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Chart-side Manner: the Crunch Or in my case, perhaps it should be written: group-side manner: the crunch. Here I am, literally hours after one of the most significant eclipses I have ever experienced, NOT doing the next lunation reading because I am hopelessly zonked into James T. Braha's 1989 account of his formation as an astrologer ( *Astro-Logos - Language of Life*, by James T. Braha, Hermitician Press, Hollywood, FL: 1989) It happens ( and happens, and happens, and, ... ,) I was so TOTALLY struck by Braha's first interpretive experience, after his intiation into Jyotish in India, that I had to share it with you. I will get around to the lunation reading. Promise: _________ quote: _________ (From the beginning of ch. III) Having returned from India and my studies with Santhanam, astrology was about all I could think of. If the subject was fascinating to me, it was even more so to everyone I came into contact with. So although my plan of action was to keep to myself and analyze and research as many charts as possible, the people I was meeting had other ideas. Everyone, it seemed, wanted to know what his or her astrological birthchart "said." On the plane home from India I had to truly put up a fight in order to escape astrologizing for one of the flight attendants. though I gave her the name of an astrologer in the town she lived in she insisted, "I want *you* to do it." I explained as best I could that I was not yet ready to do that. It must have seemed terribly strange to her because in my excitement over the wonderful learning experience I had just completed I was nearly bouncing off the walls to tell people the merits of Hindu astrology. She finally relented and I was off the hook. But the relief did not last long. Shortly thereafter a landlord I met while apartment hunting also insisted that I interpret his chart. Though I again protested that I felt unready to practice for the public he refused to take no for an answer. If I would not take his money for the work, he said, then he would repay me thorugh his professional activity of haircutting. Having made the agreement we exchanged services, and I was off to a running start. The man, to whom I am very grateful, was thrilled with the reading and spread the word to all his friends. When my phone started ringing, I realized I was in business whether I considered myself ready or not. My first professional session. I painfully asked $45 and was petrified of charging money for what I considered birthright information. Though I certainly had enough knowledge between the two astrological systems there was no university degree proclaiming me a professional interpreter of the language of the stars. More than anything I was concerned that people would be paying money for information about which a certain amount would be accurate and a certain amount would not. My astrologizing was not flawless, especially early on. The strategy therefore was to work as diligently as possible on each blueprint in order to gain as much precision as I could. I am ashamed to say how long I labored over the two charts of my first paying customer. Finally, after some days I felt as ready as I ever would be. However because of my fear of inadequacy and the resultant desire for accuracy I was insenitive to the astrological counseling process. Rather than first gaining the client's trust and confidence by gradually providing her with correct but relatively innocuous information and then approaching intense issues, I went straight to the point. "Well, your life seems to center around love relationships which are quite difficult because of what happened with your father." "Well, was his life rough?" I asked. "Did he die very young or leave you and your mother or something?" "No, everything was good. We had a good relationship," she replied. "Wait a minute," I interjected, "Was there not something strange or wierd going on? *Were_you_not_missing_a_father_emotionally?* From analysis of the Hindu chart I knew there was a problem with the father. From Western astrology I could see she psychologically had no father). "No, everything was fine," she repeated. "Well are you sure you've given me the correct birth time," I asked. "Yes, definitely," she said. "The birth time is accurate. Panic. How can astrology work so well for me and my friends and so poorly now that someone wants to pay me I wondered. What was odd was that this particular birthchart would not greatly change unless the birth time was extremely off, meaning thirty or forty minutes. Some charts change drastically with a four- or five-minute discrepancy, but this was not one of them. To alter her Hindu chart, which clearly indicated great suffering at the hands of the father, the time would have to have been way off. And she swore it was not! Since I had no astrological experience with the general public or as a professional, I was quite at a loss as to what was happening. So I simply told her that the chart did not seem to work and I had no idea why. She was not nearly as bothered as I was and asked me to please continue. There seemed little point in that. I had examined both her charts for plenty of hours and all the data pointed to the same reality. If the information I had just presented was inaccurate then there was no reason to feel confident in anything else that was delineated. But strangely she bade me go on so I did. I continued with the reading for another twenty or thirty minugtes speaking on different topics of her life. It then finally came time to address her home life as a child in terms of her mother. Since this was another disaster area about which the blueprint was truly implicit, I was loathe to put my opinion forth in fear of being wrong again. But I wasn't going to lie. I meekly stated "I may be off again, but from the chart it seems your mother also had a very hard life. Your relationship with her appears as difficult as it does with your father." From her reply it became obvious that interpreting the stars for myself was one thing; Practicing it for others was quite another. "Well," she said, "my mother never had any time for me. You see she was always taking care of my father. He was a terrible alcoholic." Then and there I contemplated drawing a picture of myself strangling a woman and then saying. "Now look closely. What's wrong with this picture?" But the truth was it was an excellent lesson. There was much to be learned from it. And I was fortunate to have been confronted so early on. For one thing, I learned that I would have to decide from the very start which to trust, astrology and my own experience or the client's word. Also, I now realized that from my tongue to another's ears there coud exist a mind-boggling gap. Finally, I came to find that although astrologizing is not therapy or counseling per se, it is similar in nature. Thus, to successfully practice the "art" of astrology is to deeply understand the human experince, to possess the greatest communicaiton skills, and to appreciate the nature of life itself. __________ end quote __________ Braha is one of the pioneer generation of Western Jyotishi. Like all of them without exception, he is concerned with taking Jyotish beyond its traditional Hindu limits. Any Westerner with a service ethic and/or any personal integrity about value delivered to a client will have an equal concern. It is impossible to generalize about a subject as vast, and with as many practitioners as Jyotish. But for the record, and because of a majority of mediocre and/or incompetent practitioners, I do it: In general, Hindu Jyotish is seriously decadent in terms of contemorary Hindu culture, and without being revitalized by a new point of view altogether, it has little of value to offer the West. Om Tryambakam Yajamahe Viveshwar
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