Quaoar
and
Accidents
Quaoar
and a heightened risk for accidents
There
seem to be a heightening of the risk for accidents when Quaoar is
involved, for example when Quaoar is conjunct the Sun natally. Below,
I have therefore gathered a list of individuals with Quaoar conjunct
their Suns when they were born.
What
these individuals also have in common is that they experienced an
accident. Most of them died; some survived, but had to work hard in
order to turn their conditions around, the accident affected and changed
their life profoundly.There is also some example of when someone close
to them died in an accident.
Examples:
Emanuele
Rocco:
Italian TV journalist and newscaster. Died in an auto accident
6/02/1983.
John
McCormick:
American astrologer and humorist, a part time pro. He wrote regularly
for Mercury Hour. His interest in astrology began in 1943 and he taught
Nautical Astronomy, Navigation, Mathematics and Astrology. He lectured
broadly and was a faculty member at AFA conventions. He authored several
books and co-authored several more. While riding his motor scooter
to work on 5/07/1981, at approximately 9:18 AM EDT, Newark, NJ, he
was struck by a vehicle. With massive injuries, he died later that
day.
Rocky
Marciano:
American boxer who won the heavyweight title in 1952 by defeating
Joe Walcott. During his career, he had a perfect record, winning all
49 of his professional fights. He retired from the ring on 4/27/1956
and was elected to the Boxing Hall of Fame in 1967. Died in a private
plane crash on 8/31/1969 near Des Moines, IA.
King
Bauodouin:
Belgian royalty, the first born son of King Leopold III and Princess
Astrid. His mom was killed in an auto accident just before he was
five.
Eileen
Brennan:
American actress who is the daughter of a doctor and an actress. She
took the title role of "Little Mary Sunshine" from 1959-1961 after
an off-Broadway debut. Her stage roles also included a performance
in "The King and I," 1963. Brennan's films include a debut in "Divorce,
American Style," 1967 "The Sting," 1973 and "Private Benjamin," 1980.
A comic genius, she also built up many TV credits. Brennan married
David John Lampson on 12/28/1968; they had two sons and then divorced.
She a bad car accident in which she broke her legs, jaw and skull
on 10/28/1982. The accident left her with a dependence on pain killers,
which she overcame, along with breast cancer, in June 1988.
Gerraldine
Ferraro (Mercury and Venus cjn Quaoar):
American lawyer and three-time Congresswoman from Queens, New York,
in 1984 a candidate for an office never before held by a woman, that
of democratic Vice-President. An attractive politico and competent
campaigner, she has a rapid-fire delivery and is tough and spontaneous.
She earned the respect of her colleagues in the House of Representatives,
learning the rules of the game and working her way up the committee
ladder. Ferraro's father, Dominick, was an Italian immigrant who owned
a dime store and restaurant in Newburgh, NY. Her mother, Antonetta,
was a housewife. Geraldine was named after a brother, Gerald, who
had been killed in an auto accident in 1933.
Buddy
Holly:
American musician, songwriter and performer who was a major rockabilly
artist, beginning with pure country and then moving on to original
soft-rock with his three-man group, "Buddy Holly and the Crickets."
He was interested in black music from the mid-50s and worked with
rock rhythms from his first recording session on 1/26/1956. The group
cut four albums before his classic "That'll Be the Day" launched him
on the way to becoming a rock legend. His fame was cut short when
he was killed in a small plane crash at the age of 23 on the night
of 2/03/1959.
Denis
Gorlewski:
American motorcycle cop, died after being hit by a dump truck while
on duty February 1987.
Julio
Iglesias:
Spanish singer, known as the master of the love song, the world's
top selling living pop star, Inglesias has sold a Guinness record
of 100 million albums worldwide. Releasing five albums a year in five
different languages, Spanish, Italian, French, Portuguese and English,
it is estimated that every 30 seconds the music of Julio Inglesias
is playing somewhere in the world. His first album released in the
U.S., with the hit single "To All The Girls I've Loved Before," sold
3 million copies alone and placed Inglesias in the pantheon of golden-throated
song-and-sex stars. The son of a physician and a homemaker, Julio
grew up in Madrid in an atmosphere of wealth and privilege. Well-mannered,
athletic and eager to please, the average student spent most of his
childhood and adolescence playing soccer, displaying a precocious
talent which later earned him a place on the national team, playing
goalie for Real Madrid. "I was one of the best young soccer players
in my country," he said. "You never know at what age you can be a
superstar, but it was definitely my dream. Up until the accident."
The professional athlete who took no interest in music whatsoever
suffered a setback at age 20 that was to alter the course of his life.
While driving recklessly around a curve, Julio's car turned over,
ejecting the two other passengers. Miraculously, everyone walked away
relatively unharmed, including Julio. Or so he thought. Months later,
a progressive weakening of reflexes and increased numbing rendered
Julio unable to walk. Tests revealed that he had suffered a hemorrhage
in the accident which caused compression in his spine. After surgery,
paralysis set, resulting in the prospect of life in a wheelchair.
"I felt like I had died." Still there was light at the end of the
tunnel. His spine had been traumatized, not severed, and by all accounts
he could walk again, but it required much rehabilitation and effort.
Two months after the accident occurred, a nurse handed the bedridden
Julio a guitar with an instruction manual. Within weeks he was writing
and performing his own music. Four years later, following a grueling
regimen to regain his ability to walk and a two year stint at Cambridge
where he studied law and performed in local clubs, he made his first
public performance at a Spanish music festival and won every award.
Within two weeks, the song recorded at the festival, "La Vida Sigue
Igal," became the No.1 single in Spain, launching Julio into a new
career that quickly reached superstar status. "I knew success already
from sports. I couldn't do sports again, yet I couldn't survive without
lights." Concert tours followed to sold-out houses worldwide including
three performances at the White House. A driven perfectionist, Inglesias
supervises every detail of his recordings and their releases and,
despite his astonishing success, is seldom without his nose to the
grindstone, composing, translating, or endlessly rehearsing to create
the "perfect" show, or "perfect" album. Iglesias' marriage to Isabel
Preysler ended in annulment in 1971, which, sadly, named their three
children as bastards in the eyes of the church. Enrique was the youngest
of those three children; he had an older sister and older brother,
Chabeli and Julio Jose, respectively. He and long-time companion Miranda
Rynsburger, born 1956, had a child in mid-1997, her first, his fourth.
He owns five houses, but calls his three-million-dollar palace on
a man-made island in North Miami home. In January 1998 he is working
on another home being built in Punta Cana, Dominican Republic. He's
also developing a golf resort there with designer Oscar de la Renta.
In the late '90s, his handsome son Enrique began to follow the Iglesias
legend as a singing heart-throb.
Marc
Bolan:
British rock musician, guitarist and vocalist with "T-Rex." He
was killed in a car crash 9/16/1977, leaving a cult following
to revere his work.
Christopher
Reeve:
American actor on stage, film and TV. Tall and handsome, he played
in the TV soap "Love of Life," in the movie "Gray Lady Down" and on
Broadway with Kate Hepburn in "A Matter of Gravity." He was most noted
for his lead role in "Superman," 1977, for which he earned $250,000.
Reeve played in three sequels and ten other films. From a moneyed
East Coast background, Christopher studied classical piano and learned
to love sailing and equestrian sports, including skiing, skating and
tennis. On 5/27/1995, while riding at the Commonwealth Dressage
event, which is a three-day competition in precision horsemanship,
he was thrown forward and hit his head, suffering multiple fractures
of the first and second cervical vertebrae in his spine. The trauma
left him paralyzed and unable to breath on his own. He had surgery
to fuse the two vertebrae on 6/05/1995 at Charlottesville, VA. Since
the accident, Reeve has become a spokesman for those who have been
struck down in crippling accidents, speaking up for rehab methods
and funding. He has also produced several screenplays from his
wheelchair. He was a partner with Gae Exton for some years; they had
a son, Matthew, in 1978 and a daughter, Alexandra, in 1983. In April
1992, he married Dana Morosini; their son Bill was born two months
later. All of his family has been supportive throughout his tragedy.
After his initial fear of being a burden to everyone, suicide became
no longer an option when his wife, Dana, assured him, "You're still
you. And I love you."
Cattin
Marco Donat (orb 5d 30m ca):
Italian terrorist, leader of the Prima Linea, involved in many terrorist
episodes. The son of a well-known politician, he was given a great
deal of news coverage. Captured in Paris 12/12/1980, he was given
eight years prison and released on parole in 1986. He had two marriages;
two kids. Donat was killed on the autostrada 8/18/1988, ironically
hit by a car while trying to help someone in a previous accident.
Lisa
Hathaway (orb ):
American news figure when her (1997) seven-year-old daughter Jessica
Dubroff set her sights at being the youngest pilot to navigate in
the United States and died in a plane crash.
Antonio
Ottaviano:
American noted family, the fifth child of actress Jayne Mansfield
and her third husband, director Matt Cimber. Antonio was less than
two years old when his mom was decapitated in an auto accident, 6/29/1967.
Reasons
for Quaoar's involvement with accidents
What
then is it about Quaoar that makes it involved in accidents? What
is it about Quaoar that heightens the risk for accidents?
Well,
let's consider the mythology to begin with. Quaoar was discovered
in the constellation of Ophiuchus/Aesculapius. This makes Quaoar involved
with journeys since Aesculapius went on the hazardous journey with
the argonouts.
| This
constellation is also involved with the ability to 'handle' or
to 'steer'. To "handle a serpent" or to "steer
a wheel". In each case you have to control the potent forces
in a skillful manner, or the results will be dire. You have to
direct them according to vision and purpose. |
Aesculapius
is said to be the son of Apollon. Sometimes Apollon is actually identified
with Aesculapius. This is interesting to consider as we have earlier
established the relation between Quaoar, Ophiuchus/Aesculapius and
the Master Hilarion. An earlier incarnation of the Master Hilarion
is most likely Apollonius of Tyana (and possibly Iamblichus). The
name Apollonius reveals a definite connection with Apollon, and hence
Aesculapius can be identified with Apollon, just as Apollonius of
Tyana can be identidied with the Master Hilarion.
This
makes Quaoar associated with Apollon, who is the elder half-brother
to Mercury/Hermes, and the son of father Zeus and mother Leto/Latona.
Mercury and Hermes of course are also involved with mobility, movement,
travel and all sorts of communication. It is also interesting that
Mercury/Hermes received the caduceus from Apollon, who got the Lyre
from Hermes.
The association
of Apollon with Aesculapius is even more clear when we consider the
infant Apollon having to kill the serpent Python, which was sent by
Hera after his mother Latona. This makes Apollon a 'Serpent-handler'.
Apollon
is the sun-god, and hence he is also related to the sign Leo, which
is governed by the Sun. Associated with the sign Leo is Hydrus--the
Sea Serpent. Hydrus actually govern one of the decanates of Leo and
is the actual glyph representing the sign Leo. Aspects of Leo, the
creative sign, are therefore being handled by Apollon, the Serpent-bearer.
Some of the stories also involve the Crow, which governs one decanate
of Leo, and they are intersting in this context.
| This
makes Ophiuchus a 'handler of Leo' (Leo being represented by Hydrus),
indicating how the creative powers inherent in the fires of Leo,
have to be controlled and directed. |
Furthermore,
Phaeton--another son of Apollon (Phoebus)--was unable to handle the
carriage/chariot/wagon of the sun, thus wrecking havock in heaven
and earth. From this we see how the idea of not being able to handle
a vehicle or force is suggested in mythology.
Continue
here --> Quaoar
and Active Intelligence
By
NN © 2002