My essay "Job Hunting by the
Moon " appears in Llewellyn's 2010 Moon Sign Book, available now!
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Full
Moon in Aries: The Sweet Spot by April Elliott Kent
You
know that movie, 'An Unmarried Woman'? Well - I didn't get it. I mean, I would've
been Mrs. Alan Bates so fast that guy wouldn't have known what hit him!" ~
Goldie Hawn as Judy Benjamin, Private Benjamin
In the
1980 film Private Benjamin, Goldie Hawn stars as Judy, a pampered young
woman who has been in a continuous string of relationships ever since she became
old enough to distinguish boys from girls. On the night of her wedding to a high-powered
divorce attorney, Judy unexpectedly becomes a widow. Distraught, she vanishes
from her husband's wake and holes up in a motel room where she indulges in the
first serious soul-searching of her life. When she calls a late-night radio talk
show for advice, her rambling monologue reveals that her life so far has trained
her for nothing except being a daughter or a wife.
In search of direction,
Judy is bamboozled, by an unscrupulous recruiter, into joining the army. What
follows is the story of a young woman - an exaggerated but recognizable characterization
of Libra - who, in testing her physical and emotional limits, embraces
her Aries warrior and finds out who she really is. When the commanding
officer who promotes her to an elite team of paratroopers later makes a pass at
her, she not only rebuffs him but even parlays his indiscretion into a plum assignment
in Paris.
By the time she catches the eye of a dashing French gynecologist,
Judy has become confident and self-possessed. But in short order, the seemingly
perfect relationship proves to be yet another demeaning experience with a dominating
male. Fortunately, this time Judy recognizes what she's doing before it's too
late, calls off her wedding, and triumphantly marches away.
As Judy finally
realized, attempting to purchase a (Libran) harmonious relationship at the
expense of your (Aries) individuality is doomed to failure. It doesn't have
to be a romantic relationship, either; all kinds of important relationships can
tempt us to become too accommodating. As this Full Moon in independent Aries stands
in uneasy opposition to the Sun in relationship-oriented Libra, ask yourself:
Are you hiding your true self from your spouse, lover, best friend, or
business partner - in an attempt to keep the peace? Then take the question one
step further: If you are in a relationship with someone who doesn't know who you
really are, are you actually in a relationship? Sometimes it feels safer
and easier to hide your true self from others, because if you are rejected for
who you really are, it hurts a lot worse. On the other hand, you might be rejected
for your faux self anyway, left not only without a relationship
but also without a self.
If you're an artist or a businessperson, you've
probably encountered a similar dynamic in your work. It's important to understand
your market and to cater effectively to its needs. But what if meeting other people's
expectations and demands requires too big a sacrifice of your integrity, or your
creative vision? And if you should find yourself in competition with a friend
for business or recognition, at what point is it okay - even necessary - to take
off the gloves for a good, clean fight? There's a fine line between fulfilling
expectations and selling out, between yielding to others and standing up for yourself
- and everyone must decide for herself where that line begins and ends, and
how staunchly it must be defended.
For most of us, especially women I think,
it's safer and easier to play to society's Libran values of harmony and cooperation;
to make nice, and to maintain relationships at all costs. But the Aries survival
instinct is within each of us too, ready to rise up and help us pursue whatever
we need and want, even if that means stepping on someone else's toes. Even if
it means we're not always nice.
In contrast to über-Libran Judy Benjamin,
it's helpful to meditate on the cautionary tale of Gone With the Wind's
Scarlett O'Hara, one of the most remorseless and driven female characters in literature
(and almost certainly an Aries). Scarlett's upbringing is a lot like Judy's -
she was raised to be a perfect Southern lady, a pampered princess with perfect
grooming and flawless manners whose only job is to make a good marriage. When
the Civil War transforms Scarlett's world and she is forced into hardship for
the first time in her life, she triumphs over adversity with grit and an iron
will, and we cheer her moxie.
But the harsh manner she adopts as a survival
tactic during the war eventually becomes a habit, and Scarlett loses the goodwill
of nearly everyone she knows. She has mastered only the charming façade
of a Southern lady with none of the consideration for others that gives the stereotype
its grace. Scarlett is determined to have exactly what she wants, no matter how
many people disapprove or even suffer from her willfulness. Hers is a tale
of Aries given too much latitude, without the softening influence of Libran give-and-take.
It isn't until the final pages of a very long book that Scarlett begins to grasp
just a glimmer of what her willfulness has cost her.
Somewhere between
Judy and Scarlett, then, is the sweet spot on the Aries/Libra polarity. It
falls somewhere between the extremes of pleasing everyone and losing ourselves,
and serving ourselves entirely while pleasing no one.
At this Full Moon,
consider the houses of your chart where 11.10 degrees of Aries and Libra
fall, for clues to help you answer these questions: Where are you learning to
draw the line between self and other, between "I" and "we"?
Where are you the velvet glove, and where are you the iron fist? Where are you
looking for the sweet spot?