1 Eagle

May 05, 2005 12:58

Tomarrow is 13 Jaguar. Im feeling it will make so much sence if i get that $5000 grant tomarrow. side note: i looked up the date of last summer when i got into a car crash resulting in amnesia and pain and stuff which gave me many things to think about, important things, things that dont involve getting drunk, or getting laid, or having a nice car, or the best place to get the best food. It was a reminder of who i was and where i came from and where i was going, and that sometimes we forget this and fall off the path for the most leisurely things, simple desires and indulgences, and egotistical aims. This day fell on 7 Jaguar in the mayan calendar, 7 being a very powerfull number, marking the mid point in the 13 day cycles, micro and macro. My sign being Jaguar, thus making sence that a message was making itself clear to me at that point in my life weather i liked it or not: it is clear to me now that i was doing everthing i could, sub- or unconsciously to avoid learning this lesson or change my patterns. Some times the spirit bitch-slaps our asses to get the point across.

Tomarrow, Friday May 6th= 1 Eagle
The 13-day period Cuauhtli (Eagle) is ruled by Xochiquetzal. This trecena signifies a time of inspired play: regardless of the sport, this is the time of mastery. All of one's practice and prepartation culminates now in an unparalleled conjunction of luck, skill and timing. These are 13 days when gambling on happiness, both your own and others', pays off. These are good days for taking risks; bad days for playing it safe.

This very day is influenced by the Cihuateteo.

Cihuateteo or Cihuapipiltin, the divine or noble women, the goddesses of the crossroads. They can be dangerous goddesses, spirits of women who died in childbirth, and now live on, escorting the setting sun. At noon they take over the escort from the warriors who have died in combat. The Cihuapipiltin have special influence on days 1-Calli, 1-Mazatl, 1-Ozomahtli, 1-Cuauhtli and 1-Quiahuitl. At these days, after sunset the Cihuapipiltin go to the crossroads to lead men into misfortune.
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