Shockwaves
spread through the NBA on October 16 when the Miami Heat announced that
their star center, Alonzo Mourning, had been diagnosed with kidney disease
and would be not be playing this season. Mourning is not the first NBA
player to succumb to focal glomerulosclerosis, a disease that impairs
the kidneys’ ability to properly filter the blood. It’s the same condition
that recently sidelined the San Antonio Spurs’ Sean Elliott. Mourning’s
diagnosis caught everyone by surprise, coming in the wake of ‘Zo’s ultimate
summer vacation in Sydney.
Mourning
shone at the Olympics, and the six-foot ten-inch center matured in the
public eye, evolving from the foul-mouthed NBA bad boy of yore into
a lovable husband and father. ‘Zo finally revealed his soft side, undertaking
an exhausting marathon journey from Sydney to Miami at the height of
the games, determined to attend the birth of his daughter. Returning
to Sydney in time to win the gold for the U.S., Mourning, the proud
papa, was living life to its fullest. At first, doctors thought he was
just tired and worn out from all that heroism, but tests soon proved
otherwise.
The diagnosis
has profound implications for both the Miami Heat and the entire NBA
Eastern Conference. The Heat have built their team around Mourning,
bulking up their roster with off-season trades to complement their dominant
man in the middle. If you pull Mourning out of the lineup, the strongest
team in the East collapses in on itself. Suddenly, the race for the
Eastern Conference Championship is wide open again.
Mirrored
in the Sky
This predicament is mirrored within the current transits to Mourning’s
birth chart. Alonzo Mourning is an Aquarius, born on February 8, 1970, in
Chesapeake, VA. Currently, Uranus, the planet of the unexpected,
ruling shocking developments and all manner of surprises, has been transiting
back and forth over Mourning’s Aquarius Sun. Uranus does tend to strike
like a bolt out of the blue, changing everything it touches. Its radical
influence shatters the status quo and breaks up established routines.
Uranus can hit right where we are most resistant to change, and the
challenge of picking up the scattered pieces and starting anew brings
out the genius within. This particular Uranus transit has shaken both
Mourning, and his team, to the core.
The
Sun at the Center
The Sun
in astrology is a lot like a center on a basketball team. He’s the big
man in the middle of all the action. Ideally, a good center is a team
leader who dominates the goal. He should be strong, forceful and intimidating,
but also needs to share the ball with his teammates and contribute to
a balanced attack. The Sun in an individual’s birth chart plays much
the same role. It is the central, integrating factor, whose gravity
and power draws all the other components of the personality together
into a game plan. A strong Sun is the CEO of an integrated personality.
A weak Sun, like a weak center, is selfish and unfocused, leading the
team into chaos.
The Sun
rules, or is most at home in, the sign Leo, a sign known for its strong
personality and leadership. It’s not surprising that many famous centers
are Leos, like Wilt
Chamberlain, Pat
Ewing, David Robinson, Walt Bellamy, Nate Thurmond and Rik
Smits.
Aquarius,
Mourning’s Sun sign, is the opposite sign of Leo. Signs that oppose
each other in the zodiac share much in common, but they tend to express
themselves in completely opposite, or complementary ways. Aquarius and
Leo are like two poles of the same magnet, both strong and stubborn,
with similar talents and leadership qualities. Aquarius, an air sign,
is more diffuse and sociable than Leo; Aquarius is a king with a common
touch, like Abraham Lincoln or Ronald
Reagan. In medical astrology, while Leo is traditionally
associated with the heart, Aquarius rules the circulation and the blood
flow, providing a perfect example of how interrelated these two signs
really are.
The
transit of unpredictable Uranus over Mourning’s Aquarius Sun has coincided
with the onset of a disease that has temporarily derailed his life’s
purpose, and shattered his team’s prospects. Oddly enough, the Spurs’
Sean Elliott is also an Aquarius, born February 2, 1968, in Tucson,
Arizona. Transiting Uranus was also moving back and forth over Elliott’s
Aquarius Sun during 1999 when he was forced out of the Spurs lineup
with the same disease. He eventually suffered kidney failure and received
a kidney transplant in August 1999, under the influence of the same
transit.
While the
kidneys are traditionally ruled by the sign Libra, they cleanse the
circulatory system by filtering impurities from the blood. That is precisely
the function that focal glomerulosclerosis attacks. While two cases
hardly constitute any kind of proof, it is still a striking example
of the relationship between the sign Aquarius and the human circulatory
system.
Meanwhile,
Sean Elliott has served as a striking example of the triumph of the
human spirit. Returning to practice a mere six months after his kidney
transplant, he was back in the game on March 14, 2000. After a successful
training camp, he has been cleared to play for the upcoming season,
to the delight of his teammates and fans. Alonzo Mourning is one tough
competitor, and the odds-on favorite to win against this disease. Let’s
hope both the fans and his kids can see him back in the center of the
action soon.