Monday, January 2, 2012

Astrological Planets: Pluto in Brief

The symbol for the astrological planet of Pluto looks like a combination of the first two letters of the word "Pluto" or the initials of Percival Lowell, the man who predicted Pluto's discovery. It may have been used at first for those very reasons. However, if we apply our understanding of the cross, crescent, and circle, we see that either conscious or divine planning seems to enter into the simple glyph for perhaps the most complex of planets.

Forget for a moment that Pluto is no longer considered a true planet in our solar system. In the glyph for Pluto, the cross of matter has been broken into its component parts (a horizontal and a vertical line), but they remained joined, creating a single right angle instead of four. Pluto has come to be associated with the process of breakdown and decay that an entity, item, or situation goes through at the end of its useful life. This process reduces it to its most component parts and then allows them to once again take form and be reborn, much like the mythical Phoenix. The crescent representing both the intellectual and the emotional halves of the soul remain attached to the cross of matter during this transition, signifying the soul's transcendence of death.

Pluto seems to rule both the 'highest' and the 'lowest' of humanity. The right angle of the glyph reminds us that there is an inherent danger in dealing with the energies of Pluto. Pluto tends to encourage the philosophy that says there is only one absolute right way to think and to act. This energy is not only at the base of what we call our 'conscience' and what some psychoanalysts call our 'super-ego,' but it also gives rise to dictators, underworld crime bosses (remember that in classical mythology, Pluto was Lord of the Underworld), and other megalomaniacs. Many of the 20th centuries most frightening dictators came to power during the time of Pluto's discovery (1930s). This symbolized that the time had come for humanity to confront those remote, larger than life, mesmerizing personalities who gain or attempt to gain absolute power by claiming to know the one 'right' way.

But this striving for an absolute right is really a perversion of the quest for perfection, and perversion is one of Pluto's specialities. Inhuman action are often associated with the astrological energies of Pluto, as striving for perfection is perverted into the imposition of the will of the stronger upon the weaker.

And yet there is a positive side to this tiny but powerful planet. Pluto reminds us to use the material world for what it is meant for. It should be a place to learn the fundamental principles that are the heart of reality, for in doing so, the soul transcends the material world and reaches a union with the spirit. This union is not apparent at first glance, but if we remember the lessons taught by Neptune, we realize that the union of the soul and spirit would, by definition, have to take place beyond time and space.

While the energies of Neptune (inspiration) are too sensitive to exist fully in the material world, Pluto (conscience) succeeds in gaining power for the individual soul by perfectly balancing the three-fold nature of personal experience (mind, body, spirit). But doing so, it overcomes the seemingly vast distance that separates it from the live-giving Sun, the go, and fulfills the ego's purpose.

Pluto rules the eliminative organs, which include the sexual organs. The theme of 'highest' and 'lowest' is at the very heart of what Pluto is to astrologers.

Some of the qualities associated with Pluto include: transformation, power, transcendence, resurrection, purging, regenerating, ruthlessness, mercilessness, absolute, conscience, the super-ego, control, obsession, breakdown, judgement, purifying, power struggles, elimination, death, and rebirth.

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