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Lilith<br />

found in George and Bloch’s Asteroid Goddesses. Unlike <strong>the</strong> planets, which are associated<br />

with a wide range of phenomena, <strong>the</strong> smaller asteroids are said to represent a single<br />

principle. George and Bloch give Lilith’s principle as personal power and conflict<br />

resolution; <strong>the</strong>ir tentative key phrase for Lilith is “My capacity to constructively<br />

release my anger and resolve conflict.” Zipporah Dobyns views Lilith as related to<br />

many Pluto concerns, namely, a strong will, interest in <strong>the</strong> occult and <strong>the</strong> unconscious,<br />

and power and control issues. J. Lee Lehman relates Lilith to <strong>the</strong> “wild women”<br />

in each of us (in men, <strong>the</strong> anima of female shadow self). This aspect of ourselves is<br />

often repressed, leading to misogyny in men and self-hatred in women.<br />

Lilith <strong>the</strong> dust cloud, Earth’s “dark moon,” received much attention from a<br />

handful of important earty twentieth century astrologers, such as Ivy Goldstein-Jacobson<br />

and W. Gorn Old (Sepharial). While <strong>the</strong> very existence of Lilith has been questioned,<br />

some astrologers have taken <strong>the</strong> claimed observations of a dust cloud obscuring—or<br />

being illumined by—<strong>the</strong> Sun and constructed ephemerides for this body.<br />

Early investigators regarded <strong>the</strong> influence of Lilith as malefic, believing <strong>the</strong> dust cloud<br />

to be involved in such unpleasant matters as betrayal and stillbirth. However, <strong>the</strong> feminist<br />

movement—which has strongly influenced <strong>the</strong> astrological community, if for no<br />

o<strong>the</strong>r reason than that <strong>the</strong> majority of practitioners are women—has caused reevaluation<br />

of mythological figures like Lilith: Perhaps <strong>the</strong> rejection of Adam’s authority<br />

should be seen as commendable, as <strong>the</strong> first time in history (even though it is a<br />

mythological history) that a woman refused to be ordered around by a man. Thus,<br />

more recent interpreters have tended to give Lilith a richer range of meanings, including<br />

many positive ones.<br />

The majority of contemporary astrologers reject <strong>the</strong> notion of astrological<br />

influence from an obscure dust cloud, and fewer actually use “<strong>the</strong> dark moon Lilith” in<br />

<strong>the</strong>ir work. (One measure of its rejection is its absence from such standard twentiethcentury<br />

reference works as <strong>the</strong> Larousse Encyclopedia of Astrology.) Attributing influence<br />

to Lilith persists, never<strong>the</strong>less, particularly among astrologers in <strong>the</strong> lineage of<br />

Goldstein-Jacobson and Sepharial. An important modern treatment of Lilith by Delphine<br />

Jay (Interpreting Lilith) and her very usable Lilith Ephemeris were published in <strong>the</strong><br />

early 1980s. In 1988 and 1991, respectively, <strong>the</strong>se two <strong>book</strong>s went through <strong>the</strong>ir third<br />

printing. Thus, like her namesake, Earth’s dark moon continues to refuse to submit to<br />

<strong>the</strong> astrological mainstream, which would prefer to deal with more manageable celestial<br />

bodies.<br />

Sources:<br />

Dobyns, Zipporah. Expanding Astrology’s Universe. San Diego: Astro Computing Services, 1983.<br />

George, Demetra, with Douglas Bloch. Asteroid Goddesses: The Mythology, Psychology and Astrology<br />

of <strong>the</strong> Reemerging Feminine. 2d ed. rev. San Diego: ACS, 1990.<br />

———. Astrology for Yourself: A Work<strong>book</strong> for Personal Transformation. Berkeley, CA: Wingbow<br />

Press, 1987.<br />

Jay, Delphine. Interpreting Lilith. Tempe, AZ: American Federation of Astrologers, 1981.<br />

———. The Lilith Ephemeris, 1900–2000 A.D. Tempe, AZ: American Federation of Astrologers,<br />

1983.<br />

Lehman, J. Lee. The Ultimate Asteroid Book. West Chester, PA: Whitford Press, 1988.<br />

Schwartz, Jacob. Asteroid Name Encyclopedia. St. Paul, MN: Llewellyn Publications, 1995.<br />

THE ASTROLOGY BOOK<br />

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