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Acute Versus Chronic Disease:

A Mars-Saturn Issue

Ingrid Naiman © 2003

Historically, Mars was called the lesser malefic and Saturn the greater malefic.
Mars was associated with conditions with dramatic symptoms such as fever,
inflammation, pain, and bleeding; Saturn ruled chronic diseases whose onset
usually began years before anything clinically detectable was noted.

The best example of an acute illness is probably the plague. The Black Death
stalked Europe and Asia for three hundred years. When it swept through a town
or village, it left countless victims in its wake the way a cholera epidemic does in
some underdeveloped areas of the world today.

The onset of an acute disease is usually sudden. If one survives, one is seldom
the worse for wear afterwards; but, of course, the fear that is instinctual in the
psyche is that one may not survive or that those one loves may not survive.

Not all Mars-ruled conditions are infectious. Bleeding due to accidents or injuries
is also "acute," but the common denominator is the sudden onset. There is also
generally a need for swift response to effect damage control and minimize long-
term consequences.

Mars

In general, there is a tendency to blame someone "outside" for suffering caused


by Mars. The perpetrator could in such instance be an invisible microorganism, a
knife or scalpel, a bite by a venomous or angry creature such as a spider or dog,
or someone else's reckless driving. Only rarely is one "responsible" for one's own
Mars injuries: a bruise or fracture sustained in sports would appear to be the
exception; but, in reality, there is always some element of competition with Mars.
There is an enemy. The enemy may be bacterial or political, or it could be an
athletic opponent, this whether one is competing to win or merely to test one's
own prowess against some hidden measure one has inside oneself.

Not surprisingly, if there is an enemy, it is fair to wage war, and we have not only
seen countless victims of military violence but also wars on alien organisms that
require larger and larger arsenals to eliminate smaller and smaller enemies. It is
even fair to say that because of the Mars overlay on acute conditions of all types,
medicine uses a lot of language that sounds strangely similar to that used by
armed forces.

Since the unethical triumph of Pasteur in the late 19th century, the war against
illness has largely been focused on minute organisms, but what is ignored by the
exponents of the germ theory is the individual differences that make for survival.
The question of who succumbs and why and how they differ from those who
survive is not addressed. The germ is therefore viewed as causative, and the
more that is known about the germ, the more specific are our weapons against it.
If the germ were a bullet, it would make sense that a direct hit would have the
same terminal effect on all infected; but germs are not, in fact, like bullets so the
military analogies have limited relevance to medicine.

Saturn

Father Time is opposite to Mars in that the blame for illness must be placed on
the individual sufferer. To make this very clear, germs are not responsible for
high cholesterol or obesity or diabetes or cancer, therefore the patient must be
the cause of his or her own misery. You can see where this argument is heading.
If the victims of Mars are innocent because an enemy caused the condition, those
suffering from chronic illnesses must be guilty of some sin to have brought so
much misery upon themselves.

Therefore, "official medicine" from centuries ago has tended on the whole to
ignore chronic illnesses and to wage war on acute ones. Mars miseries raise
passions, but Saturn ones tend to breed judgment, depression, and feelings of
helplessness.

Saturn has dominion over diseases that "mature" from inconspicuous to serious
over time. The easiest way to understand this is with the examples already cited.
Cholesterol may be one or two points above what is ideal and/or one could be
just a few pounds overweight but ten or twenty years down the road, five or ten
could be twenty or forty. Since Saturn reveres discipline, the excess is regarded
with puritanical disdain: overindulgence, laziness, lack of exercise are to blame.
I.e., medical science cannot be expected to be effective if patients lack dietary
discretion or fail to work out in gymnasiums.

True or False?

The truth from an astrological perspective is different again. Each individual has
more or less capacity to express Mars or Saturn. The malefic influences are hence
dependent on the skill one has in utilizing either planet adequately.

For example, if one is able to run a high fever and destroy germs through febrile
reactions, this would be one explanation for success or defeat in the face of an
epidemic. Contrariwise, one might have greater defenses, thicker cell
membranes, higher immunity, or more water to pacify fire? To detoxify the body
of infection, one needs strong white blood cells (water) and efficient metabolism
(fire) and elimination.

Likewise, the issue with Saturn is also balance. Obviously, great restraint and
denial of pleasure would curb the tendency to accumulate fats and sugars, but
efficient metabolism works here also since a lot of gastric foment and insulin
would more or less obviate the risks of a certain amount of injudiciousness.

The Mars-Saturn scales tip other directions as well. If Mars is suppressed through
reluctance to express oneself spontaneously, refusal to compete, or denial of
spontaneity, acute responses are rendered inactive. The first line of assault is
thus surrendered, and we could argue valiantly that it is surrendered to Saturn's
more calculating and cautious modus operandi. This means that the immediate
agenda is deferred until it cannot be ignored any longer and an acute condition
goes underground where it metamorphosizes into a chronic condition. Ironically,
when the chronic condition reaches what might be called "critical mass," it erupts
with more Mars-like symptoms: pain, inflammation, and perhaps even fever.

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