I am feeling comfortable about my rabbits and the 22nd of January will be here before long so I better step on the gas and put some rabbits down on paper for real, or else I won't have a greeting card for Chinese New Year.
When I think of the astrological Rabbit I inevitably look to the moon. I suppose this has to do with my culture and what is instilled in me. I grow up learning about the legend of Chang'e, our goddess of the moon, and the rabbit is her faithful companion up there.
In our Chinese mythology, it was said that there used to be ten suns and they were causing unbearable heat to our world. Chang'e was married to an archer, who went out and shot down 9 suns, leaving just the one we see today. For his valiant effort he was given an elixir of immortality by the Emperor of the Heaven. He didn't wish to be immortal all by himself so he gave the elixir to his wife Chang'e for safe-keeping. One day someone was trying to steal the elixir and Chang'e in an attempt to prevent the elixir from falling into wrong hands, drank all the elixir herself. She thus became immortal and chose the moon as her residence, leaving her husband behind. The Emperor of the Heaven caught wind of this and granted Chang'e the ability to meet her husband annually, on the 8th full moon of the year. Hence the August Moon Festival. A quick check on the internet shows there are many versions of this legend and what I am telling might sound different from what other people have learned. I suppose the only real significance is that we believe Chang'e is the goddess of the moon, and the rabbit keeps her company.
I suppose it is not difficult to conjure up stories about beings on the moon, especially when the moon surface is represented by unknown shadows and shapes. That floating luminous object that changes from a ball to a sliver in the night sky is in itself an object of pondering and bewilderment. I need to confess, the music of Rusalka's "Song to the Moon" is playing as I am writing. It is also interesting that the same moon appears different when viewed from different parts of the world.
I took a picture of a full moon in the States: