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Astrology & the Chakras:
Toward a Sacred Psychology
of the Horoscope
Understand that thou art another world in little, and hast
within thee the Sun and the Moon, and also the stars.
-- Origen (185/86-254/55 C.E.)
by
Ray Grasse
In this article I would like to explore the exciting possibility of
bridging two of history's greatest psychological systems -- astrology and the
chakras. Conventionally, these two systems have been seen as having little or
nothing to do with each other, the former primarily concerning the outer world,
or macrocosm, and the latter involving the inner world, or microcosm. In fact,
as we shall soon see, these two systems are but two sides of the same coin, each
one complementing the other and thus enhancing our understanding of both.
The basic system of correspondences I will be using here is drawn from
teachers I have studied with in the Kriya Yoga lineage.1 The general
system of "chakric horoscopes" and their guidelines for interpretation are my
own, developed over more than a decade of working with these basic
correspondences. With that said, let us begin by exploring some of the core
ideas of chakric philosophy.
What Are the Chakras?
In Sanskrit, the word chakra
(sometimes spelled "cakra")
literally means "wheel". In yogic philosophy, this term refers to the
psychospiritual centers located along the length of the spine, each of which is
associated with a different archetypal principle of consciousness. Although
there are literally thousands of chakras situated throughout the subtle body,
yogic philosophy normally stresses only seven or eight of these. Let us briefly
review these primary points and their planetary associations.
Chakra 1, at the base of the spine, is called
Muladhara. Its element is earth, and it is governed by the planet Saturn.
Psychologically, it concerns one's relationship with the material plane, and the
principle of limitation in both its constructive and destructive aspects. In its
more unbalanced expression, it governs the drive for survival, as well as such
states as greed and fear, while its more balanced expression points to such
qualities as practicality and worldly skillfulness (business, science, etc.).
Chakra 2 is called Svadisthana. Its
element is water, and it is ruled by the planet Jupiter. Psychologically, it is
one of the centers concerned with emotions. At its grosser levels of expression,
it governs such states as escapism, excess, and dogmatism, while its more
constructive expressions include enthusiasm and religious devotion.
Chakra 3 is called Manipura. Its
element is fire, and Mars is its governing planet. This chakra rules over
emotions in their more dynamic and energetic forms. Thus, in its less refined
state, it relates to anger and combativeness, and is more positively expressed
as strength and assertiveness.
Chakra 4 is called Anahata. Its
element is air, and its corresponding planet is Venus. The psychological focus
is on love, beauty, and allurement, and it governs the capacity for harmony in
all romantic and social interactions. In its unbalanced form, it produces a
tendency toward hedonism, pleasure-seeking, and excessive "sweetness" of
temperament, while, when in balance, it can give rise to an exceptional sense of
aesthetics, and even unselfish love.
Chakra 5 is called Vishudda. Its
element is ether, and it is governed by the planet Mercury. This chakra's
psychological focus is upon mental self-expression and one's ability to
formulate or verbalize thoughts. When unbalanced, it produces chaotic thoughts
and/or communications, while its constructive expression tends toward creative
spiritual thinking and refined communication skills.
Chakra 6 is called Chandra, and is
ruled by the Moon. Though overlooked in most published discussions of the
chakras, Paramahansa Yogananda described this as the feminine polarity of the
Ajna chakra, or "third eye" (to be considered next). Its emphasis is upon
awareness in its most reflective or introspective mode, and it governs such
qualities as nurturing compassion and psychic sensitivity. Its more destructive
expressions include the experience of fearfulness, emotional dependency, and a
preoccupation with the past.
Chakra 7 is called Ajna and is located
in the center of the forehead, also known as the "third eye". Its corresponding
planet is the Sun, and it governs the principle of pure consciousness in its
most active, visionary, and expressive form, as well as the higher will. In its
balanced state, it rules creativity, spiritual energy, and self-expression,
while in unbalanced form it can manifest as egoism, willfulness, "dry" awareness
without compassion, and the drive for attention.
Chakra 8 is called Sahasrara, the
"crown chakra" or "thousand-petaled lotus", and exists at the top of the head
above the other chakras. Whereas the previous Ajna chakra represents the
supreme realization of personal divinity (perceived in meditation as a
fivepointed star), the Sahasrara rules our point of contact with the
transpersonal divine, the level of "Godconsciousness". However, because this
chakra represents a transcendental point beyond the more personal chakras (and,
by inference, their astrological correlates), it is largely dormant for most
individuals, and can, for purposes of clarity, be left out of our subsequent
discussion.
Chakra Planet Keywords
(8)
Sahasrara -
The
Transcendent, Inspiration
(7) Ajna
- Sun -
Active Awareness, Higher Will
(6) Chandra
- Moon -
Reflective Awareness, Memory
(5) Vishudda
- Mercury -
Thinking, Communication
(4) Anahata
- Venus -
Harmony, Love
(3) Manipura
- Mars -
Force, Strength, Control
(2) Svadisthana
- Jupiter -
Expansiveness, Emotionality
(1) Muladhara
- Saturn -
Structure, Limitation
The Twelve Secondary Chakric States
Thus far we have been looking at the chakras
only in their simplest possible description. In fact, most of the chakras
possess at least three different aspects, or faces: feminine (introverted),
masculine (extroverted), and spiritual (balanced). In other words, each chakra
can be diverted over to either its right side or its left side, or it can be
experienced in a perfectly balanced fashion in the very center of the spine. In
their right- and left-hand aspects, the chakras are associated with the twelve
signs of the zodiac.
In each of these three aspects, the
psychological energy of any given chakra will manifest in uniquely different
ways. For example, when experienced in its more masculine mode (Gemini), the
fifth, or Mercury, chakra will generally manifest as interpersonal
communications in the waking world, while its more feminine side (Virgo) will
tend toward more internalized thought processes, or perhaps even appear within
the dream state. In its balanced state within the central channel, however,
Mercury rules the mystical mind, that aspect of mentality which truly communes
with spirit.
Some traditional esoteric sources, such as
Cornelius Agrippa, expressed much the same idea in the following way: Saturn
rules Aquarius by day and Capricorn by night; Jupiter rules Sagittarius by day
and Pisces by night; Mars rules Aries by day and Scorpio by night; Venus rules
Libra by day and Taurus by night; Mercury rules Gemini by day and Virgo by
night; while the Sun and Moon hold rulership over one sign each, Leo and Cancer.
Yet it is only in the very center of each chakric level that the energy of that
chakra truly manifests in a spiritually-balanced fashion, beyond the dualistic
qualities of the zodiacal wheel.
In
its broadest sense, this shows us that the seven classical planets relate to the
twelve signs in a startlingly precise way. One simply spins the zodiac around
until they fall into line with these chakric placements.
What to do with the three outer planets? Note
how they fall into line with the first three chakras,
in accordance with the zodiacal signs they are commonly associated with by
rulership. Hence, Pluto equates to the feminine side of the Mars chakra
(Scorpio), Neptune to the feminine side of the Jupiter chakra (Pisces), and
Uranus to the masculine side of the Saturn chakra (Aquarius).
In yogic philosophy, each of these peripheral
chakric centers represents a kind of memory tract or "storage bin" for karmas
and life impressions; whatever we feel, think, and experience is logged into the
energy fields of the spinal column. In this way, habit patterns (or samskaras,
in yogic terminology) are built up over time, and etched into the subconscious
psyche, where they continue to compel us toward particular behaviors from
lifetime to lifetime.2
The Chakric Science of Personality
Every personality is comprised of these basic
archetypal elements, although in widely varying combinations. Depending on an
individual's karmic patterns, subtle energies concentrate themselves in
different areas of the chakric system, where they are then employed toward
either constructive or destructive ends. In this manner, complex patterns are
constellated throughout an individual's chakric centers. Although every person
experiences all of these centers to one degree or another, certain chakras will
tend to be more dominant for some than for others. Hence, a more artistic person
may have the fourth chakra emphasized, whereas an intellectual type may have the
fifth chakra emphasized, and so forth.
One useful way to illustrate this point is
through the notion of sub personalities, since each chakra has its
own unique traits or "personifications". Utilizing this system of
correspondences, we can describe the different chakras in the following way: the
first, or Saturn, chakra can be metaphorically described as the "Inner
Politician" or the "Inner Architect"; the second, or Jupiter, chakra is the
"Inner Optimist" or the "Inner Preacher"; the third, or Mars, chakra is, plain
and simple, the "Inner Warrior"; the fourth, or Venus, chakra is the "Inner
Lover," or the "Inner Artist"; the fifth, or Mercury, chakra is the "Inner
Communicator" or the "Inner Thinker"; the sixth, or lunar, chakra is the "Inner
Mother" or the "Inner Queen"; the seventh, or solar, chakra is the "Inner
Father" or the "Inner King". Certain chakric levels will be emphasized in any
given horoscope, and this will determine an individual's most dominant
sub-personalities.
Chakric interpretation using the signs
We have seen how the twelve signs closely
correspond to the different chakras by spinning the zodiac around until Cancer
and Leo are positioned at the top of the wheel. The placement of a person's
planets within these different signs will therefore provide important clues as
to which chakric levels are emphasized. For example, any large constellation of
planets in Libra or Taurus would indicate a heavy focus of attention, karmically
speaking, on the lessons of the heart, or fourth, chakra, while planets in
Scorpio or Aries would indicate a focus of energies on the naval, or third,
chakra, and so forth. In theory, these chakric emphases would manifest as energy
patterns within those corresponding areas of the person's aura, which would in
turn be perceptible to sufficiently clairvoyant individuals.
This kind of interpretation can be refined to
a considerable degree since each planet is subtly different in the way it
amplifies any given chakric level. For example, Saturn located in one chakra has
a dramatically different effect than when Jupiter is found in that same chakric
center. Specifically, wherever Saturn is placed shows in what area of experience
one may feel especially challenged to grow, or, in its most frustrating form,
where one may feel denied in some way. In a subtler sense, of course, the
placement of Saturn indicates the chakric level at which one may also find the
greatest depth of wisdom carried over from past lives. In any event, one would
probably have to work very hard for desired results in the chakric level
inhabited by Saturn, although for that very reason one might also have a much
greater appreciation for the rewards of that chakra, just as a man stranded in
the desert would have greater appreciation for a glass of water than a man
swimming in a river. By contrast, in whatever chakra Jupiter is placed indicates
where one experiences more obvious blessings and good fortune, where there is a
more fluid opening and expression of life energies -- possibly to excess.
Arguably, the most important significators to
look for, chakrically, are the Sun, Moon, and Ascendant. Simply by studying
these basic points, one can, I believe, learn a great deal about an individual's
chakric focus in this life. For instance, Sun in Gemini would strongly suggest a
heightened focus upon the throat chakra of mentality and communication, whereas
Sun in Capricorn would point to an intense direction of energies toward the
earth plane and the establishment of success, recognition, or simply balance on
this level. As most astrologers know, these primary indicators (Sun, Moon, and
Ascendant) have their own unique and subtly different shades of meaning -- a
source of lively debate among astrologers over the years. My own feeling on this
matter is that the Moon indicates the chakric level one is
coming from
both emotionally and karmically; the Ascendant
shows where the everyday personality in this life is
presently at,
in terms of visible, habitual ways of thinking and
relating; and the Sun indicates the chakric direction one is
aspiring toward
in this life, and which one is attempting to bring
into creative manifestation.
This, then, has been only the briefest
introduction to yogic chakric philosophy, and some of the ways it can illuminate
our understanding of the conventional, or Western horoscope. It is my hope that
in the years to come the further exploration of this synthesis will provide us
with the foundation for a true "sacred psychology," one that more fully unlocks
astrology's spiritual potentials.
This
article has been adapted from Ray's book
The
Waking Dream : Unlocking the Symbolic Language of Our Lives
(publisher: Quest Books). An expanded discussion
of the practical aspects of interpreting chakric horoscopes are featured in
Eastern
Systems for Western Astrologers: An Anthology,
published by Weiser Publications.
Notes/References
©1995 Ray Grasse - all rights reserved.
This article was excerpted from a longer article
published in The Mountain Astrologer, April 1996.
www.MountainAstrologer.com
This
article was
written by the author of

"The
Waking Dream: Unlocking the Symbolic Language of Our Lives”
by Ray Grasse
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About The
Author
Ray
Grasse is associate editor of
The Mountain
Astrologer Magazine, and author of the book
The Waking Dream: Unlocking the Symbolic Language of Our
Lives (Quest, 1996), and the forthcoming
Signs of the Times (Hampton Roads, April 2002), an examination
of the Aquarian Age. Ray maintains an active astrological practice, and
can be reached at (630) 933-8519, or at
jupiter@enteract.com
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