Skip to the content

New Moon in Aries: Sharks

sharks
image by YokoIshioka, Deviant Art

In the film “Up in the Air,” George Clooney plays Ryan Bingham, whose career takes him all over the country to fire employees for companies that are downsizing. Ryan moves through life quickly, precisely, and without hesitation. He wields the machete of professional job termination with efficiency and (at least superficial) kindness, and once he has finished a job, he doesn’t look back. As Ryan tells a rapt audience of colleagues in a distinctly Aries-tinged monologue,

The slower we move, the faster we die. Make no mistake, moving is living. Some animals were meant to carry each other, to live symbiotically over a lifetime. Star crossed lovers, monogamous swans. We are not swans. We are sharks.

But at the zenith of his career, Ryan’s lifestyle of perpetual travel and unfettered independence is threatened both by new technology that could mean an end to his solitary life on the road, and by the realization that relationships mean more to him than he’d suspected.

Clooney’s Aries-like character (a confirmed bachelor) encounters the Libran other in the form of a fetching woman he meets on the road, but also in the wedding that reunites him with his family. Ryan seems surprised at the tenderness he feels for the sisters he essentially abandoned when he left their prosaic home town. As he tries – tentatively – to reconnect with them, he finds that they, too, have moved on, and that there is no easy place for him in their lives. Not only is his bachelor apartment in far-away Omaha stark, utilitarian, and not really a home; but he finds he doesn’t belong among his family, either. When someone on an airplane asks where he’s from, he simply answers, “Here.”

The man who is reluctant to marry is a stereotype that launched a thousand self-help books. And as countless generations have found, leaving home to conquer far away lands means jumping—perhaps permanently—from the warm, Cancerian waters of family. Not to mention that the Capricorn career in which you have taken refuge from the demands of a partner or family may eventually pose an equal threat to individuality and mobility. As Ryan Bingham and his hapless victims found out, you can quickly find yourself out of a job (especially in the age of the Uranus/Pluto square). Or, in the case of Bingham himself, you may find your entire approach to your career—and your life—is threatened by new ways of doing things. Then, too, one reaches a point in life when it becomes difficult to switch careers—not only because of our obligations to others, but also because fitting into corporate machinery inevitably requires that we check some measure of autonomy at the door. And once it’s been surrendered, it can be difficult to reclaim.

That is the work of each year’s New Moon in Aries: reclaiming the self. Who are you, apart from your family, your career, and your partner? Among the cardinal compass points that orient us to our world, the point of self—the rogue element that is seen as a potential threat to the security of family, the order of society, and the fidelity of marriage—is one that is often misunderstood and given short shrift. It’s essential to honor our commitments, but we also have an obligation to fulfill our individual destinies. And each time you fail to pursue your unique passions or to honor your true nature, you die a little.

As a midpoint between Cancer and Capricorn, the parental signs, I find it helpful to think of Aries as a symbol of the divine spark, the catalytic impulse that united your parents in an act of creation. It is the part of you that won out over all the other spermatozoa in the race to fertilize the egg, the part that emerged from your mother’s body bloody and screaming and ready to fight for what it needs. The part of you that is, simply, unalterably, matchlessly, you.

Even if you have no planets, nor the Ascendant or Midheaven in this sign, Aries is simmering somewhere in your horoscope, calling the shots from a house cusp or two, or hiding out intercepted in a house. He’s the symbol of pure, unbridled life force, the energy to explore and conquer new territory. Unless you were born with Mars, his ruling planet, in a more strategic sign (say, Libra or Capricorn) or aspect (such as to Saturn), this is not a part of you that thinks ahead and tries to figure out how to capitalize on all that energy. It is, rather, the part of you that simply loves to be in motion, conquering new lands and rising to new challenges.

Standing at this New Moon crossroads, with demands from all directions, remember to feed this part of yourself with just as much food and oxygen as you give to your family, partners, and worldly responsibilities. When it is well fed—properly fed—the Aries spark will lead you in exciting new directions that make you feel alive. But when your individuality is starved, or when it is used as an excuse for failing to connect with others, it can turn into a shark—gliding silently, dangerously, and hungrily just beneath the calm surface of your life, waiting to take a bite.

© 2010, 2015 by April Elliott Kent

Preorder my new book, Astrological Transits (coming Aug. 2015 from Fair Winds Press) and get a free bonus e-book, “I’ll Follow the Sun: An Astrological Happiness Project.” See this page for details.

11 comments to " New Moon in Aries: Sharks "

  • The lady here with the Moon/Saturn conjunction in Aries (a shark with a day planner) says “Indeed!” Such a great article, Kent.

    And with this New Moon conjunct my North Node in the 6th house, I think I know where I must be a shark…

  • helen

    April ~ this is effing A!!!
    oh my god what did you do, lift the top off my psyche and peer in? gaaaa!
    i had just written in my journal on inside front page i am reclaiming my life. ha!
    So am scribbling down your Rx for this ailing shark (i thought oh that can’t be me, i’m a nice person… ha ha ha ha ) then i realized i had stopped moving and almost died – you’re right about the damn desk jobs… still figuring out how to wiggle my way out into a moving life… okay i am typing out my scribbles coz i can’t read my writing…
    Rx for Aries: Where are you from? here. Reclaim Self: – pusure your unique passions and honor your true nature. You’re the spark, the catalyst. Explore and conquer new territory and rise to new challenges. Connect with others… Simply loves to be in motion. oh god how could i forget that last one… that is going on my bathroom mirror!
    Thank you from this flattened aries…. xoxo 🙂

  • meca

    Looove this! I have Mars in Capricorn, but I am feeling this Aries energy! My motto recently has been to be action oriented! I am so good at planning, but not so much at doing, so I’m putting all of my energy into implementing all of my ideas!

  • Really enjoyed this April. A great description of Aries as well as of the essential tension between the cardinal signs….

  • Natori

    So loving your use of Yokolshioka’s shark art…fierce!

  • Natori

    P.S. This is an especially well-phrased elucidation of the cardinal points: Among the cardinal compass points that orient us to our world, the point of self—the rogue element that is seen as a potential threat to the security of family, the order of society, and the fidelity of marriage—is one that is often misunderstood and given short shrift. It’s essential to honor our commitments, but we also have an obligation to fulfill our individual destinies.

  • KathleenPratt

    Just the confirmation I need to know I am on the right path…loss after loss since last June and the latest last weekend, my what I was thought would be a partnership-retirement forever was not to be… so at 55 in July, I am a Cancer! I just brought home my small motor home tonight! off to find my new life! new direction! **explore and conquer new territory**

  • this is simply fabulous. 🙂

  • Hi April, I have such an appreciation for your penmanship… : -D
    I did enjoy the film, “Up in the Air,” too; and I liked how you distinguished between the cardinal signs using the characters from the movie. Also, thanks to you, this is my first sighting of a bow-tie-wearing shark. It’s a surprisingly irresistible image, and quite cute!

  • As always, well written and wise. I was trying to link Aries and Mars to my own life, where Aries is intercepted if you use that system, and Mars in Taurus in house 12. I have always struggled with getting things DONE. Starting is such sweet sorrow. Anyway, lately I have been connecting with another meaning of the twelfth house: other people’s labour. I am allowing myself to get some things done with the help of other people. Amazing how much can be accomplished in a few hours by people who are totally focused and good at a job. My healing room is all spruced up. Let the Chi flow.

  • -Pisces -K

    Wow. How well written and inspiring.
    I feel energized .
    Thank you

Leave a Comment