Monday, August 30, 2010

Generational Astrology- Gen X


Do we really even need a post about this? I mean, Billy Idol. 'Nuff said.

Howdy folks. After a nice cappuccino (and while I battle the temptation to get another one) I am, per my sister's request doing a little post about generational astrology, or specifically generation - x (or, in astrological terms, the Pluto in Libra generation).

Back in ancient times, most of the planets people knew about were fairly personal because of how quickly they moved. Even in the rather shortened life expectancy of the old days, you could reasonably assume you'd make it to 30 (around which age you would encounter what's called your Saturn Return, a beast of a topic that I'm not gonna try to tackle until I understand it better). After people started to discover the outer planets of Uranus, Neptune and Pluto, it became clear that they had a much longer orbit around the sun (and, therefore, around the zodiac) and that large groups of people would be born during the years that these planets would spend in just one sign of the zodiac. As such, these planets (though intensely important in the personal chart of course) came to signify generational tendencies. Often the significance of the planet will play out in very overt ways depending on which sign it's in. In general, Uranus is connected to creativity, expression, rebellion- where the generation seeks and expresses its unique and creative side. Neptune is connected to spiritual understanding, ideals, areas where reality is less strict (which can provide creative insight as well as delusive misunderstanding). Finally, Pluto is connected to the dynamics of power, of change (as we discussed in the last post). I think a good place to start is the comparison between the Baby Boomers and Gen-X.

http://www.wstardesigns.com/Horoscopes/generations.html - This link has a little more information on generational tendencies over the past few hundred years. I've sort of consolidated some of their info and added my interpretation

The baby boomers were born with Uranus in late Gemini/early Cancer square Neptune in Libra, and Pluto in Leo. This is a fairly clear picture of the hippie movement- Search for uniqueness in terms of mentality and family/roots (communes, etc), which was at uncomfortable odds with their social ideals/development (Neptune in Libra). Finally there was the Pluto in Leo aspect- revolutions in Creative expression (just think about the music of the late 60's), Fun (*coughacid*) and the role of the self in society and at large.

In the 70's, those born into Generation - X had Neptune moving into Sagitarrius (creativity and idealism in the search for meaning and truth, as well as confusion and uncertainty). Uranus in Libra (early 70's) and Scorpio (Later 70's) brought changes and uniqueness in social understanding and sex, Pluto in Libra helped lend a transformative quality to social consciousness, an increased concern for the well-being of others, a desire for social cooperation, but in some cases without a clear focus. Libra is the Scales of the zodiac, the sign of relationships, marriage, cooperation and concern for others (and pleasing others, being popular). While an extremely important turning point for the mentality of people in a rapidly changing world, this generation (at least astrologically) did not have the same fire as the Baby Boomers, or the discipline of later generations. In addition, I think it's interesting that the Baby Boomers had Neptune in Libra- an idealism and slight vagueness in terms of the relationship aspects of Libra- while Generation X had Pluto in this sign, bringing a much harder, transformative slap in the face of reality about social understanding. This, in my opinion, is very telling about the differences in the Baby-Boomer generation and Generation X.

I believe each generation has stereotypes born of their innate tendencies that just happened to fall in a certain pattern (the self-expression of the Pluto in Leo's became "Baby boomers are selfish". The cooperative, social understanding of Pluto in Libra became "Generation X is lazy". The inquisitive, deeper understanding of Pluto in Scorpio became "Millenials are dark and emotional". But we all contribute to the whole in myriad ways, and each generation brings an understanding of a new part of the zodiac- each of which is essential as we grow and develop as a society.

Generation X'ers have alot of potential in creativity and expression as a group to other people, and while they faced the difficulty of searching for meaning and an understanding that seemed to come naturally to older generations, they were also some of the first people who had to face the challenge of finding meaning and understanding in a world of rapid social change, a world in which self-expression was not effective enough to provide meaning, a world in which communes just weren't an option anymore. I think Fight Club is the quintessential Gen-X movie- living in the creative wake of a generation of self-expression, with expectations of greatness but a strong sense of disillusionment. So what can we do? Work together, express our frustration with society by making soap and beating the sh!t out of each other, and ultimately learning about ourselves and finding love.

Tyler Durden: Man, I see in fight club the strongest and smartest men who've ever lived. I see all this potential, and I see squandering. God damn it, an entire generation pumping gas, waiting tables; slaves with white collars. Advertising has us chasing cars and clothes, working jobs we hate so we can buy shit we don't need. We're the middle children of history, man. No purpose or place. We have no Great War. No Great Depression. Our Great War's a spiritual war... our Great Depression is our lives. We've all been raised on television to believe that one day we'd all be millionaires, and movie gods, and rock stars. But we won't. And we're slowly learning that fact. And we're very, very pissed off.

While I think this is one of the greatest movie quotes of all time and has been pretty applicable to anyone born after 1950, Gen X in particular resonates with this statement.

Well guys, I got that second cappuccino, and this is all I got for today. Cheers!




2 comments:

Sarai said...

Thanks soo much dude! Reaally cool stuff here.

Fabulous post bro, and SOO insightful. It is true that Fight Club is to Gen X what Easy Rider was to the 60's...an anthem & a cautionary tale.

I love the way you approach this stuff though. Your perspective is so young and fresh.

Stuff like this helps people get an idea of why understanding previous or later generations might be kind of challenging...

Great Job, and thanks again!

Anonymous said...

you can't quote fight club until you've read the book!! it's totally different from the movie and has a completely different message about life!

why are your posts so long, man? can you do them in installments? and use bigger font because reading that hurts my eyes.

um. yeah. neat stuff. generations are annoying.