:: Autumnal Equinox :: Lunar New Years
I hope you've discovered Wikipedia, a sort of Every Man's, er, Every Person's.. Encyclopedia. While its creators and contributors might not agree, perhaps its greatest value is the immediacy of information. In a flash,
an article on the autumnal equinox is at hand. I would agree that Wikipedia's leap of imagination this: a collaborative self-balancing mechanism for information: outrageously biased or misinformed entries are challenged and edited, and depth is added where new discoveries refine older consensus.
equinox: the equinoxes are the two days each year when the center of the Sun spends an equal amount of time above and below the horizon at every location on Earth
So if the Equinox is about the sun, how does the moon relate to the Autumnal Equinox? Calendar historians probably could answer this with far more accuracy, and precision. But the simple answer is that linking a great solar event with its nearest important lunar event is just a natural affinity. Moon/Sun, Sun/Moon, what's so complicated?
Friday marked Rosh ha-Shanah, the first day of the
seventh month, called Tishrei in the Jewish calendar, the new
year 5767 in the Jewish calendar. It is, according to the Talmud, the day man was created. It is the Day of Judgement, for which the faithful have prepared during the preceding month of Elul, the last month of the year. This first day of man's new year is a call to go within and clarify what is of genuine importance in life.
Islam too marks Rash Hasana, the first lunar day of the
ninth month in the Hijri (Islamic) calendar, better known as
Ramadan. A central event of Ramadan is fasting, "... said to redirect the heart away from worldly activities, its purpose being to cleanse the inner soul and free it from harm", per the Wikipedia entry. Here is a wonderful
collection of Ramadan inspired photos on flickr.
Christianity has, curiously, sidestepped this particular transformational time, having left St. Matthew as the lone guardian of 21 September, and instead making inner contemplation a focus during the Easter Tide, the Resurrection of Christ, both calendrically linked to the first Spring Moon (and Vernal Equinox). All Hallow's Eve seems to stand out as the most prominent autumnal festival.
I find a curious affinity with this Western ghostly period and that of a number of Eastern autumn festivals also centered around ghosts, the most prominent being O-Higan in Japan, celebrated at the first new moon near the Autumnal Equinox, and Ghost Month during the seventh lunar month in the Chinese tradition. Both share similar roots: the idea that the doors to the underworld are opened and ghosts wander the land, In Japan, this time is used to revere ancestors, while in China, much is made of
providing these ghosts food and lucre (
hell money).
In the Mahayana Buddhist tradition
O-Higan is a time of inner reflection on right-living, thereby coming full circle to the precepts of Rosh ha-Shanah and Ramadan. Right-Living is best represented by the
Six Paramitas"Paramita is a Sanskrit word, which means to cross over to the other shore. It implies crossing over from the Sea of suffering to the Shore of happiness, from the Samsara of birth and death to Nirvana and from ignorance to enlightenment."

Labels: attitude, history, moon
:: Fiction & Lunar Cycles :: Trading & Lunar Cycles
Fiction and Lunar CylesTom Drake has, as he so often does, dished up something a bit off the beaten track: comments on a new "financial thriller" book.
Here is the full article (page down a bit for the book part). Here is a snippet:
The novel isn't as well written as Eric Ambler, Graham Greene, Lawrence Durrell or even Martin Cruz Smith. But it is about the financial markets and the fortuitous rediscovery of an ancient method of market timing, previosuly only known to "them"."
[
more from Tom].
More about
Paradigm, a financial thriller by Robert Taylor, at
taylortrends.com I know zipola about Taylor or his methods, but I continue to be curiously intrigued with what people are doing on the lunar front.
Trading & Lunar Cyles23 Sep 06: I originally intended for the Trading & Lunar Cycles to post over at actio-et-reaction, which is, in fact, where I've moved it.
Please continue reading.
Labels: books, moon, trading
:: Schwassmann-Wachmann, Venus & Luna
Never to be missed, two ladies of the sky, Venus and Luna Crescente conjunct on the 24th of April. They can be seen together on the Eastern horizon at sunrise or on Western horizon at sunset.
Next is the
dying comet Schwassmann-Wachmann, on a close-encounter with Earth May 25th-ish. Due to its brilliance in the sky, one can now watch the breaking-up of one of the larger pieces, cleverly named Fragment B, en plein vue using amateur scopes. A close encounter in galactic terms happens to be, in this case, six million miles "close by". Reminds me a bit of the
Mayan apocalyse.
Labels: moon, space
:: Google Moon - Lunar Landing Sites
I couldn't resist:
Google Moon - Lunar Landing Sites. If you squint just so, you can see Jade Rabbit, who of course is the versa luna patron lagomorph.

Labels: attitude, computers, moon
:: The Other Side - Samurai Lapin
Versa Luna being The Other Side of the Moon, it is fitting that her steward be honored by this series of animations by British animator, Mata, a self-described 'animator, PhD student, and pontificator', and who, by the sheer breadth, volume, and quality of his website, is indefatigably tapped into a deep well of creativity.
The Other Side - Twisted animations by Mata - Samurai Lapin

Labels: media, moon