Monday 14 March 2011

Saturn's Dreaded Seven and Half Year Transit From Radical Moon Can Be a Blessing in Disguise By Dhirendra Prasad Kaintholla

he core competence of an astrologer should be to predict the future that is what astrology is all about. The good news should be told immediately and emphatically, while bad news should be conveyed with a lot of care and caution tempered with choosing the right words because people respond slowly to the good news for it sinks in after some time, on the other hand, they react immediately to the bad one.

Therefore, if the bad new is told in the way described above, the consequences of an ominous combination can turn out to be not that bad, or the situation could become retrievable, because the vigour of the thoughts can sway the things the native's way; it is just like converting forces of high tide or the strong air currents into electricity. A lean phase can give a necessary pause to reflect; like a catapult our affairs are pulled back with the elastic between the arms only to be propelled forward with a great force. The adverse circumstances generate the force powerful enough to set you free. In short, a crisis can be an opportunity in disguise: tough times do not last, tough people do.
 By Dhirendra Prasad Kaintholla

People are often cocooned in their comfort zones deeply in love with the status quo; the cosy feeling of favourable circumstances often lulls us into complacency that can numb our responses. Just like a pain killer.

A bad period of life restores our sensitivity and chops off the deadwood of relations gathered around us when our fortunes are going up. Bad times sift the chaff from grain, and you end up being lighter. You shed the baggage and the excess fat. Bad times can be like exercising in a gym, or like going for an early morning jog in winter. Like exercise strengthens muscle of body, bad circumstances strengthens the 'muscles' of brain. You start thinking out-of-box. The people of your family put their heads together; you brainstorm to survive in the storm outside. A short period of adversity is a blessing in disguise.

A much dreaded transit of Saturn can similarly throw us out of gear. When this stern teacher transits the twelfth, first, and the second houses from the radical Moon the equilibrium in our life gets disturbed, like thermodynamic balance, it takes some time to establish the new equilibrium.

For some people this transit can put them on another level, e.g. Morarji Desai (29 February 1896 - 10 April 1995), in the first 7 ½ period of this transit of Saturn he qualified in the Indian Civil Service examination in the British India in the nineteen twenties, and later resigned to join the freedom movement. In the second cycle of the Saturn transit, he became the Chief Minister of Bombay in 1952. And, in the third and last transit, he became the Prime Minister of Indian in 1977.

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