A Psychological Approach To Progressions

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A psychological approach to

transits and progressions

This article is extracted from a seminar given on 8 June, 1996 at


Regents College, London as part of the Spring Term of the
seminar programme of the Centre
for Psychological Astrology.

The nature of prediction

How do we interpret transits and progressions from a


psychological perspective? I would like to begin by saying that,
although the internal nature of our exploration should be clear to
any astrological student with a psychological approach, I am not in
any way denying the value and long tradition of predictive work in
astrology. But the two are not mutually exclusive. 'Psychological'
does not mean only 'inner'. Too many of us have had experience of
accurate prognostications of a specific and concrete kind to
pretend that the planets are not related to the outer as well as the
inner world, or that it is impossible to predict certain kinds of
events in certain situations.

Many years ago I gave a seminar for the Wrekin Trust, which was
then transcribed, edited and turned into a book called The Outer
Planets and Their Cycles. In passing, while examining the birth
chart of the Soviet Union, I made a prediction about its future. It
was really a kind of throwaway, as I did not have much knowledge
at the time about the subtleties of mundane astrology. My rather
naive prediction was based on the fact that Pluto would creep up to
conjunct the Soviet Union's natal Sun in seven years' time. I had
observed that every time a powerful transit hit this natal Sun in
Scorpio, the Soviet leadership changed. In mundane terms, this is a
fairly obvious and simple conclusion, since the Sun in a national
chart reflects, amongst other things, the nation's leadership.

The reason I expected a collapse rather than yet another typical


struggle for the leadership was because Pluto is rather more all-
encompassing than the other outer planets. It tends to wipe
everything clean, and nothing remains of the original form or
structure. There were other transits - for example, the Uranus-
Neptune-Saturn conjunction in the first decanate of Capricorn,
approaching the Soviet Union's Venus in the 4th house - that
suggested that this imminent collapse was going to be like a
marriage breakup. It would be a disintegration from within rather
than from without, and all the various satellite countries would
start asking for a divorce. This was how I read it at the time, and
there was no indication in 1982 of the events to come. A new
leader was certainly on the cards; but a total collapse was
unthinkable. In the subsequent seven years, therefore, I didn't think
about it. Then everything came to pass as predicted. There are
many situations, both mundane and personal, in which astrologers
can make accurate prognostications.

However, focusing solely on the predictive side of astrology is like


a medical doctor focusing solely on a bodily symptom, rather than
considering the whole individual and the interrelationship of body

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