Culture Hero
Utne Reader
Aquarian readers of Rob Brezsny's
Real Astrology column got
a special invitation in January. 'Find or create a symbol of your
greatest pain,' Brezsny wrote. 'Mail it to me. I will then conduct
a sacred ritual of purification during which I will burn that
symbol to ash.'
Some 900 readers responded, cramming the astrologer's San
Rafael, California, mail drop with everything from drawings and
love letters to a Jack Daniels bottle and a pair of real owl wings.
The wings, Brezsny explains, represented the correspondent's sense
of 'always being watched.'
Several months later, the column carried a report on the raging
bonfire Brezsny set on a Marin County beach: 'I begged the Goddess
to release you from the karma that brought you the pain.'
Sipping pink lemonade in the house he shares with his wife, Ro
Loughran, and 6-year-old daughter, Zoe, on a quiet suburban street
north of San Francisco, Brezsny expresses great satisfaction with
this well-received piece of astrological performance art. A number
of his readers, he says, wrote to say their pain was gone.
For Brezsny, a shaggy-haired Texas native who has been writing
his weekly column for the past 19 years, that sort of interaction
with his public is its own karmic reward. With a blend of
spontaneous poetry, feisty politics, and fanciful put-on, Brezsny
breathes new life into the tabloid mummy of zodiac advice columns.
Real Astrology runs in 103 alternative newspapers, from
Anchorage to Miami, with a combined circulation in the neighborhood
of 4 million.
In the course of a single, 12-sign column Brezsny might riff to
his Capricorn readers on the glories of silk worms; advise
Sagittarians to dispense with jewelry, tight clothing, and
'constricted expectations' for the month; evaluate the San
Francisco 49ers' top draft choice; and get in a dig at Donald
Trump. Behind all the quirky metaphors and topical patter, however,
lies a serious intent. When Brezsny asks Cancerian men to wear
veils on International Women's Day or proposes 'brag therapy' weeks
for Leos, he's really challenging readers to subvert the
assumptions that govern their lives more firmly than any stars.
Conventional astrology columns 'reinforce reality,' Brezsny argues,
'and try to get people to adjust to the ghastly limitations of
civilization. My intention is exactly the opposite. The ultimate
political act is to overthrow perceptions of reality.'
Brezsny breezily concedes that 'most smart people wouldn't be
caught dead in astrology.' And that's exactly what he relishes
about it. Working in a 'devalued genre,' he says, allows him to
practice his calling as 'a tantric poet, storyteller, and teacher
in disguise' without the expectations and limitations that
accompany those roles. 'I've thought of myself as a poet for many
years,' says Brezsny, who studied religion as a Duke University
undergraduate. 'Eventually I figured out that nobody reads poetry.
You almost have to do it surreptitiously if you want to have an
audience.'
Brezsny hit on the astrology column as a populist poetic form
while he was living in Santa Cruz in the late 1970s. 'Poetry
proposes that the language you use to render experience helps shape
the experience,' he says, 'that language is crucial to the act of
creating your life.' And so, he believes, is an astrology column
written with the 'Dionysian logic' of ecstasy, paradox, and humor
he favors. Insisting that his work is rooted in a well-grounded
knowledge of the art, Brezsny endorses the 'mythic language' of
astrology. He first studied astrology with a private teacher in
Plainfield, Vermont, in the 1970s but has no use for official
sanction or certification. 'I see everything I do as inherently
astrologically correct,' he says.
As a practitioner of what he calls 'ironic sincerity,' however,
Brezsny doesn't need anyone to debunk the self-canceling concept of
his column. He'll do it himself. 'If I'm not engaged in some sort
of self-mocking, I'm probably taking myself too seriously and
distorting the information,' he says. 'I've always said I believe
in astrology about 70 percent.'
For the record, his own sign is Cancer. But he deflects most
other questions about his personal life and won't even reveal his
age, except for admitting he's in his 40s. 'It's a great blessing
not to be known as a personality,' he says. 'It keeps me humble and
close to the source.'
Among his other component parts, Brezsny is both prankster and
polemicist. His performance art stunts include handing out money on
a freeway exit ramp. His raps on a corporate 'world entertainment
war' with the imaginations of a global audience at stake and 'a
cult of science that propagates the notion that science is more
true than the other myths in our culture' roll out with practiced
smoothness. His latest project is a novel called A Feminist
Man's Guide to Picking Up Women. The hero, he says, is 'a
character somewhat based on me' who encounters a group called the
Menstrual Temple of the Funky Grail. Is Brezsny serious when he
talks about the craft of 'feminist porn' he's perfecting in the
book?
'Everything I do,' he says, 'is both tongue in cheek and
not.'
For more information on Real
Astrology call 415/995-2670 or visit his website at
www.realastrology.com