Get JulianLee's Groundbreaking
Astrology Books: "13 Astrological Assertions" -- or -- "The Geostel Brownbook -- Better Guide To Astrocartography Maps" Ebooks, PDF, Instant Download |
A: It's all over the board. But there are a few categories that call me a bit more. I've always gotten a lot of body worker and healer types. I think it's just that these are more open to esoteric information. Also creative entrepreneurs. Like, one recent reading was with a long-time client who is a pioneer with a certain kind of water, from a certain source. I guess the entrepreneurs are more open-minded to new life strategies. You get a certain "tree" buzzing sometimes. Like, for years I had many callers from Fairfield, Iowa who were into TM. But I have neurosurgeon clients, a good number of attorneys, quite a few artists or aspiring artists. I have clients who work for Google, Facebook, Microsoft, and Amazon. Nobody from Twitter yet. I've had a few clients who were literal gurus, with a following. That's one of the oddest things. Q: Do you get a lot of callers from the internet? A: I do, but I prefer referral clients. They are already gung-ho and on board and have full trust in me. People who come purely from the internet usually have some skepticism and fear. "I'm nervous about hiring this guy I found on the internet." So they are higher-maintenance. They get whacked out if you are 2 minutes late calling. Fortunately now most of my clients are referrals, a friend who has relocated told them about me. And when you have a 30-year practice you are always getting calls from old clients going back through the years. They've done the thing they wanted to do before, and they are ready for some new adventure. It's a profound relationship and I love that. Sometimes I feel like a cosmic carny. Q: A carny? A: I put people on rides. That's all you can do. You know, those rough guys with a rag in their back pocket and a cig hanging out of their mouth, I remember from Riverside Park in Des Moines. Running rides for the kids. Maybe the ride lasts 5 years, or 20. But like children they get off the ride all breathless and want to do it again,. Or perhaps try some other ride in the amusement park. Some other different location with different goals. Everybody else is having "rides" on the samsara too, good and bad rides. Those who don't know anything about astrology, and live in various places at various times, just don't know anything about them in advance or what's really going on. They don't know how the impacts on their lives are arising. But they are having rides also. The samsara is confusing. I definitely help make sense of it. And I put them on better rides. Q: You have written that your first astrology-guided move was to Alaska, and it was based on an Astro*Carto*Graphy map. And you've said that there were some problems up in Alaska for you. A: Yes. It turned out that I had always been living with an excellent House of Children, thus I had three kids who were happy, healthy, and appreciated by all around us. It turned out that Alaska turned that on its head, and now there were many worries and concerns about my kids. The realm of "my kids" was not going so well as with the Iowa chart. I realized soon after going there that the "Relocated Natal Chart" was really what was happening. And it has a Fifth House. And I had screwed up my Fifth House. I ended up leaving there when I realized that. It's really critical that an astrologer doing locational work comprehends the blessings that the client already has in their current location. Every location, without exception, has some kind of special blessings. You can tell by the various fruit the client has already manifested in the current location. You have to be really careful about what you're throwing away to get that "other thing." Q: So did you blame the Astro Numerics Service, who sold the ACG map? Did you want to sue them? A: No, because my mind immediately said "That's the best my karma would allow at that time." The idea that you're gonna pay 12 dollars (the price of the map and booklet at that time) and receive All Good is a little childish, don't you think? I realized that, on one hand, there was something to it, because my life definitely changed up there. But that it was a new study in this world, and much more was to be known about it. If I'm gonna have the karma to "use a metaphysical trick and receive boons" -- that would be my own karma. If I'm gonna have my technique blow up on me, or disappoint, that's also my karma. Q: So you didn't start attacking the Astro*Carto*Graphy people. A: No. And it was funny, this was around 1980. Back then things were so informal and half-cocked. I remember when I got my $12 dollar map in the mail, somebody had written something on it with pen. It was probably the secretary or whoever prepared the outgoing mail. They had written on the paperwork "Looks like Hawaii gives the good life with all the trimmings." Some nameless person was actually giving their opinion on the paperwork. Since that time I know Hawaii would not have given me any perfect life, and those islands had the same blighted Fifth House as Alaska had. So there was a lot of silly playing fast-and-loose going on. There was this heady feeling surrounding the ACG product that it "gave the secrets" and people were just silly about it. Once I had realized the full functionality of the Relocated Natal Chart, I did state that the product has limitations and there are better ways to see what a location offers. But no, I didn't blame Jim Lewis or his company for my problems. The way it works is: If you have the karma to be blessed by a particular technique right now, whether the technique is deemed Mickey Mouse or looks super sophisticated, you will get that boon. If you have the karma to be messed up by a technique, disappointed, no matter how sophisticated it looks -- you will be disappointed. So, some people will luck out using a linemap, other people won't. And that's all due to their karma at the time. Cleverness doesn't really avail in this world. Only the good karma, associated with transits and progressions, is what surely delivers. Q: So the astrologer is really just like a player in a play. "A boon is going to come to this character, and there's an astrologer or metaphysician involved, during this act." A: Yes. If somebody's gonna get a boon in this life, it's there in their karma and will arrive, with or without astrologer. But in this multifarious drama it happens that "astrologers, best friends, wise men" or whatnot get inserted into the various stories. And we can see that in the planets also. Like, if Uranus is coming around and interacting with somebody's 4th House Ruler, then it will often happen that astrology, or some occult technique, comes into play as they make a move decision. Astrologers are just more characters on the stage. Astrology itself can't rise above the law of duality. It only describes the duality. An appropriate verse to explain this, from the Bhagavad-Gita, is the one that says "The wise man sees that he's not really doing anything, just observes the gunas are just playing among the gunas." I'm paraphrasing two verses there. The karmas are rolling about doing their thing. The "astrologer" is contained and encompassed in the samsaric hairball, just like all the other factors and players. Generally an astrologer does not stand above the duality. He is part of it. Q: Is there such a thing as a "perfect chart"? A: Absolutely not. All charts contain duality. This includes all natal charts, timing charts, and locational charts. The best you can do is to get a chart where there is more coherency or good fortune in particular areas of life, for particular periods of time. Newbie astrologers who believe there is some kind of "perfect chart" are like children. Q: Explain "coherency." A: Coherency is a word I like to use, and I think Maharishi Mahesh yogi used it, and it's a word for blessing, improvement, fruitfulness, pleasant growth, good experiences -- what we humans would interpret as pleasantness or good fortune. In astrology, coherency is tied a lot to Jupiter, Venus, the Moon, the trine, and the sextile. If you are given a nice car that you like, and needed a car, that's a coherent event. If you smash your car against a post and accidentally kill the neighbor's dog, that's an incoherent event. Incoherency is, in practical observation, associated with Saturn, Pluto, Mars, and the square, quincunx, and dodecile aspects. In my locational astrology work I basically try to increase the coherency-feed into areas of life that the client cares about. But there is no location that is "fortunate in all ways," only in particular ways. And as to those fortunate trends, there is no location that is always fortunate in a given way, but only during periods. Yet those periods could last many years. Q: How many of your clients have actually moved based on your advice? A: I can't know for sure since a lot of them never tell me or I only heard about it second-hand. But based on doing this twenty-seven years, I could conservatively guess that it's at least five hundred. Q: How important is the timing of a move? A: Extremely important. Going at the wrong time can bring contrary results on arrival or even downgrade the longer-term good of the place. Let's say I've found a place where a client's income will improve. Maybe it's clear to me it will start improving next year, but won't be good this year at all. Then perhaps it's easy to see it will improve for five years then flatten out, or maybe go sideways for two years. Then maybe it comes back improving again for twelve years after that. These fluctuations can all be seen from here. And there is no "steady state" to any of the charts or any realm of life. There are only harvests. Q: Buddha said in the Dhamappada "You run like the hare, hunted pursued." Do you think this relates? A: Yes, that's it. What are we pursued by? Constant change, duality, change of "seasons." The samsara keeps catching up to us. So to deal with this situation we become like surfers, trying to ride the nice waves. Q: And in your locational astrology you are trying to help people more skillfully ride the coherency waves. A: Yes. I have used the metaphor that we can "stand under the right apple tree at the right time to catch some apples in our apron." In a way you could say we humans are always "following the harvest." In every valley once fruitful and warm there comes a time when a cold wind starts to blow and the fruit is no longer on the vine. This is our human dualistic situation. With locational astrology we can follow the harvest more intelligently and knowingly. But one has to choose: "What is the thing I really care about improving and what things am I willing to let hang." Or even "What pains and troubles am I willing to bear, while I have this other blessing." Timing is also hugely important in travel, or trips to check out a place. Notice that nobody has an exact duplicate of any trip. If you go to Seattle 5 times you will have 5 different experiences, some, vastly different. Some of the trips will go better than others. This is because of the transits you're traveling under. It's very possible to visit a place that's going to be excellent for you long-term, but go at a bad time and have a bad experience that turns you off of the place. Likewise there may be a location that's gonna eat you alive this year, but you may go there on a great weekend, under some wonderful short-term transits effective for a few days. You have a lovely time so think "This must be my lucky place"and thus decide to move there. You can get fooled. It's very tricky. Q: It does seem obvious nobody has an exactly duplicate trip anywhere, and some visits to Los Angeles or whatever are better from others. This is another reason astrological knowledge is so valuable. You can distinguish between short-term themes and long-term themes. There is this naive idea a lot of people get, once they hear about locational astrology, they think there is this "lucky place" for them and it's "always lucky" and will always be. That's not how it is. As transits move, in the long-term situation, every fortunate theme that's built up in a given location will eventually have it's decline or knock-down times. And if you travel there 10 times, again, you'll have 10 different trips. And should you travel there at bad times, you will have bad experiences there. You will have negative experiences anywhere if you travel there at a bad time. An example would be: Mars is squaring your Neptune that weekend, Venus is afflicting your Saturn, and the moon's in a bad place the day you land there. Maybe this was a place you once prospered for 10 years and have many happy memories about it. Yet that week, because you traveled under these bad transits -- it's problematic there, even hellish. Q: So is the adage true that "you can never go back?" A: As with most "nevers," that one's false. A lot of adages are false! Right, people do want to go back to good times. And we often think returning to a place where we had good times will bring the good times back. That adage exists because people are commonly disappointed by this. But the real truth is: If you go back to that place when the transits/progressions are adverse to your expectation you won't "go back." However if you return to that place when the transits are good, maybe even better than they were before -- you can go back. You can "go back" in spades! "Things of the fonder past returning to you" -- this is, in fact, one of the lovelier things you can find in a new location -- but only if you come at the right time. In fact, you can get this effect, strangely, in a place you've never lived before. And that's something most people wouldn't think of. In my new location in Montana I have this sweet feeling all the time like I'm "back in my mother's house." There is a lot of "return" stuff going on though I've never lived here before. Q: So is it a fact that all kinds of things can occur in one location? A: Indeed. I have often said astrology is all about wheels-within-wheels, the turning of various wheels. I would conjecture that if you could live in one place for thousands of years, you'd have times you're king, times you're a homeless beggar. You'd have times you're a composer, times you're an accountant. You'd have lonely periods and times of marriage and domestic bliss. All things would come to you eventually, all kinds of karmic experience, if you could live eons in one place. The big circles would finally come around and deliver everything. So what we're doing when we move, basically, is we sort of cheat the wheel or scurry away. We probably, by moving, are one-upping things on the "Lords of Karma," if you will, and subverting a certain law. Like naughty school children playing hooky and evading the Principal. With higher spiritual development we become a still point and the outer world revolves around us, perhaps. Not having much involvement any more with the karmic flux, there is no need to move any more. But then we become like a staring frog on a lily pad, perhaps, like a Nityananda, not engaged with the samsara any more. And most people don't want to go there -- can't. People used to say about Swami Muktananda that he seemed like a still point with the world revolving around him. Q: So for the rest of us ordinary mortals, who want to change their experience by moving, shouldn't attraction work? Aren't people often attracted to places that are good for them? What if you recommend a location to somebody but they've never been attracted to there? Should that be an issue for them? A: I've been asked that. The first thing I would say is this: It often happens that people move to the place they've been attracted to -- maybe for a long time -- then have a bad time, mixed results, or even calamities after moving there. Happens all the time! Meanwhile, I have many cases of movers who did take my advice, moved to the place they were never attracted to before, and were very pleased about things there. The truth is, people do get attracted to places that have good influences for them, at least had those influences. Places "talk to you" from a distance, this is true. If somebody has excellent 4th House transits in Paris during 1990-1995, Paris will "call" them strongly during that time. They'll get good impressions, feelings, stories, photos coming at them from Paris, during that time. What they do is register this in their head as "Paris, attractive, feels good." But by the time they ever go there, those beneficial harvests may be long gone, see? They've been carrying around their impressions gathered during the past, but go there too late. Likewise, when a place is negative for you, it will also send out to you, as it were, negative impressions, and you build up that register in your head. You think "I've always had a bad feeling about that place." This is based on the past, how that place was for them back then. It may be about to have some lovely years of positive developments, but this impression is there. This is, indeed, I think how samsara tricks us into having unpleasant experiences. The average human being is stumbling around based on positive and negative impressions they've stored up in their head. Few act immediately and instinctively when a place is "calling us" right now. In my work I cut through all the impressions or prejudices people have built up, about places, and find them good places they never could have thought of. "Shangrila years" come to every person, in every possible location. But if you've never had "Shangrila transits" yet in that place, that is it's never called you, you won't have registered that place in your head that way. By the time you start to get different impressions about that place, through news or media or friends, perhaps you've missed 4-5 of the nicest years there. So yes, often attraction does work. But most people respond to it way too late. Thus this samsara is bewildering. It's probably meant to be. Q: How does an astrology reading relate to psychic readings? Is there any overlap? A: They are two different things, but there will be overlap depending on the astrologer. I have always viewed myself as a pure astrologer, but I get accused a lot of being psychic. I say "accused" because I have never tried to use psychic ability in my readings, and I preferred to understand the astrology as astrology. One of my earliest astrology readings by another, when I was first getting curious about it, was done by a woman who was actually -- it turned out -- a psychic. I didn't know this. She was actually using astrology charts in the same way Tarot readers use the Tarot, to stimulate psychic impressions. This was disappointing to me because I wanted to learn about my chart in terms of the astrological lore or laws -- if there were any. When I asked her, "Why are you saying this? Show me in my chart where it indicates this" -- she couldn't answer and she became agitated. She didn't know the lore or literature; couldn't explain my chart to me in the sort of technical way I was hoping. But looking at charts all the time will develop the intuition. It happened to me. Certainly when that happens, you are going to be a better astrologer than one who is all technical, all lore, but has no intuition. Because a given astrological factor can manifest in multifarious ways. A pure psychic can read the tea leaves, read from the way the birds are acting around their bird feeder, read from a rune throw, read from sensations in their body, or read off of astrological charts even if they've never studied astrology. A pure astrologer can't, but if they are highly experienced and good at the lore, their reading could be more instructive than the psychic, with a bigger framework whereas psychics tend to bring up all sorts of random, odd things without a view of the client's big framework. I like to think of astrology as the most elegant form of runes/Tarot etc. Because there is so much conscious knowledge to it; things you can explain, to another, and principles you can apply that anyone can learn. So they are different, but there will always be some overlap if the astrologer has some intuition. I have never read any book on developing your intuition, or made efforts to do so. But it did grow in me naturally over time. Q: So do you use intuition in your readings? A: I don't do it consciously, but it appears that I do it unconsciously. There is a moment where it appears to kick in nowadays, and that's when I first begin to look at the client's chart. I will see some problem in their current location, and I'm looking for it, and I say "Ah, there's the problem." Then I start visualizing how far east or west they might have to go to lose that problem, just because I want to look at my first alternative chart for them. And in that moment a town often arises in my mind. Maybe they are in North Carolina and I'm just "guessing" they would get some different house ruler some ways to the west, and so I just take a stab. And with one client my mind might think "Taos," with another "Fort Collins," with another "Boulder," and with another "Santa Fe." But in each case I was just trying to take a stab at a certain longitudinal area to the west that I think might be that far. But I don't know why I think of one town versus another in that NM/CO area, because generally a person's charts would be the same up and down that area. And that's where I think I get an intuitive hit. Because it often turns out that the first place I thought of, when examining it and trying it against others, turns out to be the best technical situation. Then I end up just using close study of the charts to, in many cases, confirm what I had first "thought of." In some cases it speeds up my hunt. But I don't try to do this. And if my initial thoughts didn't turn out to be technically best, I would abandon them. There is also a dimension related to my own will, my own visualization for the client, and my own word. Q: What does this mean? Well, there is a power in word. I try to use words to benefit my clients; to serve them. And I have to believe in that thing -- that dream they have -- to speak about it with faith. And I think there are factors like that in my work. I have often been surprised at some of the reports I've had from relocated clients. "This particular thing happened just like you said" they say, and I think "Wait, I said that?" It will be some particular thing that you can't really get out of a chart with pure astrology. At times I have thought that my word and putting that vision in their mind played a role in bringing it about. There are spiritual dimensions to this work that can't be avoided in the end. And a lot of astrologers load their clients down with negative spin, negative words, and negative readings, and that's not a nice thing. They are, in fact, just pressing their negative will upon the client. Q: If you see something negative in the chart, coming up, do you tell them? A: I would lay out to them the range of possibilities from high-end to low end, not mention the low-end much. If you do that, you are hurting the client, giving them fear and negative visualizations, and making it more likely they manifest some low end. I direct their minds to the high-end possibilities. Nothing can be exactly predicted with astrology, only a range of things from high-end to low. By "high" I mean easy, even pleasant things (with the bad transit), and by low-end I mean the dire, undesirable things. I would prefer to work within the context of "should I do this thing, or not?" (sue the government, move, get married, go to France in September...) Given whatever transits that apply, I'd either advise for or against. Perhaps I'd tell them "If you do this, then, you're going to get this/that low-end possibilities." In this case, see, they have an out. They don't have to do that thing. It is action that makes a transit expand in its potential. The more actions you take during a bad transit, the more trouble expands. So if they are insisting on taking an action that is dangerous, then I might mention low-end to warn them off of that. So if trouble is coming up, I tell my client the ways to "keep their head down" or lie low, and how to avoid most of the trouble. I have never stated to anybody "This bad thing is going to happen." Astrologers like that are miscreants and troublesome people on this earth. Because there is no bad thing seen in the charts that has to happen. There is always protection available. A wide array of protections are available, no matter what the transit. This is grace. Q: What is the best way to learn astrology? A: In the end, it's looking at a lot of charts, charts of people you know personally or can know something from the public realm, such as by reading biographies and autobiographies. I found that the astrology books were often wrong or did not present reliable rules. So early on I just started "looking at the charts." This includes watching transits and progressions -- yours and everybody else's. Based on my clients I've looked at well over 10 thousand by now, and before that, I was studying hundreds of them, people I knew, famous people, etc. At the beginning I was frustrated that a lot of statements by astrologers in books didn't necessarily hold true. Yet I knew I was onto something true. I began looking for reliable laws, and I did this by looking at many, many charts, trying out different systems and theories, asking a lot of questions. And the great thing about this is you are not approaching it with solidified preconceptions, so you end up seeing things others have been missing. Q: Could you give any examples of things in books that you found to be unreliable or wrong? A: OK. Well, most books write that the Sextile aspect is positive, fortunate, easy. But this is often not true. With the Sextile there is really just a "heavy mixing" between two planets. So, when Mercury sextiles your Saturn in a transit, there is a heavy mixing of Saturn with Mercury. And you will find there are difficulties then. At best you could say that the troubles are pretty workable and organized. I remember many years ago, as I was starting to use astrological timings more and more, I picked a "Moon-Sextile-Saturn" afternoon for going to the DMV because books said that was a time you got on well with authority figures, the law, etc. It was some routine thing with a vehicle title. But you know how the DMV is, you want minimum hassles, delays, red tape. But the lady at the DMV (a Mexican, incidentally) basically checked every jot and tittle. She was all business and threw the book at me in terms of regulations, and I was turned away having to come up with some other document. Watching the Sextile many years from that day, I see it can be both bad and good. The prime thing you can say about the Sextile is that it produces strong interactions with people. And with sextiles and even trines from Saturn, the functioning of that planet, you could say, is impaired or at least slowed down. When Saturn touches anything, it cools it down, makes it at least sluggish. Another example is how many books describe Jupiter-Square-Saturn in a mostly negative way. Yet you find it in the charts of successful businesspeople, wealthy persons, and not a few billionaires. It's easy to explain why, metaphysically, such would be the case. Q: So a lesson there would be that when people study astrology, from books, they should take things with reserve, get a lot of opinions. A: Yes. I say: Don't bite down too hard on the opinions of others, including what's written in books, when you begin studying astrology thinking "This is it! This is the law! I know the secret now. I read it in a book." It's not wise. You'll make mistakes. Some astrological observers are better than others, and a lot of them, when they write their opinions, are basically going off a theory rather than real life experience. When Dane Rudhyar opined that the Quincunx is a minor aspect, he was just trying to fit them into an elegant theory. In human terms they are not minor. I have not studied astrological books for a great many years because I find the study of the charts and people themselves more engrossing and challenging. Another example would be the ideas people have about Mercury retrograde. I get clients who want to postpone a reading because Mercury is retrograde. Yet in their case, doing it during the Merc Retrograde is the most appropriate thing. Because what happens then is that the conventional, everyday Mercury things get bogged down, and instead people start doing the unusual Mercury things that they have long set aside. So, they tend to "write that letter" they've been wanting to write for 6 months then, that being a thing they don't do much any more. They go to a counselor then though they don't usually go to counselors. They have a certain conversation that deals with a lot of stuff, background issues, that have been hanging around forever -- but normally those conversations don't usually take place. They do their unconventional Mercury things. To that person I might ask: Do you get a lot of astrological readings? and they say "no" I point out that the Merc Retrograde is why they're coming to me. If that was somebody who got an astrological reading every week, then perhaps for them, because readings are conventional activity for them, the Rx would give them a messy reading. But not for the others. You can imagine conventional Mercury activity (transactions, checkout lines, transit) as being like a big river rushing forward. Along the sides of the river there are little inlets, nooks and crannies. There are back movements there -- eddies -- and things getting stuck along the sides of the river. They are caught there by the onrushing river and never moving on. If the river were to become still or change directions, all these things would become loose and become free to move again. Mercury Retrograde is like that. It loosens up the Mercury activities that have been stuck on the sides of the onrushing river. Under the Mercury Retrograde we naturally do the more subtle, delicate "Mercury things" and clear the sort of Mercury tasks we don't get to normally. Q: So it's clear that people get ideas in their head about astrology that may cause, if you will, a sort of distortion of life, causing them to do unnatural things or miss what is natural. A: Yes indeed. An inexperienced obsession with astrology interferes with natural processes and instincts and causes people to do stupid things. And it's usually because of something they read in a book. Or even lots of books. Q: Can you give another example of a book idea that you regard as false or problematic? A: Well, a sad one, and a little funny, is seeing all those women moving to "Venus lines" on their Astrocartography map because they think they will get a mate there; find marriage. This is because of the silly text Jim Lewis placed in his original "astrocartography" booklet. I get them all the time. The conversation goes like this: Client: I still have no guy and I even moved to my Venus line five years ago. Me: Which one? Client: The strongest one, the Venus Descending. Me: Ah, yes. The one where Venus is even right there conjunct your marriage cusp. Client: Yup. Me: Let me guess. I bet you have a lot of lady friends, right? Client: Oh, yea, I have loads of girlfriends. Me: And I bet they are good looking. Client: Oh, yea, it's weird, all my girlfriends are like fashion models. Me: And they are glamorous, dress well, have great hair, wear makeup, like to sit around and have fun and have food and enjoy themselves with you... Client: Oh, yea, we're always hanging out. They are a lot of fun. My buds. Me: Ok, don't you know that Venus is female planet? What Venus-DSC guarantees is pretty girlfriends. Client: Oh geez. So they have made this major change in their life, moved to a place and spent years there, based on faulty opinions in an astrology book, one that is considered authoritative. Q: This is devastating. A: I know. But, now they know. Q: How many moves have you made since discovering locational astrology? A: Three, since discovering it in my birth state of Iowa. I have made 3 astrologically inspired moves over a span of 32 years. Q: That's not many moves in 32 years. A: I guess not! Typically my clients have 10 or 20 moves behind them. Q: Summarize your moves. Since the discovery of locational astrology to now 32 years later, I've lived in four states. One of these, Oregon, was not an astrological move; I considered the chart to be the same as my Calif. chart, and it was. I did it because I was bored with Ojai and wanted to be closer to some of my children. The 3rd astrological move, to Montana, was recent, in my old age. The states were Alaska, California, Oregon, and recently, Montana. I was in California about 15 years, and with "my California Chart" about 22 years. So there were three that had astrological study behind them. It wasn't until age 60 that I was able to make a move based on ripe knowledge. That was my 3rd astrological move, recently to Montana. So it was "a stupid ACG map move," then a move using a few new ideas I wanted to try out, then a move late in life finally, that had a lot of study behind it. I was obsessed with this topic ever since I discovered it was real. Q: Shouldn't a locational astrologer make more moves in order to learn and test his theories? That would be ideal. I always wanted to try more experiments personally, but I'm a family man, and life happens. Sometimes you get held in a place. But indeed, I used to feel bad I didn't move more, to keep my knowledge fresh and personal. Clients sometimes ask me: "Have you been there?" and there were not really many places that I had been. During the 20-year California period I craved to try out some of my riper and better ideas and to have that experience again, of "seeing the new chart come in." But life happens. I stayed in the "California Chart" (which included Oregon) about 25 years, even though it was a difficult chart and the result of my first experiment using my own ideas, because that's what my family needed. But I had begun to get much information from my clients, from my client interviews. Plus, I learned a great deal from the 2 astrological moves that I did, and am learning now again from this third one. When being an adventurer with this new knowledge, you learn from your mistakes as well as the things you do right. But yea, I have sometimes felt like a professor eager to do a Practicum myself or have a "sabbatical" to do it first hand again. Still there's nothing like talking to 15,000 people in their current location, having their birth data. Q: You felt you were learning by hearing the stories of your clients. A: Very much. It's has to be the best way to learn. Because you get to deal with infinitely more factors and situations that way -- than what's available in one's own chart. I feel very lucky that I developed the kind of practice that involved me doing interviews with people on a daily basis -- about their real lives in that location. It was the way I've learned the most. Moving all the time, without good reason, would make for a broken up and crazy life. My clients, likewise, often stay in the recommended location a pretty long time, like me, which I am proud of. Q: Can you tell us something about your three astrological moves? A: The move to Alaska was after finding Jim Lewis' "Astrocartography map" and I had no clue what I was doing. But I moved right to the place that the map appeared to indicate was "lucky." Just like many people have done. I found out from that move that everybody has a locational "house of children," that I had had an excellent one already in Iowa, and now I didn't like how things were going for my kids. Lesson: You will always be losing something when you make a major move east or west, even though you may be gaining another thing. Move #2, to California. After a few months of wandering back to our home town and sojourning in the midwest based on a dream (literally in sleep) that my wife had, this was the first where I got to try out some of my new ideas beyond the Astrocartography map ideas. At that time I was most seeking to assist one of my children who had a handicap, and I basically put all the eggs in that basket, trying to give her things like "Mars in the 3rd House" and Sagg rising. At that time I knew about the significance of the new locational rising sign, and the fact that there are planets in other houses, doing their thing, and I was very interested in trines to the midheaven/ascendant. I was trying to correlate the charts of six people (my family) and it was a VERY difficult decision to make. The move to California became by biggest learning move. I found out the most from it. My third astrological move, just recently at 59, was the first one where I was able to think just "for me" plus use the knowledge I had gained over the preceding 30 years. It was the first one I got to do for myself where I had a clue what I was doing. I have been pleased with the outcome, and experiencing and watching the new locational chart form has been exciting and inspiring. It has been very confirmatory to the theories and techniques I honed in my long period in California/Oregon. Q: Does a person have to move every few years to have the good benefits locational astrology is supposed to give? A: It depends on what you have available to you for charts, and it depends on the person and what they are seeking. All you can do in life is "catch a harvest." Catching a harvest is actually what everybody wants. When I say "harvest" it means "this situation is improving," or "these conditions are improving and I'm blissful about that." Catching a harvest is all anybody is seeking, whether they are aware of astrology or not. The majority of my clients are seeking to stay somewhere for a while. In these days "long term" for most people would mean 10 years or more. Short term might mean 2 or 3 years. I am usually looking for a place the client can invest themselves. Especially if they are a family, and especially if they say that's what they want. But you can't find any location where conditions don't fluctuate, or where a given harvest doesn't start winding down. I have some clients who are delighted to go to a place for 1-2 years if those 1-2 years will be exciting and give them the kind of harvest -- it's really a harvest of experience -- that they want. These are often single people, or people who are done with career and family, and want adventures. To stay in a location when you're not getting the life- harvests you want (writing that book, creating that business, falling in love) is pointless if there is nobody who needs you to stay there. But to move around a lot when you don't know what you're doing and simply getting a random mix of good and bad experiences, without understanding them, is sad. So the answer to that question is: You can stay somewhere 30 years but don't expect conditions to remain the same there for 30 years. If you want to "surf the coherency waves" you would need to move now and then -- like a lot of successful people actually do instinctively. The purpose for most people is not "to stay in one place" adamantly, but to get the kinds of experience-harvests that they desire. I would have liked to have made more moves than I have made. But I was a family man. If one has a friendly enough 4th house structure there may be a lot of good in staying in one place lifelong, or for 30 years or whatever. Still, that person will be building up itches and hungers that are not satisfied in the location. Every farmer you find on his same land 40 years later has that "dream" to, you know, sail the Caribbean or explore castles in France or whatever. The fact is you can't find a location for anybody that they will never question. That's because of the cycle of Saturn. Every 7 years Saturn will hit the locational 4th House ruler with a square, opposition, or conjunction. At that time, pretty much everybody questions their location seriously. They see flaws to "these surroundings" or "this town" or "this culture" and think "Should we move?" This is unavoidable for all. Whether they should or not -- that's another story. What I try to answer. Sometimes, things are about to get better than ever if they will stay put. That's my answer to some clients. But let's say we have gram and gramps and they have been on the same farm for 60 years. Nevertheless there were those years where the Saturn transit came, and they heavily questioned staying; considered leaving. It's impossible for me to take away these Saturn challenges to their 4th House every 7 years. So in some cases, if they have no reason to stay, and I think they've already had their best harvest there, I'll recommend a move. If I can find something worth moving for. Other times, I'll urge them to stay put longer. Either because it's the least damaging option or because they're about to have a turn to the good, where they are. Q: What is the hardest part of your work? A: Looking at another chart and seeing the painful, difficult things that many people are dealing with. Say, progressing Saturn has been squaring their Mercury for 15 years, within 3 degrees and has 15 more years to go. Looking at that and visualizing what that must be doing based on the house system (and hearing it from them too). It's sort of a burden just to look at these things and have to picture it. In a way I do some living vicariously through others, as I look at so many charts. Lots of suffering people out there! The 2nd thing that's hard is when I know that moving won't help them, at least right now, and having to tell them that opinion. The fact is some people are just stuck with painful situations, and that's hard to see and hard to bear. I'm a cure-oriented astrologer and my clients are looking for a cure. They are asking for a lot. It's hard when I can't give it. Q: But sometimes you can? A: Definitely. Or else I wouldn't do this. Q: What is the happiest part of your work? A: When I hear from a moved client and they are happy and gushing about the changes they've had. The other part is just the study itself, testing theories, finding out new things. When someone's telling a serious and colorful tale, about a problem, and we're pretty solid with the birth time, and there's nothing obvious to explain it -- I love trying to figure that out. It leads you to new things. I'm sort of amazed at some of the things I've learned, technically. Then any new vista, starting to study it. Like I recently began to pay attention to fixed stars. That's a whole new horizon for me and very, very interesting. Astrological knowledge is endless. You never know it all. And the best find of all is when someone has harsh factors, and you're sure the chart is accurate, but they are running really high end, hardly having any negative impacts from those factors. Especially if they are some kind of spiritual practitioner, you sometimes get a portal into "grace factors." How people can actually get "off the chart" and have protection and grace. This is the holy grail of my life, and now and then I get a client who's showing this. Q: Is this a lucrative profession for you? A: For me it's not, because I refund too many people and don't advise them to move. I lose a lot of money that way. But I was never motivated by money and never wanted to be a slave or on a work treadmill. I like a lot of time for study, activism, creative hobbies, and meditation. Once I had "just enough" money I was pretty satisfied. I was always more motivated by the goal of "figuring things out. How does it work? What is karma? How does it work? How can you change things?" Q: You're unusual in turning people down and refunding them. How do they respond to this? Are they upset? A: A lot of them are. But I try to give them something of value in my short "stumped" talk to them explaining why. Many times in that talk I point out to them good things they are already carrying in their current location, some of the positive themes they already have that they take for granted. They can tell that I'm thinking what's for their best, and a lot of them are very glad later on that they didn't move. Because things change in every person's locational conditions, everywhere, I invite them to call me back in 2 years or more. It's surprising that a lot of them do. They'll call me 2-3 years later and say: "Here I am. Still here. Can we try again?" It's touching actually. I've always tried to follow that Hippocratic Oath thing of "first do no harm," and I prefer to sleep well at night over taking money and directing everybody who calls me to move. It's simply not always the case that you'll get worthwhile results, at that time, by moving. Q: Most other locational astrologers will always recommend some location if they somebody pays and asks. A: Yes, and I say that's either because they are not experienced, or not honest. Probably mostly the former. It's sort of on axiom that the less you know about a topic the easier things seem; the more you know about it, the harder it gets. The timing aspect is a very difficult thing to be reckoned with. That is, you can't just "move whenever you want" and have it turn out well. There is a lawfulness to moves. Moves done under the wrong transits tend to give mixed results no matter how the chart looks, and Saturn generally needs to be in the right place. Saturn moves slowly. Basically one may need to wait quite a while to make a move that is ripe, lawful, one that sticks, and has a solid outcome. It's usually the lack of a proper transit that makes me turn down some clients. They just need to wait. Q: Are there tradeoffs to most moves? They'll gain this, but they might lose that? How do you deal with that? A: Absolutely! Very much. Me evaluating the tradeoffs a client will have -- that's very basic to my thinking whenever I'm on the hunt for a client. It's up to me to not allow them to go into a tradeoff situation that's not worth it. One they'll regret. The fact is, you can usually GET them that thing that they hanker for. But often there will be a tradeoff that I'm not willing to get involved with. It's my job to watch that, and this is where ethics and caring are really crucial. Q: What are some examples of tradeoffs? A: Finding them a location where they'll make more money, but the happiness of their children will deteriorate. Or a place where they'll get that book written and maybe even have a career as a writer, but their marriage will become troubled. That's why I usually ask clients whether they have children, want to know if they are happily married, etc. I have seen a LOT of ACG readings where the astrologers has thrown away some great boon the client's been enjoying, throwing them to the wolves in some realm of life they've always had good. It would be so easy to give the client that thing they're itching about now, but throw away things they would never believe could be lost. I call that the "deal with the Devil." Q: Explain "deal with the Devil." A: In European and Christian lore -- and other cultures too -- there are stories about people who deeply desire some thing, and they meet some odd character who turns out to be the devil. And the devil says "You can have this. But you will have to give me THAT." Maybe it's that they want a to be rich. And the devil says, "OK, but you'll have to give me your first born" and the character has no children and thinks "Oh, that'll never happen." And it turns out he has great sorrow when the devil calls in the bargain. I think stories like that are about the duality of life and the tradeoffs inherent in this samsara. "This is good, that is bad." That duality is always there in all lives, in all locations. Q: So how do you deal with the tradeoff problem? A: I try to identify acceptable losses as compared to significant gains that will give the client happiness for a time. And I avoid unacceptable losses. I have turned down many clients because there was no way to give them what they want because of negative changes to the House of Children, and they have children. They say "My kids are happy and healthy" and they believe that could never change. I know how bad it could get. They may never have to find that out. Q: Is there a perfect locational chart? A: No, because conditions are always changing as transits/progressions move. And you have to put Saturn somewhere. And you have to put the coming Saturn transit somewhere and let it hit something. There are only blissful developments for a time, whether that time is 3 years, 10 years, or 50 years -- depending on the transits/progressions they have available. It's common that, with me, 10-15 years later my client has had some experiences and fulfillments, scratched some itches, and now they are sort of like "been there, done that" and they have some totally new goal. And they often call me, 15 or 20 years later, wanting another ride. Q: As people change goals, they sometimes require a new location for best results. A: If they're serious about those. You know, it's a lot like moving in the bed. You're lying there asleep for a long time and pretty soon you get restless and uncomfortable. That position felt good when you assumed it. But now you've been in that position too long. You naturally move and take another position in the bed, and it feels really good. In like manner let's say a person has a chronically Saturn-afflicted Mercury. They have been living with Mercury-ruling-6th for 20 years. What happens is there is an abrasive or destructive effect in the 6th house, and it's built up. They are sickly all the time, have health problems, and do jobs they hate. It's like cracks and fissures, as it were, have built up in their 6th house. It's been under pressure too long. They hurt there. But maybe they have a really excellent location ruler of 3rd, so they've learned a lot, read a lot of books, taken lots of courses, written a lot, and are loaded with more knowledge than they can even use. So what can happen (if lucky) is we take that 6th and give it a nice coherent ruler, and it feels like "Aaah!" Like moving in the bed. The 6th House starts to get healed; comforted. Meanwhile, we could give their 3rd the bad ruler, or some more problematic ruler, and it's like there is a lot of "fat" on that house already. So they don't really experience much pain by taking a hit in 3rd. They know so much, have read so much, taken so many courses. It might take them 10 years or more before they are annoyed with the situation in their 3rd House. See, it's like moving in the bed. It feels good. New comforts are gained, old blessings get to be spent or used up. And people get to round themselves out and develop new aspects of themselves with the new and different location/chart, and new and different life. Q: When you interview people they tell you their goals and desires. That must give you a lot of exposure to human nature. Are there any goals you find people have frequently? A: I would say mate/marriage is the top priority goal with half of the people who call me. They use the "M" or "P" word. And about half of them use the "C" word -- they are looking for a sense of community with people who are on the same page or have similar views and ideals. After that, the breakdown varies. Q: Do you feel people tell you their true goals? A: It seems that they do. Q: That's pretty unusual profession where people are telling you their heart's desire every day. A: It is! What's notable also is they have frankness plus faith that by my help they can get it. People approach a call to me like trying the lottery. They believe that they might win, and get exactly what they want. They have a great amount of faith. And I have thought at times that my career is like children sitting on Santa's lap at the store, where they tell him their true desires, with total faith. My clients, though adults, approach me exactly like those children, with that much faith. And they tell me their true desires -- just like we used to do as children when writing a note to Santa. That is perhaps the strangest thing about my profession. And the truth is, sometimes I can do it. And sometimes I can't. So it's a bit like trying the lottery as well. They hope I won't be "stumped." Q: You have specialized in giving locational opinions for over 30 years. What advice would you give to other locational astrologers to improve their work or results? A: The biggest one would be this: Respect what the client has already, and don't damage it if the tradeoff isn't worth it. I hate hearing someone say: "I talked to so-and-so (an astrologer) and they said 'OMG! This is the worst location I've ever seen! This is so terrible! You poor fool!" The truth is there is always something good in the location where you have been. And typically you are going to be taking it for granted as something that can 'never be lost.' An unskilled and uncaring astrologer will also take it for granted, or not even perceive the fact that you have that boon where you are. The first thing I do when looking at a chart is to identify both the bad and the good in that location. And I confirm it with questions to see if I'm right: "So do you like your house, I expect? Is it spacious and nice?" "Oh yes, I always 'manifest' nice homes. But we don't have community..." "So how are your kids doing? Do they do well in school? Have friends?" "Oh yes, they are exceptional, everybody loves them, they have many friends, they get straight A's. But we don't have community..." "And you and your husband, you're getting along fine, right?" "Oh yes, we have an ideal marriage. But we don't have community...." In a conversation like that example, I'm expecting things like that to be true because of her current chart setup, and I'm confirming that they are indeed true. From there, I'm going to be trying to not give a location where those things are trashed. And that makes it more difficult. I see ACG opinions given to folks, and very often, in which the ACG astrologer has thrown them to the wolves; led the client to throw away very dear things by relocating. In summary: Skillfully identify the good that they already have and don't wreck those things without sufficient justification and an acceptable tradeoff. In my readings, even though I may recommend another locations, I like to make the client aware of any major positives they've already been blessed by, and how they were particular to their location. Whether they may lose these or not, I want them to understand when they have been blessed. In my case, I wish I had understood how I had been blessed in terms of marriage, children and family life, in my original location. This was one of the ways that I was grievously rather betrayed, 32 years ago, by the absurd Astro*Carto*Graphy product. Q: Do you think there is one "true path" or "true life's work" for each person? ______________________________ Esoteric Q & A You can read more of this presentation, the 2nd Section, having more esoteric questions related to astrology and birth. An HTML file will be provided instantly that continues this conversation. The 2nd Section includes these questions: Q: Do you think there is one "true path" or "true life's work" for each person? Q: But is there perhaps some golden thread that runs through all these world-incarnations that keeps popping up the same? Q: So you are saying that you can "get a new rising sign"? Q: Since on the topic, what is the Rising Sign, in your view? Q: Which is the true chart? The natal or the current locational chart? Q: Most astrologers say you cannot change your natal chart and that's "what you got" and nothing can be done about it. Q. Do you believe that there is a lawfulness about our astrological chart? That it is the perfect match for our karma? If so, how can it be that people can change it? Q: The Hindus have sometimes referred to "the lords of karma" and such things. Are there not "Lords of Karma" who make sure everybody's chart, nine months later, is the right one? Q: You spoke of "adepts" and the Buddhist adepts observing the process of incarnations during, presumably, their trance or samadhi states. Do you think there is a way for a developed soul, in the astral plane between births, to intentionally choose birth charts that he desired, i.e. getting with the right couple at the right time and so on? www.JulianLee.com |
JulianLee.com |