Once I realized there was a connection between my natal astrological chart and my aura colors, I was surprised that my aura photo revealed so much green. At first, I was only considering how earth, represented by green, was the least dominant according to the percentage breakdown of elements in my chart. But then I remembered that my Jupiter, which is known for its expansion, is in Taurus, an earth sign.
Dominant Elements In My Natal Chart
Green stands in the middle of everything and is the color which is between the outer and the inner, or the higher and the lower.
W. J. Colville teaches, “Green, which stands in the middle of everything and is the color which is between the outer and the inner, or the higher and the lower, worlds or planes of consciousness, is significant of universal adaptability.” I find this concept particularly fascinating. Previously, I said that I can simultaneously hold consciousness in two places, specifically the physical and the non-physical, such as during an Ayahuasca ceremony. So that must mean that I’m standing in the green, the middle of those two. And I wonder if green is the color of the physical channel.
Green is a balance color.
Craig Hamilton-Parker, teaches that green, which ”has the intellectualism of the yellow and the spiritualism of the blue” is associated with both the heart center as well as with nature. Like blue, the color green within the aura, he says, is “often a color that is seen in spiritual healers.” He continues, “It’s a balance color.” He says that it is indicative of a “well balanced personality” which includes traits such as stability, reliability and strength of character. His words make me think of Libra, the sign which represents balance. There, my North Node as well as my Pluto can be found. I am referencing my astrological natal chart, of course.
And green, says Craig, is ”the color of recovery” and those who bear it in their aura “calm everybody down.” His words make me think of my former hospice patient, who at nearly one hundred years of age, had become completely deaf. He asked a question which I found interesting since he couldn’t hear my voice. “I just want to know one thing,” he said before asking, “How are you so calm?” I had paused as I thought about how to condense the answer into one that would fit onto the small dry erase board. Finally, I wrote, “All of the chaos taught me to be this way.”
Evergreen
We often refer to money as green and of course, the same is true for ganga. I think green can also represent youthfulness, innocence or a lack of maturity. Think about the expression, “green behind the ears.” When something is not ripe, we say it is green and often, it literally is. To everything there is a season, right? And what about the term, evergreen? Urban dictionary defines it as “something that remains perennially fresh, or interesting, something enduring.” On the day I was born, Barbara Streisand’s “Evergreen” was number one on the music charts in the US.
I have mostly talked about the positive aspects of the colors. I did discuss murky red because it was present in my aura. But I didn’t talk about blue in its detriment. Colville says that “bluish grey” in the aura “indicates fear” and is often found in “timid natures” including those “whose religious beliefs are largely shadowed by fear.” He says it can also be found in someone “depressed in spirit” who may be experiencing “an attack of the blues.”
And you may have heard the term, sickly yellow. I’ve seen patients with liver disease whose appearances fit this description. Colville says, “Though green is often associated with deceit and jealousy, and we have all heard of a ‘green-eyes monster,’ whose acquaintance we desire to be rid of, as many sensitives have explained, it is only a sullied and debased condition of green which denotes treachery.”