Fri 6 May – Thurs 19 May
Sun in Taurus; Mercury in Aries/Taurus 16th; Venus in Aries/Taurus 16th; Mars in Aries/Taurus 11th
As the world mourns the departure of highly revered guru Sathya Sai Baba, let’s not forget the upcoming birthday on 10 May of that revered guru and eternally present Vishnu avatar- Gautama Buddha, aka Siddhartha. In Korea and possibly some other countries this is a public holiday, on par with Christmas or Easter. What is this holy of holy avatars doing by being born in the month of Taurus, traditionally known for its somewhat earthy and mundane affiliations? Well let’s not forget that Buddha was born a prince, like William (aka “Will-I-am”) who, when making his vow to Kate, said “I will”. Being a prince affords one all the mundane opulence one could imagine, as we saw during the recent wedding ceremony of Prince William, with all its pomp (from where we get the word “pompous”) and ceremony (from where we get the words “serious money”). Of course the story goes that by his Saturn return at the age of 29 the Buddha renounced his nobility and opulence and turned to a life of austere asceticism. William, on his Saturn return has opted for marriage, which tells you something about the Saturn return. It is the time in all our lives when we enter real adult maturity and our own chosen vocation or calling. Nevertheless the Buddha renounced the joys of a prince and accepted the austere path of a renunciate, while William renounced the joys of a bachelor and accepted the austere path of a husband. Jokes aside though, The Buddha tried the renounced path for a few years but only really came to be the Buddha (“enlightened one” or “awake one”) when he eventually renounced even the renounced order and chose the topmost path of “the middle way”. Here he taught a balance between austerity and opulence, along with the four noble truths as a path to Nirvana for anyone. And Nirvana is described as the perfect peace of a mind that's free from ignorance, greed, hatred and other afflictive states or "defilements". And if a prince can master detachment from greed then we definitely can too, so remember that when Mars enters Taurus on the 11th and Mercury and Venus do the same on the 16th. I mean if a holy man like Sai Baba can amass an empire worth $8 000 000 000, that’s eight billion dollars, and still stay saffron then either he had a few tricks up his sleeve, or the godman industry is simply the niche market worth investigating. And he’s not the only saffron-coated swami around today raking in the opulence while still remaining completely “detached” therefrom. Or so they say. Maybe this is the modern equivalent of the “middle way”. I can amass for myself a small fortune in mundane Taurean opulence and at the same time wear the robes of a renunciate. Adi Da did it. At least Osho never wore the saffron robes of a celibate himself, although he gave them to all his non-celibate disciples. Sorry you lost me there Osho. Nevertheless, what I’m getting at is that in this day and age of material facility, it is difficult even for the holy men to avoid the pitfalls of luxury, greed and the general weaknesses of the flesh – the traditional department of Taurus. And it is equally difficult for the sincere yet gullible seeker to be bewildered into following any charismatic godman in saffron with the odd trick up his sleeve or way with word-jugglery. Therefore even more the need to look back to he original holy men like the Buddha and remember what is meant by the middle way.
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