Copyright
2003. All Rights Reserved
This is the
second in a series of articles about the
Astrological Karma of George W. Bush. See my April
Column for the first installment of this series.
Personally, I see George W. Bush as a rather wounded Cancer. I say this not only
because of the dichotomy between his Leo Ascendant/Aries Midheaven and his Cancer
Sun, but because all the tension in his chart (three squares) is afflicting his
Sun in Cancer. The themes involved in this tension relate to experiences in childhood,
his own past life memory, the family unconscious, and the quality of his mind
and belief system.
George W. has the Moon, which represents childhood, in positive aspect to his
Venus. This indicates that there was a lot of love and affection in his childhood.
This aspect coincides with a close emotional relationship with the mother, which,
in George W.’s case by all accounts seems to be true. His Moon is also
conjunct to Jupiter, which would represent a positive, beneficent, fortunate,
expansive influence in his childhood. The wealth, affluence, and prestige attained
by his father, the large family, and the warm-hearted outspokenness of his mother,
would all point to this positive influence of Jupiter.
There is a complex of Astrological factors here, however, which would show additional
influences at work in the childhood and psychological make-up of George W. Bush.
Before I explain these factors, however, I will first describe a major karmic
event in the early formative years of George W. Bush. When George W. was three
years old his Mother gave birth to a daughter named Pauline Robinson, whom the
family called Robin. When George W. was seven the Leo/Aries side of his nature
was already giving him a reputation as being quite feisty, a bit bossy, and even
somewhat of a bully. In relation to his sister Robin, however, his Cancerian
qualities became evident. With Robin his behavior was always gentle, caring,
patient, and protective. At the age of seven, however, some intense Astrological ‘transits’ began
hitting his birthchart. In February or early March of that year, the elder George
and Barbara Bush were told that their daughter Robin had leukemia and would probably
die in three weeks. They rushed her to medical specialists in New York and were
able to prolong her life for six months until she unfortunately died.
Young George W. knew that Robin was sick, but he was never told that she could
die. In his auto-biography George W. says: “I was young enough, and my
parents loved me enough, that Robin’s death did not traumatize me.” In
contrast, it has been reported that while feeling betrayed by having the truth
kept from him by his parents, George W. cried uncontrollably, slammed the door
to his room, and destroyed half of his baseball card collection until his mother
stopped him. Later he tried to control his tears, but for years afterwards he
would wake up screaming from nightmares. One of George W.’s best friends
in childhood, Randall Roden, remembers sleeping over at the Bush home one night
and being awakened by one of George W.’s nightmares, ‘It was one
of the most realistic experiences I have ever had about death, and I am certain
it had a profound effect on him because it had a profound effect on me.”
Once again we have another telling dichotomy. Did George W. lie about the more
traumatic reactions to his sister’s death or did he suppress them from
his memory? In any case, Bush now had to endure the pain of such a tragic loss,
with parents who hid the depth of their emotional trauma from their children
and continued to live in a situation where it wasn’t really spoken about.
George W.’s Moon in Libra being in tension (square) with his Sun in Cancer
accurately reflects the tension between the cheery exterior and hidden interiior
of the Bush family.
For the Moon in Libra Hilarion says in Astrology Plus:
"This sign is ruled by Venus, the planet of harmony, tranquility, balance,
love and beauty. The Moon in this sign at birth denotes an early home environment
which was characterized by control of emotional excesses, with at least an outward
show of tranquility and harmony. Whether the harmony were really there under
the surface can be judged from the degree of affliction to the Moon in this position.
A heavily afflicted Libran Moon points to a home life which is superficially
smooth and tranquil but with a cauldron of unresolved conflict and turmoil beneath
the surface."
In Barbara Bush’s memoir she admits that she and George H.W. Bush awakened
each night in great pain after the death of Robin, while hating the fact that
nobody spoke of Robin, as if she had never existed.
George W.’s brother, Jeb Bush, described this Libran Moon, emotionally
controlled atmosphere in their childhood in the following account he gave in
an interview with author Bill Minutaglio:
"It goes against how we were...it’s just, we are not...it’s
not natural for us, for, uh, I think I can speak on behalf of all the family,
to get into, to be, to turn on this reflective mode and somehow spill our guts,....We
were brought up to basically do the exact opposite...and so I think, naturally,
it’s an uncomfortable thing."
The positive aspect of this Moon to Venus would indicate that a genuine harmony
and love did exist in the family. The difficult aspect (square of the Moon to
the Sun) would nevertheless show this tendency for things to appear calmer than
they were, an aspect of tension especially difficult for George W.’s Sun
in Cancer.
It is to the credit of young George W. that he became very concerned about his
mother’s well being at the time of Robin’s death, and it is believed
that it was at this time that he tried to uplift the spirits of those around
him by becoming the family and later the class clown. His sense of wounding and
betrayal, however, still festered. The elder George Bush and Barbara kept trying
to have another girl. After another three more boys they finally gave birth to
their daughter Dorothy. This was a joyous occasion for all of the other members
of the family. It has been noted, however, that George W. was somewhat disconnected
and even resentful of Dorothy’s arrival:
I’m ashamed to admit it, but I actually hated Doro the first month or two
after she was born. No one in the family mentioned Robin’s name any more
and it seemed to me at the time that everyone was fawning over Doro like she
was the second coming of the Almighty. You have to remember I was young back
then and confused in my feelings and emotions, but I don’t think anyone,
including my mother, knew that a little of me died with Robin and seeing this
new bably sister only served as a daily reminder for a while of my own personal
l
W. was fourteen in the year that Dorothy was born. Carrying the weight of Robin’s
tragic death in his psyche reflects the propensity of the sign Cancer to become
emotionally attached and even possessive of others in relationship. Indeed, part
of the karma of a Sun in Cancer person can be met in the following way (from
Hilarion, Astrology Plus):
"When
an individual expends most of his energy in the nurture of others,
there is a tendency to feel that without these others remaining
in contact, there George will be little substance or meaning left
to life. The threat of losing the others...can be expanded into
a general feeling of great insecurity on the part of the Cancer
individual, for which the only antidote is trust in Providence
or God. When several lives are lived in the Cancerian pattern,
the feeling of insecurity can become a trait in the soul which
requires correction through an incarnational pattern in which events
are arranged to increase the feeling of insecurity in the hopes
that the individual will ultimately turn to an inner faith in something
beyond man."
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