Orgasmic Vancouver: Sedna    
 Sedna4 comments
4 Jul 2004 @ 17:59, by Robert Oveson

The following is the Leo horoscope for the week of July 1st, from www.freewillastrology.com.

LEO: Astronomers recently discovered a planet-like world orbiting the sun beyond Pluto. They called it Sedna, a name they said was derived from the Inuit deity that created the Arctic's sea creatures. They didn't realize that the myth of Sedna is far more complicated. She is the Dark Goddess, embodiment of the wild female potencies that are feared yet sorely needed by cultures in which the masculine perspective dominates. Dwelling on the edge of life and death in her home at the bottom of the sea, Sedna is both a source of fertile abundance and a mysterious prodigy. Shamans from the world above swim down to sing her songs and comb her long black hair. If they win her favor, she gives them the magic necessary to heal their suffering patients. In the coming weeks, Leo, Sedna is your special ally. Call on her power as your work to cure the part of you that you've thought would always be wounded.

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Hhmmmm, verrryyy interesting. Read this in the www.westender.com, which I picked up on the way back from a CD release of my favorite Dark Goddess, Tanya Evanson

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4 comments

5 Jul 2004 @ 06:04 by shawa : Sedna
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Fascinating stuff. :-)  



5 Jul 2004 @ 10:28 by ov : Sedna
Interesting link Shawa. I wasn't aware that the new planet had been discovered so recently. I'd almost go as far to say that we could be approaching the prophetic qualification for signs in the sky. What's the short story on this Nibiru?

Got a chuckle out of this quote.

"Sedna, the Sea Spirit, exercises suzerainity over all animals which provide food for humans. In her residence at the bottom of the sea, from where she sends out the animals for hunting, she takes on the form of a woman. Even shamans fear her."

Woe, Shamans don't fear easily.

The Canadian roots in the name give me the warm fuzzies, aeh.  



5 Jul 2004 @ 11:08 by bushman : Red star kachina.
I personaly think Sedna is a remnant of something larger. Even though scientists say it's too small to afect our solar system, it could still be really heavy, it could also be super magnetic, to where the orbit is not eliptical, since they found it way out there it does seem to orbit an invisable sun, maybe a small blackhole, a magnetic object orbiting 2 magnets at a high speed would orbit elipticly, but at a slower speed it might orbit in a figure 8 around our sun and the invisable one. I guess they know it's not a nutron star or something, but as far as size and weight go, a tea spoon of a nutron star weights billions of tons. Even a small object as Sedna suposedly is, it could have Earth sized planets trailing behind it or even orbiting, so as Sedna might orbit way outside pluto, its orbiting planets would come into our planetay plain, maybe one of them smacked into whatever planet it was that became our astroid belt, and if Jupiter was out on the otherside when the colision occured, then Saturn would of soaked up some of the debis, as in it has 31 moons and rings, as the story goes, the planet that got destroyed was a water planet, and most of the stuff in Saturn's rings is made of water ice. So what I really find intresting is the name they chose, Sedna its red right now, Sedona, is red rock, there is a story in the india texts of a city that was destroyed by a huge rock that fell out of the sky, I found that city here in Sedona. The Hopi tell about the red star kachina, when this red star becomes the blue star, things will be cleansed. So we see Sedna way out there moving slow in its orbit, but once it turns around to come back it will accelerat towards our sun. The red shift and blue shift are a known concept, when an object is moveing away from us it is red, when its comeing at us it's blue. And then we have the concepts of space and time, now lets say you see an object way out there, how long does the light take to get here, as compared to the objects speed? So we may see an object in a peticular place in space, that dosnt mean its still there. I had read about a rouge black hole that belonged to sSagatarius A, it suposedly does a figure 8 around our galactic core and then back out into deep space, this black hole is moving close to the speed of light, and we only spoted it because it ate something and gave off a burst of xrays, still it took the light 1000s of years for that light to reach us, so that blackhole is nowhere near where we saw it now. It could be the same for Sedna. It takes 8 minutes for the light of our own sun to get to us. Very interesting :}  


5 Jul 2004 @ 11:45 by shawa : Nibiru
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...And lots more over at Google-san. :-)  



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