My essay
"Marriage by the Moon" appears in Llewellyn's 2011 Moon Sign
Book, available now!
Gemini
Full Moon Reflections: The Gift of Listening by April
Elliott Kent
When my friend's son was small, he talked incessantly.
Born with Venus in loquacious Gemini, he jabbered constantly about stories he'd
read or what he'd seen on television that morning. His mother is a patient woman,
but eventually the sheer quantity of words wore her down. One day, she recalls,
driving along with her child chattering away in the passenger seat, she suddenly
couldn't take any more. "Could you please just stop talking for one minute?"
she begged her small son. "And immediately," she told me, "his
little eyes filled up with tears. I couldn't have felt more awful!"
Few
feelings are as wounding as not being listened to, especially by those we love.
In his book The
Road Less Traveled, M. Scott Peck characterizes true, attentive listening
as one of the greatest gifts of love we can offer another person - and one of
the most difficult. There are times when it's easier, of course -- in the first
flush of passion, when your loved one's every utterance is like honey, or when
your toddler is first learning to talk. But to really listen even when you're
not in the mood, when you're heard the same story a dozen times, when you're worried
about something else, when there's nothing in it for you personally - that's hard
work.
It's most difficult to listen when people talk about things you don't
want to hear, things that challenge your worldview. Each year at Thanksgiving,
with the Sun in Sagittarius - the sign of beliefs - my family's table is
a minefield, as we all tap dance around topics that we know will invite controversy.
The first of two Full Moons this month (the second is a lunar eclipse on December
31) falls in Gemini, the sign of enthusiastic chatter as well as attentive
listening. It falls a few days too late to lend conversational sparkle to your
Thanksgiving celebration, but in plenty of time to deconstruct it. How much loving
attention were you able to muster for the bombastic uncle, the long-winded grandmother,
the brother-in-law's latest political tangent? Were you too busy trying to be
heard to really listen to anybody else?
When we give up pretending that
we know everything, we free ourselves to learn from what other people have to
say. And if we fold up the cell phone and stop talking for two minutes, we might
notice that the woman sitting next to us in the doctor's waiting room looks scared
to death and might be grateful for someone to talk to. Listening - that
simple gift of attention and love, like holding open a door for someone leaving
a store as you're entering - makes the world feel a little kinder, a little
more civilized.
In public, I find myself watching everyone around me
chatting on a cell phone and ignoring everyone else, and I wonder how in the world
they ever met the people they're talking to. Cell phones have become like little
force fields we carry to neutralize exposure to strangers. They allow us to tune
out the raucous conversation of the young men loitering on the corner, but also
to ignore the old woman asking for directions to the bus. We are in worlds of
our own, jealously calibrating the flow of conversation that has the power to
lubricate the gears of a trying world.
The world and its people can indeed
be trying, and perhaps we can be forgiven for taking refuge behind the white noise
of iPods and banal cell phone conversations. Too easily, though, inattention
becomes a habit that persists even at home among those we love, and that's
a problem. Love, as Peck notes, is not a feeling, but a verb. It's something we
do, a bit of spiritual theater we enact through actions large and small.
And listening, even when we don't feel like it, is a small but powerful act
of love. That's what my friend recognized that day in the car, when her unwillingness
to listen made her son cry. She took the lesson to heart, and made up her mind
from that day on to give her bright boy the gift of her listening.
The
Sun's annual passage through Sagittarius blesses us with insight into our most
cherished convictions. When we tap into our Sagittarius power, we may feel the
urge to proselytize about our beliefs; caught up in our own thoughts, we are likely
to forget that others see the world quite differently. The Full Moon in Gemini
reminds us, simply, that listening - bearing witness to another's reality - is
a sacred thing and a loving act. Listening connects us to one another - and it
enriches not only those who are listened to, but also those who listen to them.
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