks,

Therese

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Hi Therese,

 

That is interesting what you wrote. Why isn't the western sidereal

system very strong on natal astrology? Is it for historical reasons,

since I believe Cyril Fagan started looking at the sidereal zodiac

because he could not explain his observations with solar return

charts? And would that imply that if one is interested mostly on

natal astrology, especially the psychological side of it, one should

stick to tropical Astrology (because Jyotish, as far as I read, is

not very psychological)?

 

António

 

-----

 

> The western sidereal system isn't very strong on natal astrology.

The

> emphasis is on solar and lunar return charts. On the other hand,

Jyotish

> is extremely strong natally while being much weaker on the

varshaphal

> (solar return) chart.

>

> Therese

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At 11:25 PM 11/16/03 -0000, Antonio wrote:

>Hi Therese,

>

>That is interesting what you wrote. Why isn't the western sidereal

>system very strong on natal astrology? Is it for historical reasons,

>since I believe Cyril Fagan started looking at the sidereal zodiac

>because he could not explain his observations with solar return

>charts?

 

Yes, it was the timing hits of the sidereal return charts that convinced

Cyril Fagan of the validity of the sidereal zodiac--that and the results of

his personal research into ancient history. (I'm not an expert in this

area, so if I'm missing something here, I hope that a sidereal astrologer

on this list will correct me.)

 

>And would that imply that if one is interested mostly on

>natal astrology, especially the psychological side of it, one should

>stick to tropical Astrology (because Jyotish, as far as I read, is

>not very psychological)?

 

Although the Tropical astrologers continue to pin all kinds of

psychological interpretation on the signs, almost all psychology is

connected to the PLANETS. This was shown with massive evidence by the

Gauquelins. Also, Jyotish has improved a lot in the area of psychology, now

giving much more emphasis to the planets as psychological indicators. I've

seen this in several Jyotish workshops by professionals in the field.

 

The main problem with Tropical signs is that the planetary symbolism is

very confused. Much of the Tropical sign interpretation is linked to the

wrong planets, which then gives us an incorrect understanding of those

planets--such as the Moon supposedly having to do with nurturing or the Sun

supposedly having to do with the need for attention.

 

Also, if an astrologer uses HOUSE RULERS, then these will be incorrect in

the Tropical system.

 

I don't know why natal interpretaion was never really developed in the

western sidereal system. Maybe Fagan simply ran out of time? Or everyone

was so thrilled with timing events hits that natal astrology seemed

relatively uninteresting in comparison?

 

Therese

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Thanks a lot, Therese, this is really good information.

 

Cyril Fagan was born in the town where I now live (Dublin, Ireland),

so that leaves me a bit curious about him. Do you know of any web

site that has Cyril's biography?

 

António

 

 

, Therese Hamilton

<eastwest@s...> wrote:

> At 11:25 PM 11/16/03 -0000, Antonio wrote:

> >Hi Therese,

> >

> >That is interesting what you wrote. Why isn't the western sidereal

> >system very strong on natal astrology? Is it for historical

reasons,

> >since I believe Cyril Fagan started looking at the sidereal zodiac

> >because he could not explain his observations with solar return

> >charts?

>

> Yes, it was the timing hits of the sidereal return charts that

convinced

> Cyril Fagan of the validity of the sidereal zodiac--that and the

results of

> his personal research into ancient history. (I'm not an expert in

this

> area, so if I'm missing something here, I hope that a sidereal

astrologer

> on this list will correct me.)

>

> >And would that imply that if one is interested mostly on

> >natal astrology, especially the psychological side of it, one

should

> >stick to tropical Astrology (because Jyotish, as far as I read, is

> >not very psychological)?

>

> Although the Tropical astrologers continue to pin all kinds of

> psychological interpretation on the signs, almost all psychology is

> connected to the PLANETS. This was shown with massive evidence by

the

> Gauquelins. Also, Jyotish has improved a lot in the area of

psychology, now

> giving much more emphasis to the planets as psychological

indicators. I've

> seen this in several Jyotish workshops by professionals in the

field.

>

> The main problem with Tropical signs is that the planetary

symbolism is

> very confused. Much of the Tropical sign interpretation is linked

to the

> wrong planets, which then gives us an incorrect understanding of

those

> planets--such as the Moon supposedly having to do with nurturing or

the Sun

> supposedly having to do with the need for attention.

>

> Also, if an astrologer uses HOUSE RULERS, then these will be

incorrect in

> the Tropical system.

>

> I don't know why natal interpretaion was never really developed in

the

> western sidereal system. Maybe Fagan simply ran out of time? Or

everyone

> was so thrilled with timing events hits that natal astrology seemed

> relatively uninteresting in comparison?

>

> Therese

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At 04:44 PM 11/17/03 -0000, Antonio wrote:

>Thanks a lot, Therese, this is really good information.

 

Thanks, Antonio. My Mercury is good at collecting and dispersing

information, but I'm not so good at prediction.

 

>Cyril Fagan was born in the town where I now live (Dublin, Ireland),

>so that leaves me a bit curious about him. Do you know of any web

>site that has Cyril's biography?

 

Oh, very interesting!! I know there are a couple of sites that do have his

biographical information. If typing his name into a search engine doesn't

work, let us know. Someone should have the URLs for the sites. I have some

printed information from web sites, but right now I don't know where it is.

I'm in the midst of sorting tons of papers.

 

Therese

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Antonio,

 

The guy who knows more about Cyril Fagan than anyone on the planet is the

tropical astrologer Bill Sheeran in Dublin. Address your post to:

bsheeran

 

I think you will be pleasantly surprised.

 

Dark*Star

 

-

António wrote:

 

>

> Cyril Fagan was born in the town where I now live (Dublin, Ireland),

> so that leaves me a bit curious about him. Do you know of any web

> site that has Cyril's biography?

>

> António

>

> , Therese Hamilton

> <eastwest@s...> wrote:

> > At 11:25 PM 11/16/03 -0000, Antonio wrote:

> > >Hi Therese,

> > >

> > >That is interesting what you wrote. Why isn't the western sidereal

> > >system very strong on natal astrology? Is it for historical

> reasons,

> > >since I believe Cyril Fagan started looking at the sidereal zodiac

> > >because he could not explain his observations with solar return

> > >charts?

> >

> > Yes, it was the timing hits of the sidereal return charts that

> convinced

> > Cyril Fagan of the validity of the sidereal zodiac--that and the

> results of

> > his personal research into ancient history. (I'm not an expert in

> this

> > area, so if I'm missing something here, I hope that a sidereal

> astrologer

> > on this list will correct me.)

> >

> > >And would that imply that if one is interested mostly on

> > >natal astrology, especially the psychological side of it, one

> should

> > >stick to tropical Astrology (because Jyotish, as far as I read, is

> > >not very psychological)?

> >

> > Although the Tropical astrologers continue to pin all kinds of

> > psychological interpretation on the signs, almost all psychology is

> > connected to the PLANETS. This was shown with massive evidence by

> the

> > Gauquelins. Also, Jyotish has improved a lot in the area of

> psychology, now

> > giving much more emphasis to the planets as psychological

> indicators. I've

> > seen this in several Jyotish workshops by professionals in the

> field.

> >

> > The main problem with Tropical signs is that the planetary

> symbolism is

> > very confused. Much of the Tropical sign interpretation is linked

> to the

> > wrong planets, which then gives us an incorrect understanding of

> those

> > planets--such as the Moon supposedly having to do with nurturing or

> the Sun

> > supposedly having to do with the need for attention.

> >

> > Also, if an astrologer uses HOUSE RULERS, then these will be

> incorrect in

> > the Tropical system.

> >

> > I don't know why natal interpretaion was never really developed in

> the

> > western sidereal system. Maybe Fagan simply ran out of time? Or

> everyone

> > was so thrilled with timing events hits that natal astrology seemed

> > relatively uninteresting in comparison?

> >

> > Therese

>

>

> " How can Pluto be in Sagittarius when it's so close to Antares? " -----

>

> Post message:

> Subscribe: -

> Un: -

> List owner: -owner

>

> Shortcut URL to this page:

> /

>

>

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  • 4 years later...
Guest guest

Hi Felicia and welcome to the group,

 

you wrote:

 

> While on this subject, Mr. Houck insisted that only the sidereal equal

> house system works accurately for predictive purposes. From reading your

> comments so far, it seems that you would agree. Have you tried other house

> systems and what were your experiences with them?

 

Sari:

 

Houses are something that have interested me a lot lately. I've tried almost

all the systems over the years (I started to study astrology in 1983) and

because I live in Finland on high latitudes, the house system decides a lot.

Most professional astrologers here (I'm not a professional) use Placidus,

though it becomes the more impractical the more north you are. I know one

professional who uses tropical whole sign houses, one who uses topocentric

houses, and one of the most knowledgeable non-professionals here uses

meridian houses (that's probably the strangest house system I know IMO).

 

I got interested in whole sign houses in early 2005, and that (googling

" whole sign houses " ) in fact was the thing that led me to the Skyscript site

by Deborah Houlding, and that in turn led me to get interested in

traditional Western astrology. Later that year I found sidereal astrology

and started to study jyotish, where whole sign houses are the default houses

system. Note that this is not the same than equal houses, where the first

house begins from the ascendant, but with whole sign houses the ascending

sign in it's entirety is the 1st house (even when you have the last degree

of it rising), the following sign is the 2nd house and so on.

 

I have AstroDatabank database and I love to do studies with it; one study

that I've made is to study charts that have a lot of planets in a given

house - do the biographies/lives of those chart owners have any common

features? They do, though it's always not very striking. Now, one could

think that the house system that gives the clearest differences between

different houses, would be the one working best. I've compared quadrant

systems (defined by both the Asc/DC and MC/IC axis) with whole signs and it

seems that whole signs show the results better. But lately I've studied the

house system Therese uses, Vehlow houses or " Asc in 1st " houses, as Solar

Fire calls them, where you use equal houses, but the house doesn't start

from the cusp but spreads 15 degrees to the both sides of it so that the

cusp is in the middle. This is the house system eminent Indian astrologer

B.V Raman preferred. So far it seems to be that Vehlow houses give the

clearest results in this kind of study.

 

The houses do count and they have a meaning, but it seems that it's not

always what modern tropical astrology tells us. The " astrological alphabet "

philosophy (Aries = Mars = 1st house; Taurus = Venus = 2nd house and so on)

has done a lot of damage to the house meanings by telling us that for

example the 4th house would be the same than (tropical) Cancer or the Moon:

so it should be about soft things like mother, emotions, inner world and so

on. But those are not the things that get mentioned in the traditional

(Western) texts about the 4th house; in them, the 4th house is about father,

real estate, land, structures, undergound things (foundations, pipe systems

etc.) When you study charts with a lot of emphasis on the 4th house, you'll

find people whose lives have to do with organisations, politics, law and

business - structures, security, foundations, quite hard and masculine

themes. In that sense one might think that the 4th house is more about

father than mother.

 

Best, Sari

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Guest guest

At 09:32 AM 3/16/08 +0200, Sari wrote:

>

>(...)Houses are something that have interested me a lot lately. I've tried

almost

>all the systems over the years (I started to study astrology in 1983) and

>because I live in Finland on high latitudes, the house system decides a

lot...

 

Hi Sari,

 

Thanks so much for adding your experience to this discussion. Well, I see

you as a professional. 'Professional' doesn't mean we must have clients

since there is so much to study and re-learn these days. On the other hand,

we are all students, and will always be students where astrology is

concerned. I know you spend a tremendous amount of time on research studies

with hundreds (thousands?) of charts. In my mind that's 'professional.'

 

The NCGR Certification Program now has a Research category for professionals.

 

Re: the 4th house, Hellenistic and later astrology always gave the 4th to

both parents since they are our foundation in life. Even Lilly (CHRISTIAN

ASTROLOGY, 1647) gave the 4th to the father. This is why Deobrah Houlding's

book is so valuable. She includes the newer findings from the recent

translations of ancient texts.

 

I found it very interesting--the variety of house systems used by Finnish

astrologers!

 

Therese

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Guest guest

Hi Sari,

 

Thank you for sharing your insight and experience with the houses. It doesn't

make it any easier for me to pick one...yet :-) , but it does give me a much

broader understanding of the applicability of the different house systems.

 

I suppose in due time, I will be able to pick a house system that will give me

the most confidence in my chart interpretation, but for now, I'll just keep on

talking to knowledgeable folks like yourself.

 

Thanks again for sharing!

Felicia

 

Sari M <gerdapp wrote:

Hi Felicia and welcome to the group,

 

you wrote:

 

> While on this subject, Mr. Houck insisted that only the sidereal equal

> house system works accurately for predictive purposes. From reading your

> comments so far, it seems that you would agree. Have you tried other house

> systems and what were your experiences with them?

 

Sari:

 

Houses are something that have interested me a lot lately. I've tried almost

all the systems over the years (I started to study astrology in 1983) and

because I live in Finland on high latitudes, the house system decides a lot.

Most professional astrologers here (I'm not a professional) use Placidus,

though it becomes the more impractical the more north you are. I know one

professional who uses tropical whole sign houses, one who uses topocentric

houses, and one of the most knowledgeable non-professionals here uses

meridian houses (that's probably the strangest house system I know IMO).

 

I got interested in whole sign houses in early 2005, and that (googling

" whole sign houses " ) in fact was the thing that led me to the Skyscript site

by Deborah Houlding, and that in turn led me to get interested in

traditional Western astrology. Later that year I found sidereal astrology

and started to study jyotish, where whole sign houses are the default houses

system. Note that this is not the same than equal houses, where the first

house begins from the ascendant, but with whole sign houses the ascending

sign in it's entirety is the 1st house (even when you have the last degree

of it rising), the following sign is the 2nd house and so on.

 

I have AstroDatabank database and I love to do studies with it; one study

that I've made is to study charts that have a lot of planets in a given

house - do the biographies/lives of those chart owners have any common

features? They do, though it's always not very striking. Now, one could

think that the house system that gives the clearest differences between

different houses, would be the one working best. I've compared quadrant

systems (defined by both the Asc/DC and MC/IC axis) with whole signs and it

seems that whole signs show the results better. But lately I've studied the

house system Therese uses, Vehlow houses or " Asc in 1st " houses, as Solar

Fire calls them, where you use equal houses, but the house doesn't start

from the cusp but spreads 15 degrees to the both sides of it so that the

cusp is in the middle. This is the house system eminent Indian astrologer

B.V Raman preferred. So far it seems to be that Vehlow houses give the

clearest results in this kind of study.

 

The houses do count and they have a meaning, but it seems that it's not

always what modern tropical astrology tells us. The " astrological alphabet "

philosophy (Aries = Mars = 1st house; Taurus = Venus = 2nd house and so on)

has done a lot of damage to the house meanings by telling us that for

example the 4th house would be the same than (tropical) Cancer or the Moon:

so it should be about soft things like mother, emotions, inner world and so

on. But those are not the things that get mentioned in the traditional

(Western) texts about the 4th house; in them, the 4th house is about father,

real estate, land, structures, undergound things (foundations, pipe systems

etc.) When you study charts with a lot of emphasis on the 4th house, you'll

find people whose lives have to do with organisations, politics, law and

business - structures, security, foundations, quite hard and masculine

themes. In that sense one might think that the 4th house is more about

father than mother.

 

Best, Sari

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Guest guest

>Re: the 4th house, Hellenistic and later astrology always gave the 4th to

both parents since they are our foundation in life. Even Lilly (CHRISTIAN

ASTROLOGY, 1647) gave the 4th to the father

 

Therese,

I've read that the 4th can be attributed to both parents as well, but the same

can be said about the 10th. This is what I find confusing sometimes. Do you

attribute the 10th house to either parent?

 

Felicia

 

Therese Hamilton <eastwest wrote:

At 09:32 AM 3/16/08 +0200, Sari wrote:

>

>(...)Houses are something that have interested me a lot lately. I've tried

almost

>all the systems over the years (I started to study astrology in 1983) and

>because I live in Finland on high latitudes, the house system decides a

lot...

 

Hi Sari,

 

Thanks so much for adding your experience to this discussion. Well, I see

you as a professional. 'Professional' doesn't mean we must have clients

since there is so much to study and re-learn these days. On the other hand,

we are all students, and will always be students where astrology is

concerned. I know you spend a tremendous amount of time on research studies

with hundreds (thousands?) of charts. In my mind that's 'professional.'

 

The NCGR Certification Program now has a Research category for professionals.

 

Re: the 4th house, Hellenistic and later astrology always gave the 4th to

both parents since they are our foundation in life. Even Lilly (CHRISTIAN

ASTROLOGY, 1647) gave the 4th to the father. This is why Deobrah Houlding's

book is so valuable. She includes the newer findings from the recent

translations of ancient texts.

 

I found it very interesting--the variety of house systems used by Finnish

astrologers!

 

Therese

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Guest guest

Sari, Therese,

 

I tried casting my chart in sidereal equal houses and instead of an Aries Sun,

I now have to view myself as a Pisces. I now have to look at myself from a brand

new perspective.

 

With the Aries Sun, I thought I was supposed to be self-centered, impulsive,

simplistic and " courageous " , but now with the Pisces Sun, I have to be more

compassionate, idealistic, perhaps spiritual, and much more complex.

 

This will be interesting...

 

I also notice that the MC is no longer the cusp of the 10th house.

What does this mean?

 

Sari M <gerdapp wrote:

Hi Felicia and welcome to the group,

 

you wrote:

 

> While on this subject, Mr. Houck insisted that only the sidereal equal

> house system works accurately for predictive purposes. From reading your

> comments so far, it seems that you would agree. Have you tried other house

> systems and what were your experiences with them?

 

Sari:

 

Houses are something that have interested me a lot lately. I've tried almost

all the systems over the years (I started to study astrology in 1983) and

because I live in Finland on high latitudes, the house system decides a lot.

Most professional astrologers here (I'm not a professional) use Placidus,

though it becomes the more impractical the more north you are. I know one

professional who uses tropical whole sign houses, one who uses topocentric

houses, and one of the most knowledgeable non-professionals here uses

meridian houses (that's probably the strangest house system I know IMO).

 

I got interested in whole sign houses in early 2005, and that (googling

" whole sign houses " ) in fact was the thing that led me to the Skyscript site

by Deborah Houlding, and that in turn led me to get interested in

traditional Western astrology. Later that year I found sidereal astrology

and started to study jyotish, where whole sign houses are the default houses

system. Note that this is not the same than equal houses, where the first

house begins from the ascendant, but with whole sign houses the ascending

sign in it's entirety is the 1st house (even when you have the last degree

of it rising), the following sign is the 2nd house and so on.

 

I have AstroDatabank database and I love to do studies with it; one study

that I've made is to study charts that have a lot of planets in a given

house - do the biographies/lives of those chart owners have any common

features? They do, though it's always not very striking. Now, one could

think that the house system that gives the clearest differences between

different houses, would be the one working best. I've compared quadrant

systems (defined by both the Asc/DC and MC/IC axis) with whole signs and it

seems that whole signs show the results better. But lately I've studied the

house system Therese uses, Vehlow houses or " Asc in 1st " houses, as Solar

Fire calls them, where you use equal houses, but the house doesn't start

from the cusp but spreads 15 degrees to the both sides of it so that the

cusp is in the middle. This is the house system eminent Indian astrologer

B.V Raman preferred. So far it seems to be that Vehlow houses give the

clearest results in this kind of study.

 

The houses do count and they have a meaning, but it seems that it's not

always what modern tropical astrology tells us. The " astrological alphabet "

philosophy (Aries = Mars = 1st house; Taurus = Venus = 2nd house and so on)

has done a lot of damage to the house meanings by telling us that for

example the 4th house would be the same than (tropical) Cancer or the Moon:

so it should be about soft things like mother, emotions, inner world and so

on. But those are not the things that get mentioned in the traditional

(Western) texts about the 4th house; in them, the 4th house is about father,

real estate, land, structures, undergound things (foundations, pipe systems

etc.) When you study charts with a lot of emphasis on the 4th house, you'll

find people whose lives have to do with organisations, politics, law and

business - structures, security, foundations, quite hard and masculine

themes. In that sense one might think that the 4th house is more about

father than mother.

 

Best, Sari

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Guest guest

Hi Felicia,

 

Welcome to the wacky world of sidereal astrology.

 

I just wanted to mention that from the Jyotish side of things, the sign

the Sun is in isn't actually as important for determining personality as

in Western astrology. The Moon and Ascendant are much more important in

that respect.

 

The MC is still important in as a sensitive point that is associated

with the 10th house, but if you use the whole sign house system, then it

becomes a sort of second order 10th house cusp. Like many astrologers,

I've played around with several different house systems and find there

is something to all of them. But for convenience sake, I use a

combination of the whole sign house system with equal house cusps and

then use the unequal cusps (including the MC) as calculated by Placidus

and Porphyry as extra points to look at. But that only happens when I

have the time. :-)

 

Best,

Chris

 

 

Felicia Hong wrote:

>

> Sari, Therese,

>

> I tried casting my chart in sidereal equal houses and instead of an

> Aries Sun, I now have to view myself as a Pisces. I now have to look

> at myself from a brand new perspective.

>

> With the Aries Sun, I thought I was supposed to be self-centered,

> impulsive, simplistic and " courageous " , but now with the Pisces Sun, I

> have to be more compassionate, idealistic, perhaps spiritual, and much

> more complex.

>

> This will be interesting...

>

> I also notice that the MC is no longer the cusp of the 10th house.

> What does this mean?

>

> Sari M <gerdapp <gerdapp%40welho.com>> wrote:

> Hi Felicia and welcome to the group,

>

> you wrote:

>

> > While on this subject, Mr. Houck insisted that only the sidereal equal

> > house system works accurately for predictive purposes. From reading

> your

> > comments so far, it seems that you would agree. Have you tried other

> house

> > systems and what were your experiences with them?

>

> Sari:

>

> Houses are something that have interested me a lot lately. I've tried

> almost

> all the systems over the years (I started to study astrology in 1983) and

> because I live in Finland on high latitudes, the house system decides

> a lot.

> Most professional astrologers here (I'm not a professional) use Placidus,

> though it becomes the more impractical the more north you are. I know one

> professional who uses tropical whole sign houses, one who uses

> topocentric

> houses, and one of the most knowledgeable non-professionals here uses

> meridian houses (that's probably the strangest house system I know IMO).

>

> I got interested in whole sign houses in early 2005, and that (googling

> " whole sign houses " ) in fact was the thing that led me to the

> Skyscript site

> by Deborah Houlding, and that in turn led me to get interested in

> traditional Western astrology. Later that year I found sidereal astrology

> and started to study jyotish, where whole sign houses are the default

> houses

> system. Note that this is not the same than equal houses, where the first

> house begins from the ascendant, but with whole sign houses the ascending

> sign in it's entirety is the 1st house (even when you have the last

> degree

> of it rising), the following sign is the 2nd house and so on.

>

> I have AstroDatabank database and I love to do studies with it; one study

> that I've made is to study charts that have a lot of planets in a given

> house - do the biographies/lives of those chart owners have any common

> features? They do, though it's always not very striking. Now, one could

> think that the house system that gives the clearest differences between

> different houses, would be the one working best. I've compared quadrant

> systems (defined by both the Asc/DC and MC/IC axis) with whole signs

> and it

> seems that whole signs show the results better. But lately I've

> studied the

> house system Therese uses, Vehlow houses or " Asc in 1st " houses, as Solar

> Fire calls them, where you use equal houses, but the house doesn't start

> from the cusp but spreads 15 degrees to the both sides of it so that the

> cusp is in the middle. This is the house system eminent Indian astrologer

> B.V Raman preferred. So far it seems to be that Vehlow houses give the

> clearest results in this kind of study.

>

> The houses do count and they have a meaning, but it seems that it's not

> always what modern tropical astrology tells us. The " astrological

> alphabet "

> philosophy (Aries = Mars = 1st house; Taurus = Venus = 2nd house and

> so on)

> has done a lot of damage to the house meanings by telling us that for

> example the 4th house would be the same than (tropical) Cancer or the

> Moon:

> so it should be about soft things like mother, emotions, inner world

> and so

> on. But those are not the things that get mentioned in the traditional

> (Western) texts about the 4th house; in them, the 4th house is about

> father,

> real estate, land, structures, undergound things (foundations, pipe

> systems

> etc.) When you study charts with a lot of emphasis on the 4th house,

> you'll

> find people whose lives have to do with organisations, politics, law and

> business - structures, security, foundations, quite hard and masculine

> themes. In that sense one might think that the 4th house is more about

> father than mother.

>

> Best, Sari

>

>

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At 12:32 PM 3/16/08 -0700, Felicia wrote:

> Therese,

> I've read that the 4th can be attributed to both parents as well, but

the same can be said about the 10th. This is what I find confusing

sometimes. Do you attribute the 10th house to either parent?

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

I'm kind of out to lunch on the parents. It may be that the lots say more

about the parents than any other astrological factor--I mean the

Hellenistic Part of the Father and Part of the Mother. You look at the

sitution of the lot, and also the (sidereal) dispositors. No, I haven't

reserched this enough to have a set opinion.

 

Jyotish gives either the 9th or 10th to the father depending on north or

south India.

 

Therese

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At 01:08 PM 3/16/08 -0700, Felicia wrote:

>Sari, Therese,

>

> I tried casting my chart in sidereal equal houses and instead of an

Aries Sun, I now have to view myself as a Pisces. I now have to look at

myself from a brand new perspective.

 

No you don't have to look at yourself from a different perspective, only

with a different name. Any sign trait, if valid, doesn't change its place

on the ecliptic. Only the NAME changes. Please see my web site and read the

articles on the signs, esp. Parts 1,2 and 3.

http://users.snowcrest.net/sunrise/LostZodiac.htm

 

> I also notice that the MC is no longer the cusp of the 10th house.

> What does this mean?

 

It means that the MC is no longer the cusp of the 10th house! It means that

the zenith point (90 degrees from the ascendant--the nonagesimal) is now

the 10th house cusp, and the rulerships follow.

 

If you want to post your data, probably some of us will take a look at it.

Or you can send it to me privately. I know Bettina would like to see your

data.

 

Therese

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Felicia...

 

 

No, no, no, no. A rose by any other name, etc. You have the same

characteristics you've always have. In sidereal astrology the tropical

Aries characteristics ARE the sidereal Pisces characteristics, pretty much.

Neptune, ruler of that sign has to do with adventure, expanding horizons,

blazing new trails, etc. It's not dreamy and idealistic, intuitive, and

other worldly. That's Uranus.

 

 

....Bettina

 

 

_____

 

 

On Behalf Of Felicia Hong

Sunday, March 16, 2008 1:08 PM

 

Re: Houses in astrology

 

 

 

Sari, Therese,

 

I tried casting my chart in sidereal equal houses and instead of an Aries

Sun, I now have to view myself as a Pisces. I now have to look at myself

from a brand new perspective.

 

With the Aries Sun, I thought I was supposed to be self-centered, impulsive,

simplistic and " courageous " , but now with the Pisces Sun, I have to be more

compassionate, idealistic, perhaps spiritual, and much more complex.

 

This will be interesting...

 

I also notice that the MC is no longer the cusp of the 10th house.

What does this mean?

 

Sari M <gerdapp (AT) welho (DOT) <gerdapp%40welho.com> com> wrote:

Hi Felicia and welcome to the group,

 

you wrote:

 

> While on this subject, Mr. Houck insisted that only the sidereal equal

> house system works accurately for predictive purposes. From reading your

> comments so far, it seems that you would agree. Have you tried other house

 

> systems and what were your experiences with them?

 

Sari:

 

Houses are something that have interested me a lot lately. I've tried almost

 

all the systems over the years (I started to study astrology in 1983) and

because I live in Finland on high latitudes, the house system decides a lot.

 

Most professional astrologers here (I'm not a professional) use Placidus,

though it becomes the more impractical the more north you are. I know one

professional who uses tropical whole sign houses, one who uses topocentric

houses, and one of the most knowledgeable non-professionals here uses

meridian houses (that's probably the strangest house system I know IMO).

 

I got interested in whole sign houses in early 2005, and that (googling

" whole sign houses " ) in fact was the thing that led me to the Skyscript site

 

by Deborah Houlding, and that in turn led me to get interested in

traditional Western astrology. Later that year I found sidereal astrology

and started to study jyotish, where whole sign houses are the default houses

 

system. Note that this is not the same than equal houses, where the first

house begins from the ascendant, but with whole sign houses the ascending

sign in it's entirety is the 1st house (even when you have the last degree

of it rising), the following sign is the 2nd house and so on.

 

I have AstroDatabank database and I love to do studies with it; one study

that I've made is to study charts that have a lot of planets in a given

house - do the biographies/lives of those chart owners have any common

features? They do, though it's always not very striking. Now, one could

think that the house system that gives the clearest differences between

different houses, would be the one working best. I've compared quadrant

systems (defined by both the Asc/DC and MC/IC axis) with whole signs and it

seems that whole signs show the results better. But lately I've studied the

house system Therese uses, Vehlow houses or " Asc in 1st " houses, as Solar

Fire calls them, where you use equal houses, but the house doesn't start

from the cusp but spreads 15 degrees to the both sides of it so that the

cusp is in the middle. This is the house system eminent Indian astrologer

B.V Raman preferred. So far it seems to be that Vehlow houses give the

clearest results in this kind of study.

 

The houses do count and they have a meaning, but it seems that it's not

always what modern tropical astrology tells us. The " astrological alphabet "

philosophy (Aries = Mars = 1st house; Taurus = Venus = 2nd house and so on)

has done a lot of damage to the house meanings by telling us that for

example the 4th house would be the same than (tropical) Cancer or the Moon:

so it should be about soft things like mother, emotions, inner world and so

on. But those are not the things that get mentioned in the traditional

(Western) texts about the 4th house; in them, the 4th house is about father,

 

real estate, land, structures, undergound things (foundations, pipe systems

etc.) When you study charts with a lot of emphasis on the 4th house, you'll

find people whose lives have to do with organisations, politics, law and

business - structures, security, foundations, quite hard and masculine

themes. In that sense one might think that the 4th house is more about

father than mother.

 

Best, Sari

 

 

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Oh no...really, Bettina?

Sidereal Pisces characteristics are like tropical Aries characteristics?

 

It seems I have a lot to learn then!

 

Bettina <chiria wrote:

Felicia...

 

 

No, no, no, no. A rose by any other name, etc. You have the same

characteristics you've always have. In sidereal astrology the tropical

Aries characteristics ARE the sidereal Pisces characteristics, pretty much.

Neptune, ruler of that sign has to do with adventure, expanding horizons,

blazing new trails, etc. It's not dreamy and idealistic, intuitive, and

other worldly. That's Uranus.

 

 

....Bettina

 

 

_____

 

 

On Behalf Of Felicia Hong

Sunday, March 16, 2008 1:08 PM

 

Re: Houses in astrology

 

Sari, Therese,

 

I tried casting my chart in sidereal equal houses and instead of an Aries

Sun, I now have to view myself as a Pisces. I now have to look at myself

from a brand new perspective.

 

With the Aries Sun, I thought I was supposed to be self-centered, impulsive,

simplistic and " courageous " , but now with the Pisces Sun, I have to be more

compassionate, idealistic, perhaps spiritual, and much more complex.

 

This will be interesting...

 

I also notice that the MC is no longer the cusp of the 10th house.

What does this mean?

 

Sari M <gerdapp (AT) welho (DOT) <gerdapp%40welho.com> com> wrote:

Hi Felicia and welcome to the group,

 

you wrote:

 

> While on this subject, Mr. Houck insisted that only the sidereal equal

> house system works accurately for predictive purposes. From reading your

> comments so far, it seems that you would agree. Have you tried other house

 

> systems and what were your experiences with them?

 

Sari:

 

Houses are something that have interested me a lot lately. I've tried almost

 

all the systems over the years (I started to study astrology in 1983) and

because I live in Finland on high latitudes, the house system decides a lot.

 

Most professional astrologers here (I'm not a professional) use Placidus,

though it becomes the more impractical the more north you are. I know one

professional who uses tropical whole sign houses, one who uses topocentric

houses, and one of the most knowledgeable non-professionals here uses

meridian houses (that's probably the strangest house system I know IMO).

 

I got interested in whole sign houses in early 2005, and that (googling

" whole sign houses " ) in fact was the thing that led me to the Skyscript site

 

by Deborah Houlding, and that in turn led me to get interested in

traditional Western astrology. Later that year I found sidereal astrology

and started to study jyotish, where whole sign houses are the default houses

 

system. Note that this is not the same than equal houses, where the first

house begins from the ascendant, but with whole sign houses the ascending

sign in it's entirety is the 1st house (even when you have the last degree

of it rising), the following sign is the 2nd house and so on.

 

I have AstroDatabank database and I love to do studies with it; one study

that I've made is to study charts that have a lot of planets in a given

house - do the biographies/lives of those chart owners have any common

features? They do, though it's always not very striking. Now, one could

think that the house system that gives the clearest differences between

different houses, would be the one working best. I've compared quadrant

systems (defined by both the Asc/DC and MC/IC axis) with whole signs and it

seems that whole signs show the results better. But lately I've studied the

house system Therese uses, Vehlow houses or " Asc in 1st " houses, as Solar

Fire calls them, where you use equal houses, but the house doesn't start

from the cusp but spreads 15 degrees to the both sides of it so that the

cusp is in the middle. This is the house system eminent Indian astrologer

B.V Raman preferred. So far it seems to be that Vehlow houses give the

clearest results in this kind of study.

 

The houses do count and they have a meaning, but it seems that it's not

always what modern tropical astrology tells us. The " astrological alphabet "

philosophy (Aries = Mars = 1st house; Taurus = Venus = 2nd house and so on)

has done a lot of damage to the house meanings by telling us that for

example the 4th house would be the same than (tropical) Cancer or the Moon:

so it should be about soft things like mother, emotions, inner world and so

on. But those are not the things that get mentioned in the traditional

(Western) texts about the 4th house; in them, the 4th house is about father,

 

real estate, land, structures, undergound things (foundations, pipe systems

etc.) When you study charts with a lot of emphasis on the 4th house, you'll

find people whose lives have to do with organisations, politics, law and

business - structures, security, foundations, quite hard and masculine

themes. In that sense one might think that the 4th house is more about

father than mother.

 

Best, Sari

 

 

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Hi Therese,

 

If you and others would be willing to look at my data from the sidereal

perspective, that would be of great insight to me.

 

For one thing, even from the western astrology perspective, I can't seem to

see my chart clearly, even though my clients tell me that I do a great job

interpreting theirs. To me, my chart looks like a fog, or a web, and I can't see

the tree from the forest. I don't know what it is, but I find it very difficult

to draw any strong conclusion about my own chart, so in a sense, I haven't been

able to use astrology to help my own self much. Too much subjectivity I think.

 

The other thing is I have never had my chart read from the jyotish perspective

before, so I would be very interested in seeing how I look like from a jyotish

viewpoint. I know Bettina said I should still be the same person. However,

perhaps there are aspects of me that might have been hidden from the western

astrology lens??

 

So here it is... Here's who I am (such a Aries/Ram thing to say isn't it?):

Felicia Hong

Mar 21, 1964

Saigon, Vietnam

8:58PM

 

Thank you for any insight you would give me, especially anything that could

help me understand how I can best go about finding and maintaining my inner

peace...:-)

 

Therese Hamilton <eastwest wrote:

At 01:08 PM 3/16/08 -0700, Felicia wrote:

>Sari, Therese,

>

> I tried casting my chart in sidereal equal houses and instead of an

Aries Sun, I now have to view myself as a Pisces. I now have to look at

myself from a brand new perspective.

 

No you don't have to look at yourself from a different perspective, only

with a different name. Any sign trait, if valid, doesn't change its place

on the ecliptic. Only the NAME changes. Please see my web site and read the

articles on the signs, esp. Parts 1,2 and 3.

http://users.snowcrest.net/sunrise/LostZodiac.htm

 

> I also notice that the MC is no longer the cusp of the 10th house.

> What does this mean?

 

It means that the MC is no longer the cusp of the 10th house! It means that

the zenith point (90 degrees from the ascendant--the nonagesimal) is now

the 10th house cusp, and the rulerships follow.

 

If you want to post your data, probably some of us will take a look at it.

Or you can send it to me privately. I know Bettina would like to see your

data.

 

Therese

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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>But for convenience sake, I use a

combination of the whole sign house system

 

Hi Chris,

Wow, this sounds complicated. How do you that?

Does that mean you use a different house system for natal charts than ones for

predictive purposes such as solar return or progression charts? I often wonder

if that kind of mixing of the house systems would work.

 

Felicia

 

Christopher Kevill <christopher.kevill wrote:

Hi Felicia,

 

Welcome to the wacky world of sidereal astrology.

 

I just wanted to mention that from the Jyotish side of things, the sign

the Sun is in isn't actually as important for determining personality as

in Western astrology. The Moon and Ascendant are much more important in

that respect.

 

The MC is still important in as a sensitive point that is associated

with the 10th house, but if you use the whole sign house system, then it

becomes a sort of second order 10th house cusp. Like many astrologers,

I've played around with several different house systems and find there

is something to all of them. But for convenience sake, I use a

combination of the whole sign house system with equal house cusps and

then use the unequal cusps (including the MC) as calculated by Placidus

and Porphyry as extra points to look at. But that only happens when I

have the time. :-)

 

Best,

Chris

 

Felicia Hong wrote:

>

> Sari, Therese,

>

> I tried casting my chart in sidereal equal houses and instead of an

> Aries Sun, I now have to view myself as a Pisces. I now have to look

> at myself from a brand new perspective.

>

> With the Aries Sun, I thought I was supposed to be self-centered,

> impulsive, simplistic and " courageous " , but now with the Pisces Sun, I

> have to be more compassionate, idealistic, perhaps spiritual, and much

> more complex.

>

> This will be interesting...

>

> I also notice that the MC is no longer the cusp of the 10th house.

> What does this mean?

>

> Sari M <gerdapp <gerdapp%40welho.com>> wrote:

> Hi Felicia and welcome to the group,

>

> you wrote:

>

> > While on this subject, Mr. Houck insisted that only the sidereal equal

> > house system works accurately for predictive purposes. From reading

> your

> > comments so far, it seems that you would agree. Have you tried other

> house

> > systems and what were your experiences with them?

>

> Sari:

>

> Houses are something that have interested me a lot lately. I've tried

> almost

> all the systems over the years (I started to study astrology in 1983) and

> because I live in Finland on high latitudes, the house system decides

> a lot.

> Most professional astrologers here (I'm not a professional) use Placidus,

> though it becomes the more impractical the more north you are. I know one

> professional who uses tropical whole sign houses, one who uses

> topocentric

> houses, and one of the most knowledgeable non-professionals here uses

> meridian houses (that's probably the strangest house system I know IMO).

>

> I got interested in whole sign houses in early 2005, and that (googling

> " whole sign houses " ) in fact was the thing that led me to the

> Skyscript site

> by Deborah Houlding, and that in turn led me to get interested in

> traditional Western astrology. Later that year I found sidereal astrology

> and started to study jyotish, where whole sign houses are the default

> houses

> system. Note that this is not the same than equal houses, where the first

> house begins from the ascendant, but with whole sign houses the ascending

> sign in it's entirety is the 1st house (even when you have the last

> degree

> of it rising), the following sign is the 2nd house and so on.

>

> I have AstroDatabank database and I love to do studies with it; one study

> that I've made is to study charts that have a lot of planets in a given

> house - do the biographies/lives of those chart owners have any common

> features? They do, though it's always not very striking. Now, one could

> think that the house system that gives the clearest differences between

> different houses, would be the one working best. I've compared quadrant

> systems (defined by both the Asc/DC and MC/IC axis) with whole signs

> and it

> seems that whole signs show the results better. But lately I've

> studied the

> house system Therese uses, Vehlow houses or " Asc in 1st " houses, as Solar

> Fire calls them, where you use equal houses, but the house doesn't start

> from the cusp but spreads 15 degrees to the both sides of it so that the

> cusp is in the middle. This is the house system eminent Indian astrologer

> B.V Raman preferred. So far it seems to be that Vehlow houses give the

> clearest results in this kind of study.

>

> The houses do count and they have a meaning, but it seems that it's not

> always what modern tropical astrology tells us. The " astrological

> alphabet "

> philosophy (Aries = Mars = 1st house; Taurus = Venus = 2nd house and

> so on)

> has done a lot of damage to the house meanings by telling us that for

> example the 4th house would be the same than (tropical) Cancer or the

> Moon:

> so it should be about soft things like mother, emotions, inner world

> and so

> on. But those are not the things that get mentioned in the traditional

> (Western) texts about the 4th house; in them, the 4th house is about

> father,

> real estate, land, structures, undergound things (foundations, pipe

> systems

> etc.) When you study charts with a lot of emphasis on the 4th house,

> you'll

> find people whose lives have to do with organisations, politics, law and

> business - structures, security, foundations, quite hard and masculine

> themes. In that sense one might think that the 4th house is more about

> father than mother.

>

> Best, Sari

>

>

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Share on other sites

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>Also, there are a variety of opinions about sidereal sign attributes.

Most Jyotish astrologers (myself included) believe that a Sun in

sidereal Pisces confers standard Piscean traits (intuitive, sensitive,

emotional) to the personality along with the house its placed in and to

house of Leo.

 

Hi Chris,

 

When you say the house of Leo, do you mean the natural house of Leo, the 5th?

or the house that has Leo on its cusp? or both?

 

Libra-Gemini type...

Hmmm... I have always thought of my self as the Scorpio-Cancer type which from

my evolutionary astrology study I infer to mean deep, probing, committed,

obsessive, intuitive but moody and sensitive like a baby crab.

From the evolutionary astrology perspective, a Libra-Gemini type would make me

a harmony loving, relationship focused, but perhaps unassertive, indecisive

" intellectual gypsy " (label given by ex-husband :-)).

 

Is that close to the jyotish interpretation?

 

Felicia

 

Christopher Kevill <christopher.kevill wrote:

Hi Felicia,

 

No, I use pretty much the same system for all charts I look at. How

many I consult really depends more on how much time I have.

 

It's actually less complicated than you might think. All these house

cusps are just sensitive points that help us understand more about the

planets they are connected to. So if a planet is near the equal 8th

cusp (that's a bad one), then that is going to bring out more of the

negative side of the planet and the house, along with the houses the

planet rules. If a planet is, say far off the equal 8th cusp but close

to the Placidus 8th cusp, then I tend to look at that as also somewhat

problematic although less so than the equal cusp. So that's the

hierarchy I work with. In terms of displaying the actual charts, I use

Placidus or Porphyry, since I can read the equal cusps just by looking

at it.

 

I use the same approach for house placement. In your chart, your

Jupiter is in the whole sign 7th so that may say something about your

spouse. However, Jupiter is so far away from the cusp (20 degrees), it

may take on some 6th house qualities. So when making assessments of

Jupiter's qualities I would be more nuanced and sort of straddle both

houses if possible.

 

Also, there are a variety of opinions about sidereal sign attributes.

Most Jyotish astrologers (myself included) believe that a Sun in

sidereal Pisces confers standard Piscean traits (intuitive, sensitive,

emotional) to the personality along with the house its placed in and to

house of Leo. As I said, Moon and Ascendant are more important for

getting a basic read on people so you're more likely a Libra-Gemini type.

 

Chris

 

Felicia Hong wrote:

>

> >But for convenience sake, I use a

> combination of the whole sign house system

>

> Hi Chris,

> Wow, this sounds complicated. How do you that?

> Does that mean you use a different house system for natal charts than

> ones for predictive purposes such as solar return or progression

> charts? I often wonder if that kind of mixing of the house systems

> would work.

>

> Felicia

>

> Christopher Kevill <christopher.kevill

> <christopher.kevill%40utoronto.ca>> wrote:

> Hi Felicia,

>

> Welcome to the wacky world of sidereal astrology.

>

> I just wanted to mention that from the Jyotish side of things, the sign

> the Sun is in isn't actually as important for determining personality as

> in Western astrology. The Moon and Ascendant are much more important in

> that respect.

>

> The MC is still important in as a sensitive point that is associated

> with the 10th house, but if you use the whole sign house system, then it

> becomes a sort of second order 10th house cusp. Like many astrologers,

> I've played around with several different house systems and find there

> is something to all of them. But for convenience sake, I use a

> combination of the whole sign house system with equal house cusps and

> then use the unequal cusps (including the MC) as calculated by Placidus

> and Porphyry as extra points to look at. But that only happens when I

> have the time. :-)

>

> Best,

> Chris

>

> Felicia Hong wrote:

> >

> > Sari, Therese,

> >

> > I tried casting my chart in sidereal equal houses and instead of an

> > Aries Sun, I now have to view myself as a Pisces. I now have to look

> > at myself from a brand new perspective.

> >

> > With the Aries Sun, I thought I was supposed to be self-centered,

> > impulsive, simplistic and " courageous " , but now with the Pisces Sun, I

> > have to be more compassionate, idealistic, perhaps spiritual, and much

> > more complex.

> >

> > This will be interesting...

> >

> > I also notice that the MC is no longer the cusp of the 10th house.

> > What does this mean?

> >

> > Sari M <gerdapp <gerdapp%40welho.com>

> <gerdapp%40welho.com>> wrote:

> > Hi Felicia and welcome to the group,

> >

> > you wrote:

> >

> > > While on this subject, Mr. Houck insisted that only the sidereal equal

> > > house system works accurately for predictive purposes. From reading

> > your

> > > comments so far, it seems that you would agree. Have you tried other

> > house

> > > systems and what were your experiences with them?

> >

> > Sari:

> >

> > Houses are something that have interested me a lot lately. I've tried

> > almost

> > all the systems over the years (I started to study astrology in

> 1983) and

> > because I live in Finland on high latitudes, the house system decides

> > a lot.

> > Most professional astrologers here (I'm not a professional) use

> Placidus,

> > though it becomes the more impractical the more north you are. I

> know one

> > professional who uses tropical whole sign houses, one who uses

> > topocentric

> > houses, and one of the most knowledgeable non-professionals here uses

> > meridian houses (that's probably the strangest house system I know IMO).

> >

> > I got interested in whole sign houses in early 2005, and that (googling

> > " whole sign houses " ) in fact was the thing that led me to the

> > Skyscript site

> > by Deborah Houlding, and that in turn led me to get interested in

> > traditional Western astrology. Later that year I found sidereal

> astrology

> > and started to study jyotish, where whole sign houses are the default

> > houses

> > system. Note that this is not the same than equal houses, where the

> first

> > house begins from the ascendant, but with whole sign houses the

> ascending

> > sign in it's entirety is the 1st house (even when you have the last

> > degree

> > of it rising), the following sign is the 2nd house and so on.

> >

> > I have AstroDatabank database and I love to do studies with it; one

> study

> > that I've made is to study charts that have a lot of planets in a given

> > house - do the biographies/lives of those chart owners have any common

> > features? They do, though it's always not very striking. Now, one could

> > think that the house system that gives the clearest differences between

> > different houses, would be the one working best. I've compared quadrant

> > systems (defined by both the Asc/DC and MC/IC axis) with whole signs

> > and it

> > seems that whole signs show the results better. But lately I've

> > studied the

> > house system Therese uses, Vehlow houses or " Asc in 1st " houses, as

> Solar

> > Fire calls them, where you use equal houses, but the house doesn't start

> > from the cusp but spreads 15 degrees to the both sides of it so that the

> > cusp is in the middle. This is the house system eminent Indian

> astrologer

> > B.V Raman preferred. So far it seems to be that Vehlow houses give the

> > clearest results in this kind of study.

> >

> > The houses do count and they have a meaning, but it seems that it's not

> > always what modern tropical astrology tells us. The " astrological

> > alphabet "

> > philosophy (Aries = Mars = 1st house; Taurus = Venus = 2nd house and

> > so on)

> > has done a lot of damage to the house meanings by telling us that for

> > example the 4th house would be the same than (tropical) Cancer or the

> > Moon:

> > so it should be about soft things like mother, emotions, inner world

> > and so

> > on. But those are not the things that get mentioned in the traditional

> > (Western) texts about the 4th house; in them, the 4th house is about

> > father,

> > real estate, land, structures, undergound things (foundations, pipe

> > systems

> > etc.) When you study charts with a lot of emphasis on the 4th house,

> > you'll

> > find people whose lives have to do with organisations, politics, law and

> > business - structures, security, foundations, quite hard and masculine

> > themes. In that sense one might think that the 4th house is more about

> > father than mother.

> >

> > Best, Sari

> >

> >

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Hi Felicia,

 

No, I use pretty much the same system for all charts I look at. How

many I consult really depends more on how much time I have.

 

It's actually less complicated than you might think. All these house

cusps are just sensitive points that help us understand more about the

planets they are connected to. So if a planet is near the equal 8th

cusp (that's a bad one), then that is going to bring out more of the

negative side of the planet and the house, along with the houses the

planet rules. If a planet is, say far off the equal 8th cusp but close

to the Placidus 8th cusp, then I tend to look at that as also somewhat

problematic although less so than the equal cusp. So that's the

hierarchy I work with. In terms of displaying the actual charts, I use

Placidus or Porphyry, since I can read the equal cusps just by looking

at it.

 

I use the same approach for house placement. In your chart, your

Jupiter is in the whole sign 7th so that may say something about your

spouse. However, Jupiter is so far away from the cusp (20 degrees), it

may take on some 6th house qualities. So when making assessments of

Jupiter's qualities I would be more nuanced and sort of straddle both

houses if possible.

 

Also, there are a variety of opinions about sidereal sign attributes.

Most Jyotish astrologers (myself included) believe that a Sun in

sidereal Pisces confers standard Piscean traits (intuitive, sensitive,

emotional) to the personality along with the house its placed in and to

house of Leo. As I said, Moon and Ascendant are more important for

getting a basic read on people so you're more likely a Libra-Gemini type.

 

Chris

 

Felicia Hong wrote:

>

> >But for convenience sake, I use a

> combination of the whole sign house system

>

> Hi Chris,

> Wow, this sounds complicated. How do you that?

> Does that mean you use a different house system for natal charts than

> ones for predictive purposes such as solar return or progression

> charts? I often wonder if that kind of mixing of the house systems

> would work.

>

> Felicia

>

> Christopher Kevill <christopher.kevill

> <christopher.kevill%40utoronto.ca>> wrote:

> Hi Felicia,

>

> Welcome to the wacky world of sidereal astrology.

>

> I just wanted to mention that from the Jyotish side of things, the sign

> the Sun is in isn't actually as important for determining personality as

> in Western astrology. The Moon and Ascendant are much more important in

> that respect.

>

> The MC is still important in as a sensitive point that is associated

> with the 10th house, but if you use the whole sign house system, then it

> becomes a sort of second order 10th house cusp. Like many astrologers,

> I've played around with several different house systems and find there

> is something to all of them. But for convenience sake, I use a

> combination of the whole sign house system with equal house cusps and

> then use the unequal cusps (including the MC) as calculated by Placidus

> and Porphyry as extra points to look at. But that only happens when I

> have the time. :-)

>

> Best,

> Chris

>

> Felicia Hong wrote:

> >

> > Sari, Therese,

> >

> > I tried casting my chart in sidereal equal houses and instead of an

> > Aries Sun, I now have to view myself as a Pisces. I now have to look

> > at myself from a brand new perspective.

> >

> > With the Aries Sun, I thought I was supposed to be self-centered,

> > impulsive, simplistic and " courageous " , but now with the Pisces Sun, I

> > have to be more compassionate, idealistic, perhaps spiritual, and much

> > more complex.

> >

> > This will be interesting...

> >

> > I also notice that the MC is no longer the cusp of the 10th house.

> > What does this mean?

> >

> > Sari M <gerdapp <gerdapp%40welho.com>

> <gerdapp%40welho.com>> wrote:

> > Hi Felicia and welcome to the group,

> >

> > you wrote:

> >

> > > While on this subject, Mr. Houck insisted that only the sidereal equal

> > > house system works accurately for predictive purposes. From reading

> > your

> > > comments so far, it seems that you would agree. Have you tried other

> > house

> > > systems and what were your experiences with them?

> >

> > Sari:

> >

> > Houses are something that have interested me a lot lately. I've tried

> > almost

> > all the systems over the years (I started to study astrology in

> 1983) and

> > because I live in Finland on high latitudes, the house system decides

> > a lot.

> > Most professional astrologers here (I'm not a professional) use

> Placidus,

> > though it becomes the more impractical the more north you are. I

> know one

> > professional who uses tropical whole sign houses, one who uses

> > topocentric

> > houses, and one of the most knowledgeable non-professionals here uses

> > meridian houses (that's probably the strangest house system I know IMO).

> >

> > I got interested in whole sign houses in early 2005, and that (googling

> > " whole sign houses " ) in fact was the thing that led me to the

> > Skyscript site

> > by Deborah Houlding, and that in turn led me to get interested in

> > traditional Western astrology. Later that year I found sidereal

> astrology

> > and started to study jyotish, where whole sign houses are the default

> > houses

> > system. Note that this is not the same than equal houses, where the

> first

> > house begins from the ascendant, but with whole sign houses the

> ascending

> > sign in it's entirety is the 1st house (even when you have the last

> > degree

> > of it rising), the following sign is the 2nd house and so on.

> >

> > I have AstroDatabank database and I love to do studies with it; one

> study

> > that I've made is to study charts that have a lot of planets in a given

> > house - do the biographies/lives of those chart owners have any common

> > features? They do, though it's always not very striking. Now, one could

> > think that the house system that gives the clearest differences between

> > different houses, would be the one working best. I've compared quadrant

> > systems (defined by both the Asc/DC and MC/IC axis) with whole signs

> > and it

> > seems that whole signs show the results better. But lately I've

> > studied the

> > house system Therese uses, Vehlow houses or " Asc in 1st " houses, as

> Solar

> > Fire calls them, where you use equal houses, but the house doesn't start

> > from the cusp but spreads 15 degrees to the both sides of it so that the

> > cusp is in the middle. This is the house system eminent Indian

> astrologer

> > B.V Raman preferred. So far it seems to be that Vehlow houses give the

> > clearest results in this kind of study.

> >

> > The houses do count and they have a meaning, but it seems that it's not

> > always what modern tropical astrology tells us. The " astrological

> > alphabet "

> > philosophy (Aries = Mars = 1st house; Taurus = Venus = 2nd house and

> > so on)

> > has done a lot of damage to the house meanings by telling us that for

> > example the 4th house would be the same than (tropical) Cancer or the

> > Moon:

> > so it should be about soft things like mother, emotions, inner world

> > and so

> > on. But those are not the things that get mentioned in the traditional

> > (Western) texts about the 4th house; in them, the 4th house is about

> > father,

> > real estate, land, structures, undergound things (foundations, pipe

> > systems

> > etc.) When you study charts with a lot of emphasis on the 4th house,

> > you'll

> > find people whose lives have to do with organisations, politics, law and

> > business - structures, security, foundations, quite hard and masculine

> > themes. In that sense one might think that the 4th house is more about

> > father than mother.

> >

> > Best, Sari

> >

> >

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I mean Leo which in your chart is the 11th house. So perhaps Pisces

says something about your friends or how you earn money. Obviously not

too much because it's just one factor out of many, but that's how I

would approach it.

 

I would tend to side with your ex -- if I may. :-). The indecisive

Gemini side is confirmed by the conjunction of Rahu with your Moon. You

can be prone to think in unusual ways, or to be highly sensitive to

others, and sometimes maybe succumbing to false perceptions because of

an overactive imagination. Note that some of that description fits the

Scorp-Cancer profile. That's because the Rahu is with your Moon,

irrespective of the sign its in. Rahu has a certain Scorpionic/Pluto

flavour to it. Having Neptune on the Ascendant more or less reinforces

this more harmony-seeking , esoteric side to you. These factors tend

to predominate over any classic Libran traits imo.

 

Felicia Hong wrote:

>

> >Also, there are a variety of opinions about sidereal sign attributes.

> Most Jyotish astrologers (myself included) believe that a Sun in

> sidereal Pisces confers standard Piscean traits (intuitive, sensitive,

> emotional) to the personality along with the house its placed in and to

> house of Leo.

>

> Hi Chris,

>

> When you say the house of Leo, do you mean the natural house of Leo,

> the 5th? or the house that has Leo on its cusp? or both?

>

> Libra-Gemini type...

> Hmmm... I have always thought of my self as the Scorpio-Cancer type

> which from my evolutionary astrology study I infer to mean deep,

> probing, committed, obsessive, intuitive but moody and sensitive like

> a baby crab.

> From the evolutionary astrology perspective, a Libra-Gemini type would

> make me a harmony loving, relationship focused, but perhaps

> unassertive, indecisive " intellectual gypsy " (label given by

> ex-husband :-)).

>

> Is that close to the jyotish interpretation?

>

> Felicia

>

> Christopher Kevill <christopher.kevill

> <christopher.kevill%40utoronto.ca>> wrote:

> Hi Felicia,

>

> No, I use pretty much the same system for all charts I look at. How

> many I consult really depends more on how much time I have.

>

> It's actually less complicated than you might think. All these house

> cusps are just sensitive points that help us understand more about the

> planets they are connected to. So if a planet is near the equal 8th

> cusp (that's a bad one), then that is going to bring out more of the

> negative side of the planet and the house, along with the houses the

> planet rules. If a planet is, say far off the equal 8th cusp but close

> to the Placidus 8th cusp, then I tend to look at that as also somewhat

> problematic although less so than the equal cusp. So that's the

> hierarchy I work with. In terms of displaying the actual charts, I use

> Placidus or Porphyry, since I can read the equal cusps just by looking

> at it.

>

> I use the same approach for house placement. In your chart, your

> Jupiter is in the whole sign 7th so that may say something about your

> spouse. However, Jupiter is so far away from the cusp (20 degrees), it

> may take on some 6th house qualities. So when making assessments of

> Jupiter's qualities I would be more nuanced and sort of straddle both

> houses if possible.

>

> Also, there are a variety of opinions about sidereal sign attributes.

> Most Jyotish astrologers (myself included) believe that a Sun in

> sidereal Pisces confers standard Piscean traits (intuitive, sensitive,

> emotional) to the personality along with the house its placed in and to

> house of Leo. As I said, Moon and Ascendant are more important for

> getting a basic read on people so you're more likely a Libra-Gemini type.

>

> Chris

>

> Felicia Hong wrote:

> >

> > >But for convenience sake, I use a

> > combination of the whole sign house system

> >

> > Hi Chris,

> > Wow, this sounds complicated. How do you that?

> > Does that mean you use a different house system for natal charts than

> > ones for predictive purposes such as solar return or progression

> > charts? I often wonder if that kind of mixing of the house systems

> > would work.

> >

> > Felicia

> >

> > Christopher Kevill <christopher.kevill

> <christopher.kevill%40utoronto.ca>

> > <christopher.kevill%40utoronto.ca>> wrote:

> > Hi Felicia,

> >

> > Welcome to the wacky world of sidereal astrology.

> >

> > I just wanted to mention that from the Jyotish side of things, the sign

> > the Sun is in isn't actually as important for determining personality as

> > in Western astrology. The Moon and Ascendant are much more important in

> > that respect.

> >

> > The MC is still important in as a sensitive point that is associated

> > with the 10th house, but if you use the whole sign house system, then it

> > becomes a sort of second order 10th house cusp. Like many astrologers,

> > I've played around with several different house systems and find there

> > is something to all of them. But for convenience sake, I use a

> > combination of the whole sign house system with equal house cusps and

> > then use the unequal cusps (including the MC) as calculated by Placidus

> > and Porphyry as extra points to look at. But that only happens when I

> > have the time. :-)

> >

> > Best,

> > Chris

> >

> > Felicia Hong wrote:

> > >

> > > Sari, Therese,

> > >

> > > I tried casting my chart in sidereal equal houses and instead of an

> > > Aries Sun, I now have to view myself as a Pisces. I now have to look

> > > at myself from a brand new perspective.

> > >

> > > With the Aries Sun, I thought I was supposed to be self-centered,

> > > impulsive, simplistic and " courageous " , but now with the Pisces Sun, I

> > > have to be more compassionate, idealistic, perhaps spiritual, and much

> > > more complex.

> > >

> > > This will be interesting...

> > >

> > > I also notice that the MC is no longer the cusp of the 10th house.

> > > What does this mean?

> > >

> > > Sari M <gerdapp <gerdapp%40welho.com>

> <gerdapp%40welho.com>

> > <gerdapp%40welho.com>> wrote:

> > > Hi Felicia and welcome to the group,

> > >

> > > you wrote:

> > >

> > > > While on this subject, Mr. Houck insisted that only the sidereal

> equal

> > > > house system works accurately for predictive purposes. From reading

> > > your

> > > > comments so far, it seems that you would agree. Have you tried other

> > > house

> > > > systems and what were your experiences with them?

> > >

> > > Sari:

> > >

> > > Houses are something that have interested me a lot lately. I've tried

> > > almost

> > > all the systems over the years (I started to study astrology in

> > 1983) and

> > > because I live in Finland on high latitudes, the house system decides

> > > a lot.

> > > Most professional astrologers here (I'm not a professional) use

> > Placidus,

> > > though it becomes the more impractical the more north you are. I

> > know one

> > > professional who uses tropical whole sign houses, one who uses

> > > topocentric

> > > houses, and one of the most knowledgeable non-professionals here uses

> > > meridian houses (that's probably the strangest house system I know

> IMO).

> > >

> > > I got interested in whole sign houses in early 2005, and that

> (googling

> > > " whole sign houses " ) in fact was the thing that led me to the

> > > Skyscript site

> > > by Deborah Houlding, and that in turn led me to get interested in

> > > traditional Western astrology. Later that year I found sidereal

> > astrology

> > > and started to study jyotish, where whole sign houses are the default

> > > houses

> > > system. Note that this is not the same than equal houses, where the

> > first

> > > house begins from the ascendant, but with whole sign houses the

> > ascending

> > > sign in it's entirety is the 1st house (even when you have the last

> > > degree

> > > of it rising), the following sign is the 2nd house and so on.

> > >

> > > I have AstroDatabank database and I love to do studies with it; one

> > study

> > > that I've made is to study charts that have a lot of planets in a

> given

> > > house - do the biographies/lives of those chart owners have any common

> > > features? They do, though it's always not very striking. Now, one

> could

> > > think that the house system that gives the clearest differences

> between

> > > different houses, would be the one working best. I've compared

> quadrant

> > > systems (defined by both the Asc/DC and MC/IC axis) with whole signs

> > > and it

> > > seems that whole signs show the results better. But lately I've

> > > studied the

> > > house system Therese uses, Vehlow houses or " Asc in 1st " houses, as

> > Solar

> > > Fire calls them, where you use equal houses, but the house doesn't

> start

> > > from the cusp but spreads 15 degrees to the both sides of it so

> that the

> > > cusp is in the middle. This is the house system eminent Indian

> > astrologer

> > > B.V Raman preferred. So far it seems to be that Vehlow houses give the

> > > clearest results in this kind of study.

> > >

> > > The houses do count and they have a meaning, but it seems that

> it's not

> > > always what modern tropical astrology tells us. The " astrological

> > > alphabet "

> > > philosophy (Aries = Mars = 1st house; Taurus = Venus = 2nd house and

> > > so on)

> > > has done a lot of damage to the house meanings by telling us that for

> > > example the 4th house would be the same than (tropical) Cancer or the

> > > Moon:

> > > so it should be about soft things like mother, emotions, inner world

> > > and so

> > > on. But those are not the things that get mentioned in the traditional

> > > (Western) texts about the 4th house; in them, the 4th house is about

> > > father,

> > > real estate, land, structures, undergound things (foundations, pipe

> > > systems

> > > etc.) When you study charts with a lot of emphasis on the 4th house,

> > > you'll

> > > find people whose lives have to do with organisations, politics,

> law and

> > > business - structures, security, foundations, quite hard and masculine

> > > themes. In that sense one might think that the 4th house is more about

> > > father than mother.

> > >

> > > Best, Sari

> > >

> > >

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At 07:02 PM 3/16/08 -0700, Felicia wrote:

>

> Libra-Gemini type...

> Hmmm... I have always thought of my self as the Scorpio-Cancer type

which from my evolutionary astrology study I infer to mean deep, probing,

committed, obsessive, intuitive but moody and sensitive like a baby crab.

> From the evolutionary astrology perspective, a Libra-Gemini type would

make me a harmony loving, relationship focused, but perhaps unassertive,

indecisive " intellectual gypsy " (label given by ex-husband :-)).

>

> Is that close to the jyotish interpretation?

 

Hi Felicia,

 

I have't calculated your chart yet since I've just gone on-line after a

break, and am doing a quick read of new posts. But from India there is

really **no** interpretation of signs. Traditionally signs have been used

in Jyotish (the old Hindu astrology) to determine the strength of planets.

Mars in Cancer would be likely to act unlike itself whereas Mars in Aries

or Capricorn would be very strong, not necessarily in a good way since Mars

is a malefic.

 

Since Jyotish has come to the west, it's now a wide open field for opinions

on the traits of signs. I take the tropical observations as genuine

(observations, **not** theory), so if tropical astrologers observe that

Gemini is a bit flighty and talkative, these traits go back to sidereal

Taurus. Why??? Because Taurus is ruled by the social, relating Venus and is

the exalation of the changeable (often flighty) Moon. Taurus also belongs

to the trigon ruled by Mercury (Tau-Vir-Cap), Mercury being at home and

exalted in Virgo.

 

If tropical Taurus is fixed and stubborn as the books say, sidereally this

is because sidereal Aries is ruled by Mars, and Mars energy is internalized

into will power and determination in that sign. And so on throught the zodiac.

 

Many western Jyotish astrologers (as Chris says) simply transfer tropical

traits to siderereal signs of the same name. This makes no sense to me (or

apparently to Bettina either) because it creates a conflict in the

placements of planets in any one area of the ecliptic. In my opinion, and

person can't be two sets of conflicting traits unless they're psychotic.

 

So this is an on-going discussion/argument/belief system in these modern

times of Jyotish into the west. The western siderealists of the Fagan-Allen

school believe the tropical zodiac is a myth, so any oberved traits

**must** be sidereal.

 

In interesting world, isn't it??!! Got to run for now, hope there aren't

too many typos in this post.

 

Therese

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