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Sisyphus<br />

College of Astrological Arts and Sciences. At this writing, she is serving a second<br />

elected term as NCGR chair, and is also working on a new <strong>book</strong> and new paintings.<br />

Simms, who has three grown daughters and two granddaughters, greatly enjoys <strong>the</strong><br />

serenity of a wooded rural property with plenty of room for family visitors. There she<br />

has created a large stone circle garden with marker boulders at <strong>the</strong> cardinal and solstice<br />

points dominated by a seven-foot monolith at Spring Equinox sunrise, as a permanent<br />

setting for her Circle ga<strong>the</strong>rings.<br />

Her <strong>book</strong>s are Twelve Wings of <strong>the</strong> Eagle (1988); Dial Detective 1988; 2d ed.,<br />

2001); Search for <strong>the</strong> Christmas Star (1989); Your Magical Child (1994); Future Signs<br />

(1996); The Witches Circle (1996); and A Time for Magick (2001).<br />

SINGLETON<br />

In a bucket (or funnel) chart, all of <strong>the</strong> planets but one are on one side of an astrological<br />

chart. The isolated planet is called <strong>the</strong> handle or singleton.<br />

SINISTER<br />

Sinister, from a Latin term meaning left (not evil), refers to one of <strong>the</strong> many ways of<br />

classifying <strong>the</strong> astrological aspects. The antonym is dexter (right). A sinister aspect<br />

occurs when a faster-moving planet makes an aspect with a slower-moving one that is<br />

located counterclockwise from it (to its left) in <strong>the</strong> zodiac. Even though astrologers<br />

from Claudius Ptolemy onward have regarded sinister and dexter aspects as having<br />

somewhat different influences, <strong>the</strong> differences are comparatively minor. In most general<br />

chart readings, this distinction is ignored.<br />

SISYPHUS<br />

Sisyphus, asteroid 1,866 (<strong>the</strong> 1,866th asteroid to be discovered, on December 5,<br />

1972), is approximately 7.6 kilometers in diameter and has an orbital period of 2.6<br />

years. Sisyphus was a mythological figure whose punishment in <strong>the</strong> underworld was to<br />

roll a stone up a hill, only to have it roll back to <strong>the</strong> bottom, and <strong>the</strong>n have to push it<br />

up <strong>the</strong> hill, over and over again for eternity. According to Martha Lang-Wescott, Sisyphus<br />

represents “determination; dogged persistence; to start over (again or anew); to<br />

repeat effort.” Jacob Schwartz gives this asteroid’s astrological significance as “determined<br />

action on hopeless or repetitive tasks, ‘returning to square one.’” This asteroid’s<br />

key phrase is “start over.”<br />

Sources:<br />

Lang-Wescott, Martha. Asteroids-Mechanics: Ephemerides II. Conway, MA: Treehouse Mountain,<br />

1990.<br />

———. Mechanics of <strong>the</strong> Future: Asteroids. Rev. ed. Conway, MA: Treehouse Mountain, 1991.<br />

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

THE ASTROLOGY BOOK<br />

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