My mom, a robustly optimistic Sun in Taurus person, was fond of saying that it’s the bad times in life that make us appreciate the good ones. That’s a fine theory; but a certain amount of Moon/Pluto, Neptune in Scorpio skepticism persuaded me early on that bad times can, in fact, taint the good ones – by making us distrustful, jaded, and regretful.
Consider Adam and Eve.
They are naked and happy in the Garden of Eden. All is beautiful and serene. Laissez les bon temps roulez!
Enter a serpent – a nasty snake in the grass – that tempts them with forbidden fruit. Adam and Eve succumb to temptation, leading to their expulsion from the Garden, awareness of their nakedness, and introducing humanity to the concepts of sin and death (and inevitably, “Project Runway”).
Relatively speaking, the rest of their lives were probably something of a let-down.
Who is your serpent?
We’re born Adam or Eve, naked and usually pretty happy, I imagine, though my memory of the event is sketchy. There is that unpleasant business of getting through the birth canal, but quickly enough you’re snuggled up to some soft, friendly person and given something to drink. You’re in Eden.
And, being Eden, life will introduce you at some point to a snake in the grass. Something that tempts you with a luscious and forbidden treasure. Something that leads you to realize you’re naked, possibly sinful, and that the garden of beauty and love and innocence that you’ve called home is lost to you forever.
For young women, this serpent often takes the form of a young man who is charming, crafty, and clever. He knows just how to lead you into temptation and engineer your downfall.
For instance, according to evolutionary biologist and Harvard professor Steven Pinker,
“The most desirable man of all, in many woman’s eyes, is ‘tough-tender’ – nice to her, aggressive with everyone else.”
It’s a pretty irresistible apple when a good-looking, venomous serpent shows you his sweet side. You feel incredibly special. You will do anything to ensure a steady supply of these apples!
Before you know what hit you, your family is threatening to disinherit you, your friends won’t return your calls, and there are fang marks all over your body.
That’s a nasty serpent. Some of us are still pretty young when he arrives on the scene and leaves with our innocence.
There are nastier serpents, though, and sometimes they arrive when we’re even younger. Serpents who tempt us, boys and girls alike, with toys or candy or games, and then handle us in a way that makes us feel dirty. Serpents who rustle through the grass, hardly detectable until they suddenly leap from a bush and bite you.
And the next thing you know, you’ve been expelled from the Garden. The world isn’t so pretty or benign anymore, not so safe or secure. Your eyes have been opened to your nakedness and vulnerability. You’ve been tricked and made to feel foolish. You’ve been told your natural state is an abomination, and told it in such a convincing way that you kind of believe it.
Lunar Eclipse in Scorpio: A serpent in your garden
This Full Moon is a lunar eclipse in Scorpio. And while there is nothing intrinsically evil or unreliable about the Scorpion, it is the sign of secrets, temptations, and mysteries – and those are the things that our serpents like to use to ensnare us.
So this is an eclipse that tends to present you with either a choice to eat forbidden fruit, or the consequences of having already eaten it. Sleeping with the married lover, or realizing the lover you’ve slept with is married. Lying to a friend about something that really matters, or perhaps discovering such a lie.
There is an opportunity in this eclipse, though, that’s characteristic of eclipses in general and Scorpio eclipses in particular. It’s the opportunity to transform yourself into something even more formidable than a crafty serpent: a fire-breathing dragon. Dragons are wise, magical, and supernaturally adept. And here’s the good part: legend has it that they taught humans how to speak.
Scorpio’s greatest gifts are the ability to perceive what others can’t see, and the bravery to speak out about it. Scorpio energy in its lowest expression is a cunning snake in the grass, but Scorpio energy in its highest expression is a dragon.
Lunar eclipses fell near this degree in April 1986 and April 2005. You met the serpent then; possibly, it helped engineer a fall from grace, your expulsion from the Garden.
Did you show that serpent how a dragon behaves when threatened? Did you shout and hiss and drive it out? Did you breathe fire and call the National Enquirer to blow the whistle on that serpent’s ass? (Note to self for further research: Do serpents have asses?)
Well, here’s your chance. Because there is a snake rustling through the grasses of your garden. Something that wishes you ill, that wants you to fail, or just some free-floating spirit of malevolence that takes an impersonal delight in seeing a good person brought low.
The work of this lunar eclipse is to stare that serpent down. To summon every unshakable, sensible, life-affirming impulse you possess. To call on that dragon you carry around, just behind your breastbone – the one that breathes fire, straight from your heart.
How will the upcoming eclipses affect you? Order my exclusive eclipse report, Followed by a Moonshadow!
© 2013 by April Elliott Kent
Risse says
I LOVE THIS! It was like you were speaking directly to me! Wow. You’re amazing!
Rachel says
Amen! I am ready.
Georgianna says
Thanks!
Mary Jo Clark says
I am an intuitive artist and just finished several paintings….three contain a dragon, representing me, two have the serpent and the dragon. A new drawing again has a serpent, but very small now and a very large dragon. I fell in love and it won’t be reciprocated so he says. The paintings came from our relationship. He woke up the sleeping dragon in me and gave me permission to feel again. He just can’t love me back. The serpent standing tall, then shrinking, I think is my previous life and my ex who surpressed me….anyway this posting of yours hit me right between the eyes….I throw the paint down and see pictures which I enhance…so I didn’t intend for these images to appear. You gave me info I needed. Thank you.
Robin says
Love this post, thank you. And as a Game of Thrones watcher, couldn’t help thinking of this weeks episode and Daenerys and her dragon “Dracarys!” (those of you who watch will appreciate the synchronicity 😉 )
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t-S9VVH-toc
Jeannine says
Wow…did I need this message right now. Thank you! Can I start breathing fire right now or do I need to wait until tomorrow?
VJ says
Great post, and thank you for sharing!
The lunar eclipse will affect my 5th house with Neptune, Moon, North Node, Vertex, all in Scorpio. However, Taurus is on the cusp of my 11th with Mercury and South Node in Taurus.
My 11th and 5th houses are on a T-square with Pluto in Leo in the 3rd.
NAMASTE’
lila says
Hi April,
Love this post. and I love serpents. Kundalini, writhing Her royal way through all the nooks and crannies, biting venom so that shadows can claim the light and transform us. Sinuously speaking, dragons and snakes… shiver down the spine. One can command the airways, the other parts the grass.
Just another take, I guess, no real comment. I thought immediately of Emily Dickinson’s *A Narrow Fellow in the Grass* when I read the subject line (The Grass divides as with a Comb/A spotted shaft is seen/And then it closes at your feet/And opens further on–
…/never met this Fellow/Attended, or alone/Without a tighter breathing
And Zero at the Bone–).
my own meanderings:
the oops/and doodles of aah/ and the plop as they drop down the droop of your maw
The shake as you shiver in the grip of your bliss
the hug that’s as tight as a bite with its hiss
From the glide of your arch/and the tangle of hum
you slide into stretch/ and you puncture the sun,
then snake back through the thicket,
slivers stuck to your tongue.