Notes on World Trade Center Attack September 11, 2001
Richard Tarnas, Ph.D.
"We have not understood yet that the discovery of the unconscious means an
enormous spiritual task, which must be accomplished if we wish to preserve our
civilization."
C.G. Jung
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Many of my non-astrological friends have asked me what has been happening in
the heavens that would make more intelligible the events of September 11 and
since. These notes are a summary of a lecture I gave in my Psyche and Cosmos
graduate seminar September 18, 2001. In the lecture there were more
historical examples, elaboration of key points, and so forth. What follows here
really are just headlines, but I hope you can glean something of the basic
archetypal background of this historically momentous drama we now find ourselves
in.
The events are immensely complex, beyond words really, with so many causes,
consequences, and dimensions. But the planetary archetypal situation was
dramatically clear. In the last few weeks the planetary alignment that
represents the heaviest—the darkest, most weighty, mortally serious,
historically grave—of all archetypal combinations, the Saturn-Pluto alignment,
reached exactitude, an opposition. The first two weeks of this month in
particular were critical, as the Sun and Full Moon moved into a rare and
extraordinarily precise grand cross (two oppositions--Saturn with Pluto, Sun
with Moon--both 90 degree square to each other).
This Saturn-Pluto alignment lasts around three years—it began last fall, and
will be operative for about two more years. Historically, the hard aspects
between Saturn and Pluto (conjunction, opposition, and square) have consistently
coincided with periods resembling the present one, sometimes much worse: the
beginnings of both world wars coincided with tight Saturn-Pluto hard aspects, as
did the outbreak of the Vietnam war, the massively violent Red Guards’ Cultural
Revolution in China begun at the same time, the Terror during the French
Revolution in 1793-94, and the sack of Rome by the Visigoths in 410, to cite
only a few. The moment the World Trade Center and Pentagon attacks were known,
every astrologer in the country knew the Saturn-Pluto alignment, which has
coincided with so many grim periods of historical gravity and contraction, had
erupted.
Yet there is more to this archetypal complex than these words and examples
suggest. As horrific as is its shadow, it is equally capable of bringing forth
actions, psychological transformations, and enduring social-political
consequences involving extraordinary moral nobility and sheer physical and
volitional effort—something we have certainly already witnessed. The positive
potential of the Saturn-Pluto archetypal complex is usually inextricably
intertwined with confronting its negative manifestations—great courage in the
face of darkness, danger, and death; sustained effort and determination, intense
focus and discipline; moral discernment and wisdom born from experience and
suffering.
To understand the full dimensions of this alignment, one has to grasp clearly
the archetypal meanings of Saturn and Pluto, and then see how the combination of
the two works. As with every major aspect or alignment between two planets, the
corresponding archetypes mutually activate each other and combine, each in its
own archetypally specific way, to create a range of quite distinctive and
powerful qualities, tendencies, and events.
Pluto is in certain respects the most potent archetypal principle in the
planetary pantheon: it is the archetype of power itself, as it embodies the
primordial forces of destruction and regeneration, the underworld in every
sense, the secretive and subversive, the shadow, the id, the broiling cauldron
of the instincts, the violent and the demonic, the fiery and volcanic, the
elemental energies of nature: Pluto-Hades-Dionysus in Greek mythic terms; in
Indian terms, Kali and Shiva in both their destructive and regenerative aspects.
Whatever Pluto comes into alignment with, it greatly intensifies and compels
that second archetype, deepens and makes more profound, destroys and transforms.
It brings a titanic, overwhelming elemental potency, on a mass scale.
The Saturn archetype is extremely complex: It represents the principle of
limit, structure, and necessity in the universe; the principle of opposition and
negation, of heaviness and gravity—both moral and physical (weighty as serious,
and weighty as materially heavy); of rigidity and separation, contraction and
density; repression and reaction; of hard concrete materiality. It is the
reality principle, the bottom line. It is fate and karma, the cross we bear,
hardship, sweat and labor, problems and difficulties, suffering and death,
failure and defeat, sorrow, the endings of things, the consequences of the past,
guilt, judgment, punishment. But it is also discipline, rigor, moral
determination; order, precision, control, security, and organization. Saturn is
"the Establishment": the established structures of control, authority,
tradition—which may be rigid or stabilizing, containing or oppressive, grounding
or deadening. In hard aspects, such as the opposition it is now in with Pluto,
Saturn consistently brings out the problematic, challenging, negative potential
in any reality; it defeats and hardens, it grounds and forges.
As you read the following, keep in mind that every one of these experiential
qualities and phenomena are precisely faithful to the archetypal character of
Saturn and Pluto in combination—there is nothing random or loose about this
litany of phenomena. Each archetype simultaneously acts on and is acted upon by
the other--each activates, informs, inflects, opposes, and combines with the
other.
Here then are characteristic manifestations when Saturn and Pluto come into
major hard alignment:
1) Dark, grave, momentous, deadly serious, profoundly weighty events.
2) Intensely dramatic times, with enduring consequences ensuing from current
decisions and actions, with much at stake, often with life and death issues in
the balance.
3) The feeling of being caught helplessly in the grip of overwhelming,
powerful, and often dark forces, of being the victim of large ruthless
impersonal forces of nature or of history that are both destructive and
imprisoning. More generally, a sense of larger powers of any kind—social,
historical, elemental, biological, archetypal—being in control of one’s life.
The powerlessness of the entrapped and suffering victim is usually matched by an
obsessive drive for control, power, and domination, the two sides of the
experience mirroring each other, sometimes occurring in alternation in the same
person or community.
4) Deep humiliation effected by violence, violation, and defeat. A
compensatory need to prove one's steely strength, power, and
invulnerability.
5) The empowerment of forces of hatred, murderous aggression, of evil and the
demonic, of the secretive and subversive, of the underworld—elemental,
instinctual, criminal—with consequences that are punitive, defeating, traumatic,
contracting, tragic. More generally, the simultaneous experience in extreme form
of both violence and contraction.
6) Absolute determination, courage, and sacrifice, unbending will, intensely
brave silent strenuous effort. Superhuman physical and moral exertion in the
face of horrific circumstances, perilous threat, murderous hostility (the
firemen and police in the World Trade Center, the passengers that stopped the
hijackers in the jet that crashed in Pennsylvania from hitting their intended
targets). Extreme self-control in dangerous and terrifying situations. (These
qualities also pertain of course, in twisted form, to the suicidal hijackers
themselves.)
7) A deeply sobering awareness of the world’s dangerousness. The potential
for either a highly grounded and experienced realism in the face of a harshly
challenging world, or paranoid fears of hidden organized plots and dangers.
An intense focusing of concentration on a deadly serious reality. In the
extreme, the naked encounter with one’s own death, producing in response either
mortal panic or unflinching courage.
8) The empowerment of conservative or reactionary forces, bringing about an
emphatic increase in defensive armoring, rigid boundaries, hostile separation.
9) A tremendous intensification of the harshest aspects of reality—material,
mortal, existential. Negativity of overwhelming, mass dimensions. Deprivation,
poverty, hardship. Sadness intensified to anguish. At worst, intense mass
suffering, death, loss, grief, agony.
10) The encounter with that form of the numinous which inspires awe and
dread, even terror; confronting a power—divine or natural—whose stupendous
elemental destructiveness is more than human, that stupefies the imagination.
11) The eruption of massive, titanic, volcanic, overwhelming elemental forces
that have a negative, collapsing, constricting effect.
12) The annihilation of the established order and of the enduring structures
symbolizing that order. Also, established structures of power which are
experienced as being both oppressive and evil, and thus deserving of ruthless
destruction. (The World Trade Center and Pentagon as Saturn—supreme symbols of
established order and control; Pluto as violent destruction, as the terrorist
underworld, and as extreme hatred, demonic both in intensity and as projected
onto the established structure of power.)
13) Confinement and constriction intensified to claustrophobic,
life-threatening, or even lethal dimensions (cf. the fetus struggling in the
contractions of birth; suffocation; helpless entrapment by larger physical
forces; Saturn-Pluto is the central aspect of the perinatal trauma—both Grof and
Rank, the major psychologists of the birth trauma, had this aspect).
14) Experiences that in their traumatic intensity and gravity take many years
to absorb, integrate, or heal from. More generally, events that are extremely
enduring in their consequences—both destructively and
constructively—establishing new structures and orders of life, either
solidifying or oppressive, deadening or maturing.
15) In general, the emphatic intensification of conflict and separation, of
intractable enmities, of problems, contradictions, and oppositions.
16) The tendency towards ruthless complete "othering": intense
objectification of other subjects. This extreme objectification combined with
the projection or experience of evil and shadow qualities, thereby impelling
cruel behavior, hatred, revenge, murder, anger, suspicion, fear, terror, greed,
fanaticism (Pluto). All made possible by establishing or experiencing an
absolute boundary (Saturn) between self and other as separate and alien, often
seeing the other as subhuman and unworthy of life (references to beasts, devils,
swamps, vermin, lairs, hunting down animals, etc.).
17) A tendency to see things in terms of a confrontation between good and
evil.
18) Both the confrontation with evil, with the shadow, and the constellating
of it. Periods of collective intense and heavy judgment, blame, scapegoating,
punishment, execution.
19) Historically a tendency in the collective psyche to constellate the
shadow by eliciting or projecting archetypal "faces of the enemy," seeing or
experiencing darkness and violent evil in the other, resulting in periodic
historical contractions bringing war, mass death. There is usually a powerful
focus of grave concern and fear in the collective psyche onto a particular
object, either as scapegoat or as authentic danger or evil—the "Evil Empire"
(Reagan against Soviet Union) in 1981-84; the apocalyptic nuclear danger of the
superpower arms race reaching its peak during the same period, with widespread
fear of World War III; the Germans and Japanese in 1939-41, the Communist Soviet
Union at start of Cold War (1946-48), international terrorism now.
20) Experiences of irrevocable catastrophe, intense loss, endings, death,
resulting in lasting sense of deep heaviness, darkness, and sorrow often
combined with anxiety.
21) A sense of the tremendous inescapable weight and burden of history, the
past, errors from the past, ancient resentments and enmities.
22) The sense of an ominous, darker reality descending on an age.
23) A sense of the irrevocable end of an era; the destruction of the
established order of existence, the end of an earlier mode of life characterized
by naivete, inflation, or illusion. "The end of innocence."
Cf. 1914, beginning of World War I, the first Saturn-Pluto conjunction of the
20th century; 1929-30, beginning of the Great Depression, the
following opposition; 1964-67, the beginning of the Vietnam War. The earlier age
now seems "Prelapsarian," before the Fall: the WTC attack and destruction have
brought about a ruthless end to an age in America of complacency, of arrogance,
of hubris, of taunting indifference to the larger world community, of naivete,
of inflation, of unthinking freedom, of self-indulgence, of illusion, of
unconsciousness. "That fat, daydreaming America is gone now, way gone" (Frank
Rich, NYT).
24) A greatly intensified and deepened maturation of a person or a culture,
leaving its puer dream and entering a senex reality—darker,
serious, problematic, concrete, confining and challenging, aging, burdening,
maturing (cf. Manhattan’s Stuyvesant high school students who directly witnessed
and were deeply transformed and matured by the events; almost all high school
students at the time of the Columbine school shootings and the concurrent wave
of other school shootings in the country were born under the Saturn-Pluto
conjunction of 1981-84).
25) The galvanizing of the will, a sense of stern purposefulness, grim
determination.
The man of steel., the archetypal mother in the throes of the birth labor—the
superhuman effort of contraction and determination in the service of a
life-and-death cause. Cf. the firefighters and police entering the towers and
climbing to their deaths out of duty and service to others. "The iron will of
the ironworkers laboring at Ground Zero" (NBC News).
Steely purposeful assertion of control and power (Saturn and Pluto), after
experiencing the horror of utter powerlessness—by U.S. now, the president and
military and intelligence establishment; earlier by the terrorists (Pluto as
extreme life-and-death survival instincts and intensity, Saturn as being in
control or being controlled—thus the alternation of extreme assertions of
controlling power and extreme helpless victimization under another’s controlling
power).
"Grim determination"—a phrase used many times to describe both the terrorists
and the response, in different forms, by rescue workers, the American people, or
the Bush administration, and now the Taliban and Afghani people. Saturn brings
seriousness, gravitas, focused purposefulness, which Pluto intensifies with the
desperate force of life-and-death survival instincts.
"Perhaps the worst realization is how low-tech this attack was. No
sophisticated missiles, no stolen nukes, no exotic bio-warfare or chemical
agents. The main, decisive weapon here was determination." NYT
From the terrorists’ guide found in their luggage: "Stand fast…The time of
fun and waste has gone. The time of judgment has arrived."
Grim, driven, humorless and merciless determination in the service of power
and control—the terrorist mass murderer, the slave driver, the tyrant, the inner
tyrant (cruel superego), the dictator, the merciless judge, the intensely
self-disciplined ascetic, the rigid authoritarian, the obsessive-compulsive
security apparatus. Totalitarianism and terrorism, mirror images in their
calculated organized violence in the service of power and domination.
26) A quality of relentlessness, implacability, irrevocability; of ferocious
ruthlessness and cruelty. Grim violence, the cruel ruthless enemy. Wars, jihads,
crusades, "holy" wars…
27) Murder (Saturn as death, the Grim Reaper, Pluto as violent instinct,
hatred and aggression, predatory destruction, Kali). Also, mass murder (Saturn
as personal death; Pluto as mass death and destruction).
28) The unspeakably difficult—physically, emotionally, logistically—task of
rescue and recovery—sifting painstakingly and perilously through the endless
gargantuan mountain of hot ash and pulverized debris, of fragmented concrete,
steel, and human bodies; the crushing failure to find survivors.
29) The Herculean labor of clearing and cleaning; of restoring structures, of
stabilizing the deep underground foundations and containments destroyed or
threatened by the collapse.
The task of rebuilding from the rubble (cf., the conjunction of 1946-48, not
only the beginning of the Cold War, Iron Curtain, etc., but also the Marshall
Plan and the rebuilding of Europe from the rubble of World War II).
30) Consider the great German astrologer Ebertin’s telegraphic summary of
Saturn-Pluto: "Tenacity and toughness, endurance, the capability to make record
efforts of the highest possible order, the ability to perform the most difficult
work with extreme self-discipline, self-denial and renunciation….A hard and
unfeeling disposition, also cold-heartedness, severity, tendency to violence, a
fanatical adherence to one’s principles once they have been adopted. A martyr.
Mass murderer…..Hard struggling for success. The participation in achievements
brought about by large groups or masses of people, the pursuit of difficult work
or of painstaking and thorough research in seclusion, the process of growing
spiritually and mentally, silent activity…." (Combinations of Stellar
Influence, 188).
Saturn-Pluto is grit and grime, fire and brimstone, ashes and horror, dust to
dust, blood, sweat, toil, and tears (Churchill rallying the British against the
Nazis during the Blitz, 1939-40). It is harrowing and galvanizing. It
traumatizes and it forges. It destroys, transforms, and bodies forth.
Saturn-Pluto also brings forth the possibility of wisdom, of unflinching
moral discernment and self-awareness, achieved through profound experience and
suffering.
It’s helpful to think of great artists born with Saturn-Pluto hard aspects
whose work has especially embodied many of these qualities in diverse and richly
complex ways: Kafka and Melville, for example, throughout their work, both born
with Saturn-Pluto conjunctions; Hemingway with his lifelong concern with (and
attraction to) war, death, killing, and the grim brutality of life; the three
Saturn-Pluto directors Alfred Hitchcock, Orson Welles, and Oliver Stone in their
many films of fear and suspicion, evil and the shadow, being helplessly trapped
in the dark plots of cruel, murderous, or diabolical forces; Giger’s many
paintings and images of darkness, evil, brutality, ruthless entrapment; Joseph
Conrad’s horrific, traumatizing experience of metaphysical and human evil in the
Congo under the Saturn-Pluto alignment of 1890, later recorded in The Heart
of Darkness ("the horror, the horror").
Shakespeare had Pluto square Saturn as a long personal (once in a lifetime)
transit during the entire six-year period in which he wrote all the major
tragedies—Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, Macbeth—exploring and articulating
with such profundity the depths of the human shadow.
We see it too in the metaphysical and spiritual vision of major Saturn-Pluto
theologians like Augustine and Calvin, with their profound sense of the dark
evil and corruption rooted in the human soul, original sin, guilt and remorse,
hell and damnation, predestination, being in the grip of an overwhelmingly
powerful force and fate that rules one’s life and destiny no matter what one
might attempt otherwise, their relentless determination to suppress evil and
construct moral and ecclesiastical structures to serve that quest, their overall
focus on moral judgment and self-judgment. (In a more contemporary, less extreme
example, we see it in Thomas Merton, born under the conjunction of 1914-15,
whose spiritual autobiography The Seven-Storey Mountain under the
immediately following conjunction, 1946-48, wrestles with these same themes with
somewhat different results.)
The forging of the moral faculty is a Saturn-Pluto effort, from the God of
thunder and almighty power giving Moses the Ten Commandments onwards (even our
film recreations of that event reflect the collective psyche’s archetypal
dynamics, with both cinematic biblical spectacles of that name, The Ten
Commandments, both by De Mille, produced when Saturn was square Pluto, in
1923 and 1956).
Saturn and Pluto were conjunct when the world faced the full horror and evil
of the Holocaust, 1946-48, with the public release of the films taken of the
Nazi concentration camps (films edited for the British government by Hitchcock),
and with the Nuremberg Trials of the Nazi war criminals in 1946, with their
ambience of grave moral and legal judgment, confrontation with the shadow,
horrific evil, "man’s inhumanity." Films precisely express the archetypal
dynamics of the collective psyche. After that conjunction, each hard aspect of
Saturn and Pluto coincided with major films about the concentrations camps and
Holocaust—Resnais’s Night and Fog in 1956, Kramer’s Judgment at
Nuremberg in 1965, Sophie’s Choice in 1982, Schindler’s List
in 1993; virtually all of the 10-hour long documentary Shoah was filmed
under the conjunction of 1981-84. Kafka wrote "The Trial" under the Saturn-Pluto
conjunction of 1914 (and was himself born under the Saturn-Pluto conjunction
just before that). Saturn was opposite Pluto in 1536 when Michelangelo began
painting "The Last Judgment."
In terms of the tendency to see things in terms of good and evil: cf.
Augustine’s epic drama of history; the American view of Soviet Communism from
the beginning of the Cold War during the conjunction of 1946-48, "the evil
Empire" of Reagan in 1981-84; "a monumental struggle between good and evil" of
Bush in 2001; Churchill’s view of Hitler in 1939-40; Conrad’s "Heart of
Darkness"; Oliver Stone’s rendering of America in Platoon, JFK, Nixon, Wall
Street, Born on Fourth of July…Melville’s magnificent dissection of this
tendency in Moby Dick; Billy Budd.
Saturn-Pluto alignments do indeed tend to bring genuine confrontations
between good and evil—but where the evil exists is not usually as simple a
matter as the confronter believes (cf. Keen’s Faces of the Enemy, the
perinatal projections in history analyzed by Grof and the psychohistorian Lloyd
de Mause).
Cf. Israel and Palestine, whose implacable enmity was established with the
founding of Israel under the SA-PL conjunction of 1948; with every hard SA-PL
aspect since, including the present, coinciding with a Middle Eastern war, with
their mutual projective constellating of the shadow and the need for suppression
and attack. Modern India and Pakistan were divided under the same conjunction,
1947, commencing a similar tragic drama.
"We are at war"—those grim words, creating that heavy dark weight in the pit
in one’s stomach, again and again heard during Saturn-Pluto eras. Cf. the first
Saturn-Pluto cycle of the twentieth century, beginning in 1914, and its hard
aspects coinciding with both world wars, essentially constituting a "thirty
years war" that does not end until the end of the full Saturn-Pluto cycle at the
end of World War II (the first Thirty Years War, 1618-48, also precisely
coincided with the Saturn-Pluto cycle).
Yet it does not have to be the full-fledge open war of the world wars: the
following Saturn-Pluto conjunction (1946-48) brought the beginning of the Cold
War, with the Soviet domination of Eastern Europe, the Iron Curtain, the Berlin
crisis, the beginnings of anti-Communist McCarthyism in the U.S., the House
Committee on Un-American Activities, the founding of the CIA, National Security
Council, and Department of Defense. (Saturn as "cold" war, rigid, armored, iron
boundary, containment, fear, hardness.)
In terms of that sense of an ominous, darker reality descending on an
age—we’ve already begun to forget what it was like, during the last Saturn-Pluto
conjunction, of 1981-84 (the one immediately following the conjunction that
coincided with the beginning of the Cold War), Reagan’s first administration
when the Cold War was at its peak, with the tremendous nuclear build up on both
sides of the Atlantic reaching apocalyptic proportions, preparing for "nuclear
overkill," and impelling apocalyptic fears in the collective psyche, the sense
of a nuclear sword of Damocles hanging over the world because of the Manichaean
standoff between the superpowers; Armageddon fantasies emerging (along with the
empowered fundamentalist imagination), Helen Caldicott and the mass anti-nuclear
rallies, scientists’ recognition of the "nuclear winter" probable fallout from a
nuclear war, the widely seen "The Day After," the fears of "triggering World War
III" and the drawing of many historical parallels with the beginning of World
War I, and so forth. It is a powerful archetypal gestalt as it emerges in and
grips the collective psyche (again, recall 1914-16, 1939-41). Saturn-Pluto as
mass death: the many wars, massacres, major terrorist attacks coincident with
this alignment.
Events with brutal and enduring impact—it is the principal aspect of
trauma.
Confrontation with darkness, evil, hatred, bestial ferocity, the demonic, the
shadow, and the moral and physical effort to sustain that confrontation: Cf.
Churchill courageous rallying the British alone in Europe to face Hitler and the
overpowering Nazis in 1939-40. Albrecht Durer’s woodcut "Knight, Death, and the
Devil" beautifully conveys this archetypal moment (Durer born with his Sun on a
Saturn-Pluto square).
Confronting "the beast" (cf. this summer’s shark epidemic of attacks and
fears; Spielberg’s Jaws, Jurassic Park [Spielberg’s born with
Saturn-Pluto conjunction, visible as well in Schindler’s List, Saving Private
Ryan, AI, et al.]; Giger; Sexy Beast; Henry James’s "The Beast in the
Jungle"; Conrad’s "Heart of Darkness" "Apocalypse Now Redux"; NYPD Blue’s
sustained confrontation with the beast of the urban underworld, begun under the
last square).
And then there is the purely physical, material, and energetic manifestations
of Saturn-Pluto in this event:
"Steel" and "iron" are themselves quintessential Saturn-Pluto: matter
hardened by fire, powerfully enduring concrete and steel structures, steel jet
airliners, steely responses, iron curtains, iron determination.
The World Trade Center towers were built beginning under the Saturn-Pluto
opposition of 1966-67. They were the strongest buildings in the world, built
from 192,000 tons of steel to withstand hurricanes, with steel columns
encircling the 110 stories and a massive reinforced steel core running
vertically down the center. Their capacity to withstand the tremendous impact
was so great that it saved 20,000 lives as they remained standing for more than
an hour after impact, swaying and shuddering but allowing thousands to escape,
and even then not toppling over onto other buildings. In a sense the titanic
strength of the World Trade Center towers was met by the titanic force of the
Boeing 767s—400,000 pound jets traveling at 300 mph carrying 24,000 gallons of
fuel.
Saturn-Pluto is the stupendous weight of the twin towers collapsing, 110
stories of steel and concrete and glass, the inconceivable amount of potential
energy (Pluto) contained by the building in its immensely elevated erect
condition suddenly destructively released as it fell (Saturn) from its great
height. The titanic cumulative weight of the collapse, pulverizing everything
below—Saturn as weight, gravity, falling, collapse, hard materiality; Pluto as
stupendously intensifying that weight and gravitational collapse—great mass and
great gravity creating tremendous destruction.
Pluto also as the fire ball heat of the explosion melting the steel,
destroying the steel shell of the buildings, collapsing the huge structures down
upon thousands in destructive finality ("then the fire ensues and once the
temperature gets up [to] 800 to 900 degrees, the structural shell will start to
fall. Engineers suspect the temperatures inside the crash areas could have
quickly reached well over 1,000 degrees, perhaps approaching 2,000 degrees —
beyond the melting point of any steel" NYT). The combination of being crushed
and incinerated.
Titanically massive steel and concrete material structures, destroyed,
annihilated, atomized: the Newtonian-Cartesian world (Saturn) of engineering
meets Shiva (Pluto). And Shiva uses the Newtonian-Cartesian "laws" of matter and
force, mass and gravity, to accomplish his destruction.
Saturn and Pluto are both archetypally "dark," in different ways, including
the literal; their combination is extremely dark: hence the literal implacable
darkness after the collapse, black soot, smoke, ash, the impossibility to see
anything.
"Just as survivors of the WTC collapse have spoken of being enveloped in dust
so thick and black that they couldn't even see their hands in front of their
faces, so it was for me entering this cloud of emotion, thought, and energy. All
I could experience within it was sorrow, grief, fear, and anger…" (David
Spangler)
"The jaws of death." "The gates of hell." "Nuclear winter" (WTC witness
accounts).
All the destruction was created from the encounter of fire and matter (Pluto
and Saturn).
The stupendous mass of debris: from Pluto’s relationship to the results of
destruction, decay, refuse, garbage, scatology, waste; Saturn’s to materiality,
dust, death, worthlessness, grayness.
We see the unusual synthesis of the two principles, Saturn and Pluto, in such
phrases describing the terrorist attack as "a carefully planned catastrophe—
executed with alarming precision and seemingly cold-blooded calculation." A
company whose engineering expertise was consulted by the reporter of the twin
towers’ collapse was named "Controlled Demolition"—disciplined, precisely
calculated devastation. Other characteristic verbal juxtapositions describing
the events: "Terrifying professionalism" (New Yorker on the hijackings),
"Organized pandemonium" (witness of the Pentagon aftermath).
Yet Saturn-Pluto is also the aspect of unusually enduring structures and
foundations, powerful structures and structures symbolizing power, solidly and
deeply constructed buildings and existential structures whose strength and
solidity allow them to endure for great lengths of time—Pluto in this case
intensely driving and empowering the material solidity and enduring structure.
It is titanic structures and titanic efforts, the building of structures and
foundations that endure through immense toil and struggle, grit and
determination, the strenuous marshalling of tremendous resources in a focused,
determined manner: cf. the Marshall Plan 1947, the skyscrapers themselves, and
now the extraordinary labor to secure the deep underlying structural foundations
seven stories below the larger WTC area (cf. NYT, 9/18/01) to keep the entire
area from collapsing.
By the way, the World Trade Center twin towers were completed 28_ years ago,
an exact Saturn return. The Pentagon was completed 58 years ago, thus this was
its second Saturn return. Saturn returns for individuals regularly bring major
transforming events, confrontations with mortality, endings of an entire cycle
of life, profound structural shifts, completions, etc. (More benignly, the
Berlin Wall also came down at the end of its exact Saturn return cycle—1961-89).
Pearl Harbor took place 59 years ago, two Saturn cycles ago.
Saturn is archetypally associated with order, Pluto with chaos—the chaos of
destruction, of annihilation, but also the chaos of nature’s depths from which
regeneration and new structures emerge. The Saturn-Pluto combination is
profoundly embodied in the dialectic between order and chaos. Each constellates
the other, each secretly contains the other, like the yin/yang symbol, as in
chaos theory and complexity theory. Chaotic phenomena always mask a deeper
order, evolution’s chaotic unfolding spontaneously self-organizes, every order
masks and gives way to underlying chaos.
Intrapsychically, Saturn-Pluto expresses itself as the superego and ego
structure controlling and repressing the id. Yet it is a true dialectic, for the
superego is not only antagonistic to the id, the id drives and can even control
the superego (as Freud brilliantly saw, with the id providing both the
superego’s energy and its potential for cruelty—Freud’s formulation of the
superego and its relation to the id, by the way, emerging precisely during the
Saturn-Pluto square of 1922-23). Each increases the reality and high-pressure
potency of the other. (Cf. the collective level of this, expressed in Freud’s
Civilization and Its Discontents under the Saturn-Pluto opposition,
1929-31.)
Saturn-Pluto brings both the repression of the id and the return of the
repressed—the id’s eruption out of the repressive containment of the ego and
superego, the compensatory backlash, the karmic return, the consequences of past
actions, the wages of sin. ("Americans are reaping the consequences of a monster
they helped create but could not control" Sydney Morning Herald on the
U.S. financing and training of the Afghan Islamic fundamentalist groups
throughout the 1980s; also, cf. the Gulf War fought under Bush pere to ensure
flow of oil to the West, the American-led bombings and subsequent embargoes
causing hundreds of thousands of deaths to Middle Eastern civilians; American
military presence in Saudi Arabia cited as single greatest cause of bin Laden’s
hatred of U.S.)
Concerning the characteristic empowerment of the most reactionary,
conservative forces during Saturn-Pluto alignments, bringing about increased
sense of defensive armoring, rigid boundaries, hostile separation: cf. first
half of the 1980s, Reagan in the U.S., Thatcher in England, Pope John Paul II in
the Catholic Church, the rise of the Christian right in the U.S., of Christian
and Islamic fundamentalism throughout the world). Cf. conservative empowerment
again during the most recent square of Saturn-Pluto, in 1992-94—the coming to
power by the Taliban in Afghanistan for example, or the Republican right, Newt
Gingerich, and the Contract on America, both in 1994; as well as the cruelty and
evil visible in the Rodney King beatings, the trial, the LA riots; as well as
atrocity and mass death in Bosnia, Yugoslavia, Rwanda….The first bombing of the
World Trade Center, by the way, took place during that Saturn-Pluto square as
well, 1993.
Saturn-Pluto is the cycle of terrorism and repression, violence and
retribution, each driving and constellating the other (consider Israel’s and
Palestine’s incessant life cycle, with Israel born under the Saturn-Pluto
conjunction of 1948 in triple conjunction with Mars, reaching boiling points
under each succeeding Saturn-Pluto hard aspect—1956, 1967, 1973, 1982). "How
does one create a terrorist? Bomb their families." (Which, in a sense, is what
the terrorists who bombed New York may tragically succeed in doing.)
Note the simultaneous opposites: Saturn-Pluto is the tyranny by terrorism,
and it’s the grimly determined effort to oppose and obliterate terrorism….And
it’s also the tyranny of a society gripped by anti-terrorist fears, controls,
and rigidities; and it’s a state and military willing to murder thousands of
innocent people to effect its implacable exterminating purpose.
Cf. Robespierre’s "revolutionary puritanism" during the Terror in 1793-94,
Saturn square Pluto.
It is the mobilization of structures of power against evil, which may
themselves move into the grip of evil: i.e., shadow-possession, unconscious
id-driven behavior often of a punitive kind.
Saturn-Pluto as demonic power that is in control (cf. Hitler in 1939-40, or
the images of Giger, born in 1940).
We see a similar polarity in Saturn-Pluto with both the Inquisition and the
evil seen/projected in witches and heretics, or the 1940s-50s Soviet Communism
and American communist underworld versus the McCarthyite anti-Communist
reaction—the evil, the shadow, the dark manipulation and perfidy are exclusively
seen in the other, never in the self.
Again, the latter phenomenon all began under the Saturn-Pluto conjunction of
1946-48 that brought the beginning of the Cold War, the Iron Curtain, the Berlin
crisis, the beginnings of anti-Communist McCarthyism in the U.S. with the House
Committee on Un-American Activities, blacklists, also the founding of the CIA,
Department of Defense, National Security Agency, military-industrial complex,
while Stalin asserted control throughout Eastern Europe….Orwell’s "Nineteen
Eighty-Four," written during that same conjunction of 1946-48, is a classic
expression of the dark controlling power in totalitarianism.
Saturn-Pluto is the fundamental aspect of totalitarianism, which first
emerged in Germany with the German state’s total mobilization for war in 1914.
Note the sequence of totalitarian empowerment in coincidence with the succeeding
hard aspects of Saturn and Pluto: the rise of Fascism and totalitarian Soviet
communism in 1921-24—Stalin, Mussolini, Hitler’s putsch--and crucial empowerment
with the Great Depression 1929-32; and full Nazi eruption in 1939-41; then the
1946-48 fullest extension of Stalinist Soviet power in Russia and Eastern
Europe, and the crucial period of Communism coming to power in China.
Cf. Saturn-Pluto’s similar relationship to the history of fundamentalism.
Note the themes of fundamentalist empowerment and ruthless "divine" judgment
visible in the terrorists’ theology of judgment and vengeance against the Satan
of the West, and also in the emblematic comments by fundamentalist American
leaders such as Falwell and Robertson to the effect that the attacks can be
recognized as God’s righteous punishment for the sins committed by secular
America, liberals, gays, and feminists.
The rigid security measures now instituted to combat the possibility of
terrorism will precisely resemble the classic Saturn-Pluto obsessive-compulsive
syndrome of the incessantly hypervigilant superego, brilliantly rendered in
Kafka’s great story "The Burrow" (written during the Saturn-Pluto square of
1923—the same year and alignment that brought Freud’s formulation of the
superego-id relationship in The Ego and the Id).
Saturn-Pluto brings those terrifying encounters with death and danger that
cause primitive fear and the reactive rigid constriction of egoic security
controls, the traumatized tightening of the sphincter, the obsessive-compulsive
psychological structure, the mobilization of security measures that ensure
safety, boundaries, order, purity and cleanliness, control, leading in extreme
to the anal-sadistic personality, the rigid and punitive puritanical conscience,
the judgmental fundamentalist, the cruel superego, the totalitarian state.
Yet Saturn-Pluto is the configuration that brings a powerful confrontation
with the basics of human mortal reality, of life and death, in such a way as to
cleanse one of illusory concerns and superficial values. "Up until the moment
the twin towers fell, America was deep in a cocoon of self-gratification and
self-improvement….Now we have to view our solipsism and wretched excess through
the prism of the ‘epic wretchedness’ of the Afghan people, as The Times's Barry
Bearak called it. It's somewhat embarrassing that we didn't look outward sooner,
that foreign wars got less TV air time than the war against wrinkles. But our
culture turns out to be about much more than its glittery surface, and that's
been clear in all that's happened since Sept. 11: the exposure to the quiet
lives of inspiration that so many victims led; the valor of rescue workers; the
altruistic derring-do of the men who fought back on Flight 93; our concern about
inflicting unnecessary suffering on innocent Afghans; the generosity and civic
tolerance at the heart of our country's response to horrific loss. With their
oxymoronic holy war, Osama bin Laden and his
murderous disciples …succeeded in illuminating - not just to the rest of the
world but to us - how little all our baubles and all our booty have to do with
who we really are." (Maureen Dowd, NYT, 10/3/01)
We see the Saturn-Pluto energy in the recent outpouring of so many writings
and communications—essays, columns, emails, lectures—characterized by sustained
grave reflection, deeply serious, penetrating thought and analysis, evincing
moral and psychological depth and earnestness, engaged with grave issues in
profound ways.
People who have these planets in major hard aspect all their lives often have
a sense of living with special moral responsibilities, with the heavy burden of
history on their shoulders, a sense of weighty karmic duty.
Saturn-Pluto presses for the forging of a deeper moral structure of
consciousness, of superego—which can be rigid and pathological, or a profound
moral advance in consciousness, a deepening of conscience, a profounder
awareness of evil, of the shadow, a deeper moral self-awareness, a moral
strength of purpose.
It is no accident that Jung, born with Saturn square Pluto, was the
psychologist who most brought the modern self into awareness of the "shadow,"
which he named and dissected, and who explored its reality in 20th
century history: the shadow of European civilization, the shadow of modern man,
the shadow of modern technology, the shadow of every individual psyche, the
shadow even of God ("Answer to Job"). Note also how so many of his writings are
characterized by a tone of intense moral gravity and penetrating analysis.
Cf. An Afghani interviewed about the possibility of being bombed by the U.S.
in reprisal: "America is very powerful and can do almost anything it wants; but
if I were America, I would look deep in my heart and ask myself why someone
would want to attack me in this way."
We also can see the Saturn-Pluto complex in Jung’s acute sensitivity to the
fateful determining power of the unconscious psyche over human life.
Saturn-Pluto brings that sense of the encompassing power of the archetypes
beyond the control of the rational self:
"We have not understood yet that the discovery of the unconscious means an
enormous spiritual task, which must be accomplished if we wish to preserve our
civilization." C.G. Jung
Saturn-Pluto is the collective psyche in a contraction of death that is also,
at another level, a contraction of birth, a hard labor of transformation within
the alembic compression chamber: Saturn-Pluto periods bring evolutionary
contractions, historical epochs that bring about a great death, the destruction
of an old order, deep transformation, and the establishment of a new
evolutionary structure. Through suffering and experience, deeper and wiser forms
of consciousness emerge.
Saturn-Pluto is the aspect of patriarchy—the evolutionary empowerment of the
stern Father archetype, of authority, hierarchy, control, law and order,
tradition and stability, discipline, domination, oppression, structure,
maturation—and at another level, it is the aspect of the Great Mother’s hard
birth contractions pressing and impelling new life and a new form of being. Thus
patriarchy as the birth canal of the Great Mother Goddess, just as History is
the birth labor of Nature. "All creation groaneth in travail" for the birth of
this new being.
Saturn-Pluto is the crucifixion, on the cross of opposites, where the divine
embrace of absolute defeat and death gives birth to a new humanity. (Saturn and
Pluto were in opposition in 29-31 AD.) It is the hard structure of death and
rebirth. It is the sacrifice that transforms reality. It is the dark and brutal
storm which brings in its wake, in the fullness of time, slowly but inevitably,
the luminous serenity of a new dawn.
This is the essential insight of the death-rebirth mystery: that every death
is on another level actually a birth.
Thus Saturn-Pluto hard aspects consistently bring those epochal periods in
history of great darkness, moral gravity, and disciplined determination that,
while confronting evil—within as well as without—ultimately serve to build the
enduring spiritual, moral, and social-political foundations for the future. They
are the death contractions of history, but also its birth contractions.
Again, the Saturn-Pluto opposition, which first moved into orb last fall
during the election season, and just now in the past few weeks reached
exactitude for the first time, will last about two more years, until 2003.
A shorter term alignment that began about the time of the attacks and lasts
about six weeks, is the Mars-Jupiter opposition, typically bringing enthusiasm
for assertive and militaristic action, strong displays of patriotism, proud
flag-waving (especially at sports and military events), nationalist bravado,
jingoism, saber-rattling, and, less problematically, an overall energetic
optimism and increase in courage and ardor.
While many other specific astrological factors can be adduced to fill out the
picture, bottom-line it’s the Saturn-Pluto alignment that symbolically and
multivalently informs virtually every element of the phenomenon. The several
other astrological factors that played a role in the timing and the nuances of
the event—the Full Moon grand cross; the Pluto and Saturn stations; the Mars
retrograde cycle (including what Mars aligned with during that cycle); the
background of specific eclipses; the Mercury grand trine with the extraordinary
calculating smoothness of the hijacking operation; the Moon and Saturn both in
Gemini, with the twin towers, twin airliners, two cities attacked, and so
forth—all these basically supported the larger, deeper, more powerful archetypal
reality of the Saturn-Pluto complex. It is this great outer-planet alignment
that constituted the simple--yet in another sense infinitely complex—essential
archetypal background of these profound events.
We must also take into account that this alignment is taking place in the
immediate aftermath of the long Uranus-Neptune conjunction, lasting from the
mid-80s to the present year, which has left humanity in a condition that is more
globally united and interconnected, more sensitized to the suffering and
realities of others, in certain respects more spiritually awakened, more capable
of collective healing and compassion, and, through technological advances in
communications media, more able to think and feel and respond together in a
spiritually evolved manner to these grave realities than has ever been possible
before.
I hope these notes, combined with David Spangler’s message, may provide a
larger perspective on the deep and grave events that have irrevocably shaped our
lives.
Richard Tarnas September 21,
2001 http://PCC.CIIS.EDU
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Matthew Stelzner. All rights reserved.
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