My essay "Job Hunting by the
Moon " appears in Llewellyn's 2010 Moon Sign Book, available now!
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Cancer
Full Moon Reflections: Can Hard Times Make Us Whole?
byApril Elliott Kent
It’s been a chilly holiday season here in San Diego. Not
when compared to anyplace with real weather, of course, but
the discomfort is real enough to us. Cold is a relative thing,
and when a place that seldom sees daytime highs below 65 degrees
experiences a string of days in the 50s, folks around here
get a little testy.
Of course, we’re testy – scared, really - about a lot of
things, not just the cold snap. Just as the real estate bubble
of recent years inflated home values in Southern California
to the point of morbid obesity, the popping of that particular
bubble is having an equally exaggerated effect in the opposite
direction. Many, many houses in our neighborhood are for sale,
and few of them are selling. And I’ve lost count of the number
of friends who have been looking for work for more than a
year, bright, hard-working people who’ve worked full-time
for decades. These are scary times, full of chickens coming
home to roost and unpleasant realities being dumped unceremoniously
at our doorsteps. Hard times. Capricorn times. Saturn’s
children, we hold ourselves rigidly, as if preparing to take
our punishment from a harsh father.
In the midst of this cold, bleak month, one of my neighbor’s
cats began having seizures. I’ve always been especially fond
of this cat – a brash, contentious tuxedo with chewed-up ears
and a swagger in his walk. While his owner was away last summer,
he suffered a broken jaw; he had maintained a good appetite
and behaved fairly normally, so it took my neighbor awhile
to realize that something was seriously wrong. He had surgery
to repair the jaw and then, a few weeks ago, surgery to remove
the wire. And that’s when the seizures started – constant,
pathetic convulsions complete with gnashing of teeth and falling
over.
About a week into this situation, a sensible vet prescribed
medication. Within a few days the cat was groggy but stable,
with the seizures fewer and less severe. My distraught neighbor
debated canceling a long-planned getaway for two days after
Christmas, but since we’re used to looking after each other’s
cats and I wasn’t going anywhere over Christmas, I agreed
to supervise the invalid. For two days I spent hours with
the shut-in, coaxing pills into him, keeping him from harm
during the seizures, watching him pace restlessly on wobbly
legs. After a seizure he’d look up at me, bewildered. And
I’d gather him up and bury my face in his neck, and we’d sit
together for awhile, waiting for the next one.
The morning my neighbor was to return, I visited my charge,
fed him his pill, cuddled him for a bit, then came home, sat
down, and cried. I cried on and off for a couple of days,
and I still cry sometimes, out of the blue, just thinking
about the bewildered look on his face and the weight of his
furry head on my shoulder. It’s a bit of an overreaction,
probably. It’s not even my cat. But a couple of days of looking
after this cat has made me love him. It seems that
taking care of things binds us to them. And then losing
them breaks our hearts.
I always suspected this, which is (mostly) why I never wanted
to be a mother. I doubted whether I could cope gracefully
with the constant fear of losing a child, or of watching her
suffer. Basically, I never wanted to be so enslaved to love.
Of course, I haven’t been able to avoid it altogether. I love
my husband, my family, and many of my friends with the same
intimidating passion I sought to avoid by remaining childless.
Even the occasional cat can slink under my radar and reduce
me to tears.
Saturday’s Full Moon (10:27 pm EST) falls in the sign
of Cancer, the sign of motherhood and of the bonds that
tether us to those people and animals and causes that we care
for. Our love for them represents our tender white underbellies,
our Achilles Heels, the terrible vulnerability that can bring
us to our knees. There’s a passage in the novel "Gone
With the Wind" in which Will Benteen eulogizes Scarlett
O’Hara’s father, a once-vibrant man who lost his mind after
the death of his wife. The upshot of the eulogy is that nothing
from the outside, not even war and sudden poverty, could
have brought down Mr. O’Hara, but that losing his wife effectively
broke his heart, mind, and spirit. And I think that’s true
of many of us; hard economic times can’t break us, though
they increasingly come as a shock. No, for most of us it’s
only the passionate attachments we form with others that have
the power to bring us down, from the inside out.
But the same attachments that threaten us are, conversely,
the ones that give our lives meaning and sweetness. I recently
listened to a radio interview with Temple Grandin, a leading
designer of livestock facilities. Grandin herself is autistic,
and social interactions with her fellow humans are extremely
trying for her. She has chosen to forgo the common attachments,
such as romantic relationships, that most of us consider essential.
But a genuine warmth crept into her voice as she described
the pleasure of interacting with animals. Pets in particular
are so appealing, so innocent, and such a delight that they
manage to form connections with even the most isolated among
us. Grandin’s latest book is called Animals Make Us Human,
a title I can’t disagree with. And for those who are a lot
braver than I am, I imagine caring for children has the
potential to make us superhuman – capable of such
a depth of love, attachment, and terror that they are our
best hope of transcending humanity altogether.
In the heart of a cold and brittle winter, even in normally
balmy and relaxed San Diego, Saturn’s wolves are howling in
the distance. They howl warnings about the collapsing economy,
the deteriorating climate, and the fearsome calamities that
threaten us – joblessness, poverty, homelessness, starving,
illness. Hard times can, in turn, make us hard, but caring
for each other – though it breaks our hearts - is what keeps
us from turning to stone.
I don’t relish the hard times ahead, and yet I have a weird
optimism about the potential for our shared difficulties to
make us whole. Taking care of things – and people - binds
us to them. And in hard times we’re called upon to comfort
each other in our suffering, dry one another’s tears, feed
each other’s hunger. My hope is that our Cancerian caring
will bind us to one another with a force as strong as the
earth’s gravity, in a loving embrace that can’t be broken
– at least, not by anything from outside of us.