My essay "The Business of Being
You" appears in Llewellyn's 2009 Moon Sign Book, available now!
Receive
email notifications of new articles, features, and events!
Teachings
of the Pisces Season:
Divine Vulnerability by April
Elliott Kent
Finally,
it seems the worst of this rainy season is behind us and
spring is on its way, even though the light is still weak
and flat under cloudy skies. Just
a couple of weeks shy of the vernal equinox, the days
are beginning to get a bit longer, and looking out my
office window I see long grass with tender little yellow
flowers in it. But March is notoriously changeable and
unreliable, an uneasy melange of delicate late-winter
flowers and tempestuous storms. Nature offers a tantalizing
glimpse of a vernal paradise, then delights in blowing
it down and washing it away.
The
older we get and more set in our ways, the more water
and wind it generally takes to knock us down. When
we're young we lack a truly mature root structure
to hold us in place. Consequently, we're a bit like
saplings that snap under a forceful gale: we can be
felled with a strong breath or a harsh word. The
older we get, though, the stronger our sense of self
- and the better we learn what to tune out, to regulate
how much negativity we will pay attention to, whom
we will allow to influence our notion of who we are.
But this is a bit like tuning in to a favorite radio
station: you're sure to hear something you like, but
often lose some interesting possibilities in the static-y
never-never land between frequencies.
We
set course in life in tiny dinghies, suitable only
for shallow waters. In adulthood we build huge
ships of iron, as seemingly infallible as the Titanic,
and falsely imagine we are much safer from harm than
we were in the ships of our youth. Life quickly
disavows us of this illusion. Experience the death
of someone close to you, and you find out quickly
just how small an iceberg it takes to sink a ship.
Participate in a profession that requires constant
exposure to the physical or psychic pain of others,
and you soon find yourself flirting with rocks too
close to shore, testing your mortality and sanity
to see if you have any feelings left of your own.
The
lesson of Pisces is a lesson of making ourselves vulnerable
- tuning in to all frequencies, and learning to navigate
the tempest-tossed waters of emotional and psychic
involvement without drowning. Contrary to pop astrology
clichés, Pisces is no more inherently spiritual,
psychic, or saintly than any other sign - but it is
more vulnerable. The symbol for Pisces is two fish,
the tenderest of creatures; Cancer and Scorpio swim
in the same empathetic waters, but only Pisces navigates
them without a protective shell, completely exposed
to both danger and ecstacy. Pisces teaches us divine
vulnerability - lowering our defenses, the better
to fully empathize and blend with everyone we meet.
Learning, in fact, about the illusory nature of protection.
I'm
no mystic. I dabbled in yoga for only a year or so,
but I was impressed by its effects not only in my
physiology but in my psychology. Our instructor constantly
urged us to relax and breathe into a pose, to trust
it, even if it seemed likely to hurt. It's interesting
to watch the body's instinctive reaction to such poses,
which is to clench and tighten in fear, as if to adopt
the hard shell of the crustacean against the threat
of pain. We go through life that way, most of us,
clenching and tightening and fighting the yoga posture
of balance and relaxation. The Pisces path, though,
is a yoga of yielding, softening, and breathing that
leads to strength, poise, and courage.
Like
every sign, Pisces walks a razor's edge between its
nobler and its baser sides, which in the case of Pisces
can make itself felt in a certain lack of constancy.
Pisces is compassionate, and supportive, all those
good things; but if you lean too hard on him, he'll
swim away in the blink of an eye. On one hand, this
is an admirable survival skill. You can't absorb the
whole world's pain and misery 24 hours a day, 365
days a year and stay sane. You've simply got to get
away from time to time, whether in a nap, a bottle,
a song, or a massage. The strongest and wisest
of Pisces pay close attention to their need for healthy
escape.
On the other hand, if you find yourself dodging your
dearest friends' phone calls in their times of need
because "it's just too painful" to stand
by them, because you are suffering from compassion
fatigue - well, you're failing Pisces 101. An important
part of the Pisces lesson is knowing your limits,
and being honest about them. You only have so
much to give, and you must occasionally call upon
Pisces' opposite sign, Virgo, to remind you of the
practical limits of your time and energy. Pisces tempts
us with the notion that we are one with everything,
a limitless river; but without boundaries, the river
overflows, with destructive consequences.
At its best, though, the Pisces season is an exercise
in pure enchantment, a round-the-world voyage in a
dinghy, the agony and ecstacy of the entire human
experience. Born with a fierce, fixed Leo Sun squaring
Neptune, I haven't Pisces' agile gifts of yielding
and blending, of empathy and escape, so can only marvel
at them. I admire Pisces as I admire water, for
its quickness and its stillness, its ability to shape-shift,
its long rains that nourish the soil. Pisces is
the exotic music we hear faintly, through static,
between the stronger frequencies; it is the fragile
pre-spring flowers outside my office window, their
seeds scattered here by the wind, pale and pretty
in the flat, gray light of late winter: They are the
youngest and tenderest of flowers, yet they stand
up to sudden storms with surprising strength, refusing
to be blown down or washed away.