Meeting the Challenge of
Relationship
New Worlds Isse: NW021
By: Noel Tyl
Sooner or later, every one of us becomes aware that we cannot exist
alone. It is hostile to the human condition: we can’t procreate, we
can’t really know ourselves; we can’t get on with life without the
cooperation of others. Indeed, no person is an island.
We are taught and groomed to marry; to do otherwise is off the path.
There must be something wrong with that person who is not in a
relationship.
It’s no wonder that astrologers see clients continuously who have
intense concerns and questions about relationship, that state of living
deemed mandatory by society but for which little specific instruction is
given for fulfillment. It is extremely difficult to relate to another,
to live happily ever. In days past (but still practiced in some
cultures), marriages were arranged. People were put into relationship to
fulfill societal and family benefits. The marriage unit was more
important than the individual growing into his or her potential.
The Heat Is On
All cultural reflections of life-epic tales in history, literature, and
song-pursue not just relationship, but the ideal relationship! The
pressure is on in our social interaction even before school age, even in
our dreams, to fulfill role prescriptions as boys or girls and to find
someone with whom all will be perfect. All this is to fulfill the
Biblical and social doctrine to go forth, be fruitful, and multiply.
And how difficult this process is. We conceive the ideal mate and search
for him or her. We expect the mate to show up. Pop culture (Hollywood)
tries to help, and ideals get blown extraordinarily out of balance. With
every birthday tick of the clock we measure who we are-our appearance,
our attractiveness, our desirability, our social position-in terms of
how successful we are in the mating game.
Astrologers and psychologists know well that people fool themselves into
recognizing the perfect relationship too early, in order to escape the
home life with their parents, to gain some autonomy and freedom, to get
the relationship mandate off their backs as soon as possible.
Precipitous marriages occur most often between ages 18 and 22. The
unreal ideals projected from one partner onto another-she’s perfect;
he’s a dream come true-are bubbles that burst within six months of
togetherness. Working as a team, earning a living, and raising a family
introduce struggle and fatigue. Painful disappointments follow, and a
routine of blame and frustration patterns itself into the individual
lives. Erstwhile lovers can become punishers. Within relationships
people can become even more alone than before; they give up who they
are.
Introduce to the relationship quest the dimension of sexuality-that
primal power-drive no one can easily talk about until it’s too
late-and the entire issue becomes volatile and explosive. A failure in
relationship becomes a failing as a person. Frustration and
embarrassment lead to criticisms; criticisms lead to rejection;
rejection leads to abandonment.
Astrology to the Rescue
What can the astrologer do to help with this complex dilemma? In the
horoscope astrologers can see the concomitants of self-worth
development, the capacity for feeling loveable or not loveable, giving
love easily or not easily, welcoming relationship or fearing it.
Astrologers can see to what degree individual needs that drive normal
early development are thwarted by parental influence. Astrologers can
easily explain why relationships become the battleground upon which to
work out early home tensions and parental interactions.
But there are good relationships, good marriages. And astrologers can
see that, too. Astrologers can even answer questions about “soul
mates,” about when there might come into life a strong candidate for
relationship…even when the client is in his or her 80s! There is
always hope, and the longer one lives, the more one learns. Multiple
marriages certainly attest to that.
Fine Tune Your Therapeutic Abilities
Astrologers can learn to work with individual needs, interaction with
the parents, the development of defensive and isolating behaviors, and
the ways development can be adjusted to open the door to real
relationship. Astrologers can help their clients understand intimacy,
how one can trust self-development and not perpetrate idealized
expectations, not fear criticisms, not repeat parentally modeled
patterns of underachieving relationships. Astrologers can learn these
psycho-relational therapeutic abilities through careful study of Intimacy,
Sexuality, & Relationship.
Client and astrologer can learn together that the distance between us
and others is only as great as the distance between us and ourselves.
Astrology introduces people to themselves rationally, positively,
productively.
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Astrology
of Intimacy, Sexuality & Relationship: Insights to Wholeness
A Master 's Authoritative
Analysis of Astrology's Most Popular Subject
For more than 30 years, renowned astrologer Noel Tyl has brought
psychological methodology into astrological symbolism and
analysis. This comprehensive guide, designed for
intermediate-to-advanced level astrologers, offers a developed
approach to relationship needs as expressed in the horoscope.
True intimacy is the ability to express feelings and show
vulnerability, without fear of criticism, rejection, or
abandonment. With the knowledge acquired from this book, you
will be able to help yourself and othersfirst, to understand
personal strengths and needs, and then to use that information
to build successful, satisfying relationships.
Discover where intimacy beginsin the early childhood influences
already profiled by the horoscope. Learn the significance that
Sun-Moon blends have on relationships. Explore intimacy
therapies and the three great enemies of intimacy. Read case
studies focusing on smothering the self, sexual abuse, sexual
dysfunction, and the inability to express emotions. Last, but
not least, see how people can overcome the past and how it is
never too late for intimacy to develop.
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