"It is hard to believe that this teeming world is too poor to provide an object for human love—it offers boundless opportunities to everyone. It is rather the inability to love which robs a person of these opportunities."
Archturus (Bootes) - Spica (Virgo): The Divine Couple
When you love yourself enough, you will attract the right person - Carl Jung
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9RuMZwrHNFE
The seminar on Nietzsche’s Zarathustra, given 1934-1939, is where Jung emphasized self-love. Can it be a coincidence that in this peiod, Nietzsche’s solar arc prog. Saturn [3ta] was conjunct Jung’s Neptune [3ta] sq. Sun [3le] _asc [3aq]? At the same time Jung’s solar arc Sun [3li] was aspecting the same combination in his radix. If Neptune with its no boundaries is about draining yourself trying to please others, Saturn’s lesson is about having strong boundaries within which you begin to look after yourself. This is not selfishness which is a keyword often wrongly linked to Saturn in cook book astrology.
When Destiny Calls, Nothing Can Stop True Love | Carl Jung
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k1-qgmLmOqA&t=216s.
Anima/Animus and Love: In Mysterium Coniunctionis (CW 14, published 1955–1956), Jung discusses love as a dynamic that brings the unconscious to light, often through projections like the anima/animus. He wrote, “Love, in the sense of concupiscentia, is the dynamism that most infallibly brings the unconscious to light” (CW 14, Para 199). This suggests that intense romantic attractions, often perceived as soul mate connections, are rooted in unconscious recognition.
In 1955-56, Carl Jung’s progressed Sun [22li] was beginning a conjunction to his radix Jupiter [23li] with both conjunct the stars Archturus and Spica (often referred to as soul mates) [1]
The Archturus-Spica (Boötes-Virgo) synthesis exemplifies the masculine and feminine in their unadulterated Divine Union, able to express, birth, and manifest the purest expressions of Unity Consciousness.
The idea that destined love can overcome fears, particularly those stemming from societal traditions, is a prevalent and powerful concept, often found in literature, art, and spiritual teachings. It suggests that genuine love can be a force strong enough to challenge societal norms and personal fears, allowing individuals to form meaningful connections outside of traditional expectations.
[1] https://javed22.blogspot.com/2020/03/sacred-love.html
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