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Author Topic:   Ariadne conjunct personal names in synastry??
angel4845
Knowflake

Posts: 26
From: los angeles, ca, USA
Registered: Oct 2014

posted December 10, 2014 12:42 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for angel4845     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
those that are familiar with this story, how would you interpret this??? is this bad or good?? my partner's ariadne conjuncts both of our personal names asteroids in synastry =/

her natal
ariadne asteroid is 10 degrees sag

my natal
her name is 11 degrees sag
my name is 9 degrees sag

yeah I'm worried could this mean there will be some betrayal theme?? I'm not sure anyone's advice??? heres the story below

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angelica

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angel4845
Knowflake

Posts: 26
From: los angeles, ca, USA
Registered: Oct 2014

posted December 10, 2014 12:47 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for angel4845     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
these asteroids all located in both of our natals in the 3rd house , we have ascendant conjunct ascendant.... here's the story below as well:

ARIADNE: THE LABYRINTH OF THE SOUL
Authentic Relationship
Daughter of the great dynasty of Knossos, Ariadne’s fate was overshadowed by the curse that plagued her family. In the guise of a great white bull, Zeus had abducted her grandmother Europa from Phoenicia and brought her to Crete. Her mother Pasiphaë had also became enamoured by a great bull. Ariadne participated in the family fate: as Pasiphaë’s daughter her lifeblood was impassioned and as Europa’s granddaughter her destiny was to abandon her ancestral home.
Poseidon cursed Ariadne’s family when her father Minos refused to sacrifice his most magnificent bull to the God. Spurned, the God aroused Pasiphaë’s shameful lust for the impressive bull that became embodied in her bull-son, the Minotaur, human from the shoulders down. Banished into the labyrinthine blackness below the palace Ariadne’s half-brother, the Minotaur, fed on sacrificial children sent from Athens every nine years. Heroic Theseus was one of fourteen youths sent to Crete to face death at the hands of the Minotaur.
When Theseus arrived to participate in the bull games Ariadne’s passions were ignited when she saw him for the first time. Beguiled by the handsome hero, Ariadne devised a plan for Theseus to slay the Minotaur and return safely through the dark tunnels of the labyrinth. For her complicity Theseus promised he would marry her and take her away to Athens. Unconscious that her fate was enmeshed with the God Dionysus and not Theseus Ariadne set upon her course to help her lover and in turn betray her family.
Through the dark labyrinthine tunnels Theseus crawled, quietly, mindful not to make sounds that would waken the sleeping Minotaur. Wrapped around his wrist was a ball of yarn, tied to the pillar at the entrance of the maze, which unravelled as he made his way through the dangerous tunnels. Ariadne’s thread was the umbilical cord that connected him to the outer world and guaranteed his return after he killed the Minotaur. That evening Ariadne escaped with Theseus. In the dark Mediterranean night they set sail for a victorious return to Athens. Leaving behind her father and sacrificing her brother she surrendered to the passion that burned inside, the rapture only Aphrodite could inspire, a similar fervour that had inflamed her mother and grandmother. The next night Ariadne and her lover reached the island Naxos. Exhausted by travelling and fatigued from the emotional turmoil that had preceded their escape they collapsed into a deep sleep. But as the rays of the morning sun lit her face Ariadne awoke to discover her lover had vanished. At the edge of the shore she saw the sails of his ship in the distance. Athena had carefully woken Theseus before dawn, setting him on his course home without Ariadne. Abandoned, betrayed and used, Ariadne descended into her own labyrinthine world on the shores of Naxos.
Blinded by her passions Ariadne had been complicit in her abandonment. In betraying her family to follow her hero she had set the cycle of betrayal in motion. Projecting her heroic self onto Theseus had left her separated from her own centre. Alone Ariadne was forced to connect with her internal world. At this threshold Ariadne experienced an epiphany of Aphrodite the Goddess who ignited the passionate fires that led to her suffering. Appearing to Ariadne the Goddess revealed her true fate: she would wed her real soul mate, the divine Dionysus. Dionysus celebrated their sacred marriage by offering Ariadne the crown as the symbol of their intimacy and eternal union.
Ariadne’s myth portrays the heart’s painful journey when connection to the inner self is severed and sacrificed to the lover. Ariadne followed her lover’s course rather than her own internal labyrinthine journey losing her genuine direction. Using the thread, the symbolic connection to her inner core, to serve the hero Ariadne lost contact with her own inner wisdom. Abandoned she was no longer able to define herself exclusively through a partner; therefore a more authentic sense of self could emerge. The painful process of confronting her naïve trust and blind faith in Theseus enabled her renewal and redemption. In psychological terms a more divine sense of union is possible when projections onto the other are consciously relinquished. Dionysus embodies a woman’s masculine spirit enabling her to define herself in terms of her own needs and not through someone else.
When this card is chosen it reveals the course of the heart encouraging the individual to acknowledge that the threads to their inner self are tenuous and must be honoured in relationship. On a divinatory level the card suggests an awakening after a period of loss or betrayal. A deeper connection in relationship is possible. Ariadne celebrates a more intimate connection with the heart, whether that is through a personal relationship, a new creative endeavour or a new course of life. On an oracular level Ariadne appears when it is imperative to reflect on the course of a relationship to discover its authenticity.
Feminine Wisdom: Abandonment is an archetypal process that strips away the mind’s illusions in order to hear the calling of the true self. Confronted by the painful reality of being left the individual is forced to relinquish their hopes and fantasies in order to awaken to the authentic path of the heart. Ariadne embodies the soul in relationship that must first experience the painful course of the labyrinth before a divine connection can be realised.
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Ariadne ("the Utterly Pure") is the Minoan (Cretan) Great Goddess and Mistress of the Labyrinth, who is Goddess of the shining moon and the dark underworld. In the center of the spiral Labyrinth a monster waits, who is yet kin to the Goddess (in the Attic myth, Ariadne's half-brother). She is the giver of souls, bound in sacred marriage to Dionysus, the God of boundless life.
Ariadne is associated with celestial spiral motion, both in the imagery of the Labyrinth, and in Her fame for dancing. Daedalos, the archetypal inventor (he is said to have invented the hammer!), who built the Labyrinth also built Her a dancing-floor decorated with labyrinthine meander patterns. The spiral dance evokes the whirling stars, and the Minotaur is called in some sources Asterios, "Star".
In the later Athenian legend, the Cretan princess Ariadne is the daughter of Queen Pasiphaë (herself a powerful sorceress and sister to Kirke) and King Minos, who fell in love with the hero Theseus of Athens. With her help he navigated the famous Labyrinth and killed the half-man, half-bull Minotaur. Ariadne then fled with Theseus, who promptly abandoned her on the island of Naxos while she slept. When she awoke and found herself alone, she demanded vengeance.
She was found pacing the beach by the God Dionysus, who fell in love with her, and made her His wife. The marriage crown was flung into the sky to become the constellation Corona Borealis, Ariadne's Crown. She was made immortal by Zeus.
She represents tangled issues and their untangling, deep, core issues, and the dark secret at the center of the maze, that to be healed, must be brought out to light.
Alternate names: Aridela ("the Utterly Clear")

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angel4845
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From: los angeles, ca, USA
Registered: Oct 2014

posted December 10, 2014 12:50 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for angel4845     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
if someone smells trouble.....please don't be afraid to say "trouble"..i have no clue what this synastry could convey

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Randall
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From: Saturn next to Charmainec
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posted December 10, 2014 12:56 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Randall     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Moving to Interpersonal Astrology.

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Aubyanne
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From: Tinseltown, Hollyweird, The Multiverse
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posted December 10, 2014 01:08 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Aubyanne     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Angelica,

I'm going to be completely honest with you. I feel that you may, at times, go hunting for trouble. The truth is, astrology is potential. That potential can be channelled or handled in a variety of ways -- depending upon our choices.

Instead, I'd look at the placements of DIONYSUS and BACCHUS in relationship to ARIADNE.

But, personally, I'd smile at the 2º conjunction of your name and hers in your natal.

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angel4845
Knowflake

Posts: 26
From: los angeles, ca, USA
Registered: Oct 2014

posted December 11, 2014 01:42 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for angel4845     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Aubyanne:
Angelica,

I'm going to be completely honest with you. I feel that you may, at times, go hunting for trouble. The truth is, astrology is potential. That potential can be channelled or handled in a variety of ways -- depending upon our choices.

Instead, I'd look at the placements of DIONYSUS and BACCHUS in relationship to ARIADNE.

But, personally, I'd smile at the 2º conjunction of your name and hers in your natal.


yeah i understand aubyanne, its just that i want to be aware of the challenges in synastry are and how i can channel those challenges in a positive way that's all. I want to understand any negative aspects in synastry and learn to manage those aspects positively.

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Aubyanne
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From: Tinseltown, Hollyweird, The Multiverse
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posted December 11, 2014 05:15 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Aubyanne     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by angel4845:
yeah i understand aubyanne, its just that i want to be aware of the challenges in synastry are and how i can channel those challenges in a positive way that's all. I want to understand any negative aspects in synastry and learn to manage those aspects positively.

Then take a deep breath and smile at the natal conjunction of your name and hers.

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angel4845
Knowflake

Posts: 26
From: los angeles, ca, USA
Registered: Oct 2014

posted December 11, 2014 06:06 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for angel4845     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Aubyanne:
Then take a deep breath and smile at the natal conjunction of your name and hers.

=) Thank you aubyanne!

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