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Time of India
23-05-2025
- General
- Time of India
Manifestation Magic: When Words Turn into Reality, Thank a Strong Mercury
Some articulate it, some meticulously script it, and some quietly vibe with a crystal under the moonlight—yet, against all odds, their desires simply materialize. The secret ingredient? It might just be Mercury flexing its cosmic muscles in their birth chart, as if it has something profound to prove. Mercury, the agile planet governing communication, intellect, and expression, extends its influence far beyond mere texts and tweets. In the intricate dance of manifestation, it acts as the universe's inherent Bluetooth—seamlessly connecting thoughts to the cosmic to-do list. When Mercury is robust, crystal clear, and auspiciously placed (a common trait for those with strong Virgo or Gemini ascendants), their spoken words tend to carry an extraordinary amount of weight. What is articulated aloud feels less like a mere wish and more like an undeniable interstellar command. Individuals blessed with a powerfully positioned Mercury often discover they're inadvertently speaking things into existence. Casual thoughts, such as "I wish I had Friday off," somehow transmute into unexpected long weekends. It's less about adhering to "The Secret" and more about embodying "The Statement." by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like 2025: Steel Suppliers From Mexico At Lowest Prices (Take A Look) Steel Suppliers | search ads Search Now Undo Imagine the universe wearing noise-canceling headphones, yet for those with strong Mercury, their desires cut through with crystal clarity, directly reaching the cosmic ear. It's crucial to note that this doesn't imply every individual with a buzzing Mercury automatically becomes a manifestation guru. An afflicted Mercury—perhaps caught in retrograde havoc or nestled too closely with challenging planets like Saturn or Neptune—might instead channel this energy into incessant overthinking or chaotic over-sharing. However, when Mercury operates with a calm, direct, and confident demeanor, the mouth truly transforms into a powerful magic wand. To amplify this inherent gift: Articulate intentions aloud —not in the style of a reality TV confessional, but with profound clarity and conviction. Maintain tidy thoughts —Mercury, being the planet of intellect, responds far better to less mental clutter and chaos. Engage in journaling, writing, or chanting —the efficacy is even greater if your handwriting doesn't resemble an ancient, indecipherable curse. Personalize affirmations —Mercury, with its discerning nature, inherently dislikes generic clichés; authentic, tailored affirmations resonate more deeply. If you observe that your manifestations seem to materialize almost as soon as a sentence leaves your lips, take a moment to examine Mercury's placement in your birth chart. It might very well be lounging in the influential 1st, 3rd, 5th, or 10th house—or perhaps it's quietly, yet dominantly, ruling your entire chart. Discover everything about astrology at the Times of India , including daily horoscopes for Aries , Taurus , Gemini , Cancer , Leo , Virgo , Libra , Scorpio , Sagittarius , Capricorn , Aquarius , and Pisces .


The Guardian
22-02-2025
- Entertainment
- The Guardian
Figures in Extinction review – Crystal Pite and Simon McBurney's impassioned response to the climate crisis
One of Crystal Pite's most distinctive qualities as a choreographer is her willingness to grapple with the society around her, to craft works that engage with the issues of our time – bureaucratic bungling (Revisor), global diplomacy (The Statement), mass migration (Light of Passage). Theatre guru Simon McBurney of the groundbreaking Complicité has a similar belief in the power of art to change the world. Together over the past four years, with the exceptional dancers of Nederlands Dans Theater, they have forged Figures in Extinction – a work of serious thought, urgent entreaty and utterly sumptuous dance around the questions of human-made climate change and its effect on the planet. The evening-long show is made of three separate works, and it was the third that received its premiere last week at Aviva Studios, home of Factory International. Pite led the creation of the first, McBurney the second, and the third is credited as an equal partnership. But as a whole, the piece has extraordinary sweep and coherence. Each begins with all the dancers on stage and a question being asked. Images run from one to the other – the skeleton of a cheetah and the pinioned movements of a frog seen in the first section return in the last. The effect is one of cumulative richness forged from separate ingredients. Figures in Extinction [1.0] the list is a mournful litany of lost nature. Pite creates an encyclopedia of haunting pictures, suggestive of the creatures that are extinct but not mimicking them. In conjuring lost animals through human bodies, the work generates exactly the state of empathy its soundtrack pleads for. The second part, [2.0] but then you come to the humans, starts with a phalanx of suited dancers in suits on chairs, transfixed by their phones as urgent events unfold around them. As it develops, the movement embodies the dense arguments unfolding on the voiceover, about the left and right brain and the ways in which we have created a society that – quoting Einstein – 'honours the servant' by promoting the rational mind over the intuitive, 'a sacred gift'. Finally, [3.0] requiem explores ideas of death and time, the relationship between the living and the dead, and the faint hope that springs from the continuity of both. With music that ranges from Mozart and Fauré to Schnittke and Ice Spice, and scenes around a hospital bed where relatives lip-sync their grief over the dying while shadowy dancers seem to represent the dead, this section is the most diffuse of the three. Yet it is astonishingly moving in its willingness to grapple with the philosophical notions of extinction, on both a personal and a planetary level. Pite creates choreography that seems to stretch the dancers to their limits, their bodies so expressive, so impassioned, as they form into tableaux and patterns, that at one moment look like Géricault's The Raft of the Medusa and at the next like a medical documentary. Group movement breaks into solos and aching duets and finally resolves into stillness. It's textured, varied, utterly beautiful. In each section, Tom Visser's astonishing lighting, which constantly switches and highlights mood, Owen Belton and Benjamin Grant's compositions and sound designs, which blend classical melody with the sound of the street, and Jay Gower Taylor's fluid, evocative design all add to the weight and power of the trilogy. It's a towering achievement – a challenge to do more, think more and feel more. Figures in Extinction is at Aviva Studios, Manchester until 22 February