Category Archives: Columnist

Mercury Unbound

There’s a lot going on presently, both in the sky and in the world. As regards to public affairs, it would be fair to say a large number of occurrences are competing for your attention. It would also not be surprising if your personal life were emulating both the celestial and public flurry. For most, if not all, one pertinent question is where to begin.

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On the Atlantic side of the U.S., an onslaught of winter weather is of immediate and urgent concern. At many locations in that same area, a significant number of people have found it worthwhile to stand in line today to purchase a certain controversial book.

If you were to take a clue from that single combination of events, it would make sense to begin an analysis of our current astrology by paying attention to what Mercury is doing.

As is the case with other sign rulers, Mercury has a sizable portfolio of correlations. What is emphasized among the large number of Mercury’s earthly associations at any given time will usually depend on context.

We live at a time when, for a combination of reasons, books printed on paper have a questionable future. Plausibly, that would go double for bookstores. Hence, to have a large number of people brave serious weather and queue up for something which could be obtained by delivery or digital auspices is an event worthy of note.

Among the many things Mercury corresponds to is information. In this century, the printed word has faced intense competition as a source of information. Even so, no other way of accessing data can duplicate the stability of a book. Once ink is committed to paper, the only way of eradicating or distorting what it says is through the implementation of drastic and draconian measures that cannot be concealed.

Somehow, a substantial number of us still seem to know that.

Mercury is now in the last handful of days before it finally leaves behind the segment of Sagittarius where it has moved back and forth since mid-November. Interestingly, the same, brief period of time will see a flurry of interactions among Mercury and other major planets reach a climax — which has been building for weeks — before they all move to develop new themes more commensurate with a new year.

Assuming there is some truth in the observation that what occurs above is reflected here below, Mercury thus seems to be a prime indication of what to make of this moment. In essence, much of what’s happening now is a summation of what has gone on before. In one case, at least, that consolidation is being committed to a lasting form — one that will serve as a stable future reference beyond the easy reach of those who would prefer that both your memory and attention span be short.

If you look at it that way, the next handful of days will not be so intimidating after all. In all probability, we can expect some density and intensity, but that too shall pass. Afterward, new business will be at hand. From all appearances, the best way to approach that near future will entail not forgetting the past, while also being newly unbound from it.

Offered In Service


dec7-7-2017

The Art of Becoming, the 2018 Planet Waves Annual by Eric Francis, will be your best guide to the major astrological shifts ahead. If you pre-order now, you’ll not only get all 12 signs of the written reading for $99, but we’ll include three extra videos covering the forthcoming sign changes of Saturn, Chiron and Uranus. These videos are only included if you get all 12 signs. You may choose your individual signs here.

A Visitor to Your Corner of the Revolution

By Amanda Painter

As we make our way through this first week of 2018, which began with a stunning Full Moon, I hope you’re feeling energized to move any intentions, resolutions or desires for this year forward — even in the seemingly smallest ways. What marked 2017 (personally and culturally) is carrying over for further development, as it always does from one year to the next. But it’s always possible to take a slightly different approach — and the standout astrological aspect of the next several days may speak to that opportunity.

Photo by Amanda Painter.

Photo by Amanda Painter.

That would be a conjunction of Mars and Jupiter in mid-Scorpio, exact at 7:39 pm EST on Saturday but in full effect now.

There’s a very interesting detail about this conjunction, which I’ll get to in a moment. At its most basic level, however, a Mars-Jupiter conjunction is about energy, particularly physical energy. It tends to indicate that a person will likely have plenty of it, and have the desire and confidence to use it.

That can mean you need to be aware of what constitutes a dangerous risk, or to keep tabs on whether you actually have the stamina and physical conditioning to complete any activity you feel motivated to start. But if you have plans to launch a new enterprise, and Mars is making a conjunction to your Jupiter (or vice versa), astrologers generally say it’s good timing. In this case, Mars and Jupiter in Scorpio could emphasize the financial potential of this week; Scorpio might also speak to your sexual energy and your motivation and desire to embody, express and share it.

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Intimations of a Useful Moon

Here we are, in the first year of this century to initiate with a Full Moon. It would now be worthwhile to look ahead just a bit to see where the lunar theme leads. We need go no further than the last day of this first month of 2018. That’s when we will have the first of two total lunar eclipses (which, not incidentally, take place during Full Moons) this year.

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If 2017 was (as many think) distinguished by the “Great American” total solar eclipse, 2018 could just as well represent an emblematic balancing of luminary (Sun and Moon) ledgers. You might say the Moon’s turn initiated just as the annual civil calendar turned.

In support of that assertion, the lunar nodes are, as if on cue, coming into astrology’s spotlight this week. What, you may ask, does that have to do with eclipses? In a word, everything.

The lunar nodes are not tangible objects like the Sun and Moon. They are calculated points, both in the sky and on the zodiac. Essentially (to simplify this explanation), there are two of them. One (the ascending, or “north” node) corresponds to where the Moon’s orbit around the Earth rises above the so-called “ecliptic plane” defined by Earth’s orbit around the Sun.

Logically enough, the other (descending, or “south”) node is where the Moon’s orbit descends below the ecliptic.

The lunar nodes are not stationary points. They move. On a zodiac chart (and once again, simplifying things) their net motion over time is retrograde — which is to say clockwise — which leads to their spending about 18 months in each sign. One important thing to remember is, at any given moment, the two nodes are precisely on opposite sides of both the sky and zodiac circle.

The most important thing to remember, however, is that the lunar nodes are where eclipses take place. For only when the Sun, Moon and Earth are aligned in the same plane can the Moon and Earth alternate in casting shadows on one another.

And alternate they do. Most of the time, eclipses take place in pairs — one (the solar) at a New Moon, and the other (the lunar) during a Full Moon. Sometimes (as will take place from mid-July to mid-August this year), luminary timing relative to the nodes allows three in a row.

But first and foremost, on an astrology chart, the solar symbol (which looks like a bagel) must be near the zodiac glyph for a lunar node (which looks like a horseshoe) for any eclipse to be taking place at all.

At this time (and for months to come), the ascending lunar node may be found in Leo. Accordingly, the descending counterpart is on the opposite side of the zodiac in Aquarius.

Right now, the Sun is moving through the middle third of Capricorn at a rate of about one degree per day. The second Full Moon of this year (and month) will take place on Jan. 31 with the Sun in mid-Aquarius (very close to the southern node) and the Moon in Leo (just as close to the northern node).

When that happens, the Earth (moving, by definition, in the ecliptic as it always does) will block the Sun’s light from anything on the other side of the Earth from the Sun. Because the Moon will be near one of its nodes (and hence, for a brief time, also in the ecliptic) we know it will also be in Earth’s shadow. Voila, a lunar eclipse.

Interestingly, the Sun, Venus, Mars and Jupiter are all taking their turn in aspect (geometric relationship on the zodiac) to the lunar nodes as 2018 begins. To put those relationships in non-technical terms, Mars and Jupiter are moving to share the same degree of Scorpio later this week (a conjunction). Similarly, the Sun and Venus are moving to share the same degree of Capricorn early next week (another conjunction).

As they move to pair up, Mars and Jupiter are also moving in what is implied to be a tense relationship with the lunar nodes (a square aspect). For their own part the Sun and Venus are metaphorically positioned so as to not “see” the nodes clearly.

Hence, if there is anything hanging fire for you going into this weekend (or, alternatively, if there is any lack of clarity going into next week), mark your calendar for Jan. 31. If there is any use to which you can put the next Full Moon and lunar eclipse, it will likely be to both relieve and resolve issues you first encounter in the days just ahead.

All the better to actually make your New Year more happy in deed, as well as in word.

Offered In Service


dec7-7-2017

The Art of Becoming, the 2018 Planet Waves Annual by Eric Francis, will be your best guide to the major astrological shifts ahead. If you pre-order now, you’ll not only get all 12 signs of the written reading for $99, but we’ll include three extra videos covering the forthcoming sign changes of Saturn, Chiron and Uranus. These videos are only included if you get all 12 signs. You may choose your individual signs here.

Clear as the Sun, Subtle as the Moon

For readers on the West side of the Atlantic, Monday will feature the first Full Moon on New Year’s Day since the 20th Century. Specifically, this opposition from the Capricorn Sun to the Moon in Cancer will be exact at 9:24 pm EST on Jan. 1 (or 2:24 UTC on Jan. 2). Weather permitting, it should be quite a sight to behold.

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By itself, this particular correlation between one periodic and easily visible celestial event and a commonly used civil calendar does not have substantial meaning. It may, however, serve as a potential gateway to greater understanding.

If anybody has ever lived during proverbial interesting times it is you, and everybody else currently present on Earth with you. Yet (contrary to easy assumption), that circumstance is not necessarily a curse.

Rather, yours is an unprecedented perspective. You live at a time when there are those who (on one extreme) still fervently believe the Earth to be flat. To the other side are those who choose to perceive reality exclusively through a dominant paradigm commonly called ‘science’, which depends heavily on the validity of abstractions afforded by higher mathematics.

in actual practice, most of us live our lives somewhere in between the extremes, doing our best to get by. That so many of us manage to muddle through one way or the other regardless of perception is a fact worthy of note.

In the process of living our lives, it is also common for human beings to form what may reasonably be called attachments — to other beings, ways of being, material possessions and points of view. It would be fair to say that this phenomenon is worthy of noticing as well.

Attachments are not inherently bad. They are a source of motivation and meaning. It is, however, implicitly problematic when your very identity is bound up with them.

When that happens, it is all too easy to perceive any information, event or experience that could compel you to release an attachment as a threat to your very existence. This, in spite of clear evidence that so many others who do not share your attachments manage to go on living anyway.

During every Full Moon, the Earth (where all of us live together) is physically moving through space between the Sun on one side and the Moon on the other. You can see it with your own eyes. The Full Moon rises, just as the Sun sets, to traverse the sky all night long. You can see it on a zodiac chart, too, with symbols for the Sun and Moon positioned on opposite sides of an emblematic circle.

Without getting all technical on you, the timing and astrological context of this upcoming Full Moon implies that every being on Earth (without exception) is also moving together with every other being between one era and another. All of us are positioned to see the past and envision a future as nobody has been before.

But if any livable future at all is to materialize, each of us will need to see (as clearly as the Sun and a Full Moon may be seen during their respective parts of a day) the only two attachments that are indispensable to your (and, simultaneously, our) continued existence.

The first is as simple as gravity. We are all inextricably attached to the Earth. None of us currently have a viable, sustainable alternative to this planet from which we all take sustenance. With all due respect to Stephen Hawking and other brilliant visionaries, this one fact needs to be seen as clearly as the fact that the Sun and daylight are one and the same.

On the other side (reflecting the first attachment’s light just as a Full Moon reflects the Sun) is the necessity of a more subtle, but no less salient, attachment to each other’s well being. When you act to make yourself well, others are made well for it. When others are harmed, you cannot avoid suffering with them — especially if you contribute to bringing that harm on.

To place any other attachment above those two is to ignore who, what and where you are. It really does come down to taking care of the Earth, yourself and each other as if there were no separation. Because there isn’t. As never before, we are all in this thing called life together. May you, and the New Year, serve to finally make that clear.

Offered In Service


dec7-7-2017

The Art of Becoming, the 2018 Planet Waves Annual by Eric Francis, will be your best guide to the major astrological shifts ahead. If you pre-order now, you’ll not only get all 12 signs of the written reading for $99, but we’ll include three extra videos covering the forthcoming sign changes of Saturn, Chiron and Uranus.

Some Year-End Astrology and a Saturn-in-Capricorn Inquiry

By Amanda Painter

This last week of December always feels rather like it’s in limbo, doesn’t it? There’s a sense of winding down, review and setting intentions for the next year, but that happens between major celebrations. Fittingly this year, the astrology as we head into the weekend is noticeably calmer compared to last week, which may come as a relief — though we are building to a Full Moon on New Year’s Day.

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Peruvian shaman/starman don Oscar Miro-Quesada in earth-honoring ceremony. Photo courtesy of Cindy Miro-Quesada

It Takes a Star(wo)man to Love the Planet

By Steve Guettermann

Eric and Amanda have given a lot of provocative information lately for thought and reflection concerning the state of our planet, our country, our relationships, our human consciousness and our potential futures. It seems the world is in an accelerating free-fall. It’s hard to change direction when in free-fall.

Peruvian shaman/starman don Oscar Miro-Quesada in earth-honoring ceremony. Photo courtesy of Cindy Miro-Quesada

Peruvian shaman/starman don Oscar Miro-Quesada in earth-honoring ceremony. Photo courtesy of Cindy Miro-Quesada

“It’s always darkest before the dawn” may be trite, but metaphorically it has great implication at this time in our human experience. While we may not be sure what is going to dawn, with things such as tanks blasting away in cultural World Heritage Sites, the question is: will we be able to see it through the dust, debris and deceit running amok throughout the planet? Can Saturn really sweep up this Pandora’s box into its rings as it moves through Capricorn?

Nevertheless, dawn is on her way. There are many people doing good and great things. Several prominent thinkers claim evidence that a new branch is growing on the human evolution tree: something akin to Homo sapien universalis. What can nurture this new way of being and of becoming?

Paradoxically, one answer lies in “the old ways.” This doesn’t mean the old ways of chewing hide to soften it for clothing or trading Sunday Night Football for the Aztec ball game of Tlachtli. The old ways mean understanding and engaging in heartfelt rituals of giving back to that which gives us physical life, creative potential and spiritual consciousness. They mean supplanting our obsession with living at the expense of everything and everyone else with compassionate reciprocity that engages family and friends, as well as daemonic entities of seen and unseen realms.

Giving back through ceremony re-establishes and strengthens our connections with self and others, instills humility, appreciation, good humor and plentitude with that which gives us life. The very consciousness of Gaia responds to such acts and, regardless of what else we do, sacred reciprocity is paramount for sustaining our lives and assuring our evolutionary progression. It puts us on equal footing with all, rather than an unenlightened hierarchy of a chosen few being served at the expense of everything else.

Giving back in the old ways of ritual assures a dynamic vitality between our physical reality and what supports us “behind the veil.” Rituals of reciprocity are vital to right relationship. They assure living within our means while constantly attracting new means that sustain us. They sustain a vibratory connection and awareness of the energies that bring matter into form — how this happens is on the forefront of quantum physics.

Without such right relationship we go into free-fall. When we cut ourselves off from what sustains us we are forced to get everything from a closed system — the Earth — rather than from an open system: the Cosmos. Obsessive materiality jeopardizes the existence of every generation. Artfully acting in the old ways of right relationship is what sustains the next seven generations and beyond. It draws upon the same forces and intelligence that brought the stars into being, which brought the Star Beings into being, which brought us into being.

The power of collective ritual to restore collective consciousness and sustainable integrity is something we can all do immediately. We don’t need treaties or laws. We can just do it the old way: get together with a group of friends and like-hearted people and make offerings to The Planet and the unseen realms. Superstitious? Less so than The Rapture, which we’ll look at in a bit, an idea that has not been around nearly as long as right relationship through sacred reciprocity.

Some cultures and religions were and are built upon elaborate charismatic ceremonies of sacrifice and reciprocity to assure long-term survival and well-being. These ways are not so much to “gain favor with the gods,” as often perceived, but rather to maintain an intricate network of energy and creation from subtle realms to ours and back again. Western culture often fails miserably at this requirement. We might say thank you, but reciprocity is much more than gratitude.

The view from Black Elk's bench; photo by Steve Guettermann.

The view from Black Elk’s bench; photo by Steve Guettermann.

Although there are complex rituals, sacred reciprocity can be as simple as offering food from a potluck to the spirits and energies that live in the area. Take a small amount of food, put it in a ceramic bowl in a special place in your yard or offer it up in a small fire.

The “old way” of believing is that burning the food or other offering releases its spiritual essence into the finer realms where our ancestors and other helping spirits accept it. Creative gifts of love and art do wonders. Visualize a bird feeder that attracts birds. Spiritual offerings have the same type of attraction with unseen allies. In return, their spiritual guano enriches physical space and time.

Our planet and lives are possible only through a tremendous configuration of cooperative simpatico forces. Just imagine the imagination it would take to create such a place as Gaia. Yet, here she is…at our feet. It is worth treading lightly upon her and leaving a little something behind as we go. Ritual reciprocity is not going to make everything peachy. It will make our challenges more sensible and put us on an upward spiral rather than going around in circles or, worse yet, that free-fall. In other words, heartfelt acts of connecting to the Planet can help change the direction and consciousness of humankind.

On a plaque on a park bench near where I live is inscribed one of Black Elk’s most famous quotes from John Neihardt’s book, Black Elk Speaks: “The good road and road of difficulties you have made me cross; and where they cross, the place is holy.”

I have contemplated that quote for years; or, more to the point, wondered, “What the hell does that mean?” I could see where any place on the good road could be holy, but not the road of difficulties, which I attributed to my human failings. Thus, how was the nexus made holy? It made no sense. It was a point of collision and confusion, not sanctity. It seemed to be one of those things Lakota elders like to say to drive the rest of us nuts…an indigenous Zen koan.

Part of my quandary came from my struggles on the road of difficulties. I have come to accept I need both the good road and the road of difficulties to figure some things out. Where they cross is a point of reflection. This is new to me.

But I missed something else. I thought the good road was the cosmic easy street. It’s not. The good road is the Road of Difficulty, while the other is the Road of Difficulties. Both are very hard, but for different reasons. The good road is difficult because it requires doing the right thing, if we can even figure out what that is. And that road gets harder the longer we are on it, for we realize what was good enough yesterday is not good enough today. This is conscious evolution and leads to Homo sapien universalis.

"The Good Road and the Road of Difficulties You Have Made Me Cross; and Where They Cross, the Place is Holy" -- Black Elk; photo of Black Elk's bench by Steve Guettermann.

“The Good Road and the Road of Difficulties You Have Made Me Cross; and Where They Cross, the Place is Holy” — Black Elk; photo of Black Elk’s bench by Steve Guettermann.

The Road of Difficulties seems to get harder the longer we are on it, too. The current state of our planet supports this.

What’s the difference between the two? The Road of Difficulty is what life is supposed to be; the Road of Difficulties is what life does not have to be. Despite what we may think, just because things have a reason for being does not mean they have to be that way. Nor do we have to hit bottom before we change direction. We can change now; many people are.

Acts of sacred reciprocity provide the essence necessary for right relationship, the impetus for conscious evolution, a compass into mystery rather than morass. Such an act can begin with something as simple as hugging your child or hugging a tree with your child. There is a growing body of scientific evidence that shows how simple things like this can help.

However, according to a 2010 Pew Research Center report, 41% of Americans believe The Rapture will occur by 2050. This means 41% of Americans believe God will take care of our problems, thus there is no need for us to act upon them. Should this planet go, God will just whip up another in six days. This is a major reason why there is no semblance of kinship between many Americans and the Planet and what goes on here. This is another form of disembodiment.

A better way to experience rapture is to engage in right relationship, rather than relinquishing the joys and responsibilities of what it means to be human. We have no idea what we are on the verge of becoming by giving back just a little bit. A push-button world that disconnects us from what gives us life does little to enhance the quality of life, if it does nothing to enhance the quality of consciousness and connection with what gives us life.


Steve Guettermann is a freelance writer and “teaches” critical thinking at Montana State University. He is currently studying Peruvian shamanism under don Oscar Miro-Quesada, and published an article in last year’s Planet Waves annual edition, Vision Quest. Steve’s email is migratoryanimal@gmail.com; you can also visit his website.


dec7-7-2017

The Art of Becoming, the 2018 Planet Waves Annual by Eric Francis, will be your best guide to the major astrological shifts ahead. If you pre-order now, you’ll not only get all 12 signs of the written reading for $99, but we’ll include three extra videos covering the forthcoming sign changes of Saturn, Chiron and Uranus.

Undercurrent

In all probability, only the perspective of posterity will allow a full appreciation of the busy astrology during the week just past. Appropriately, it all got off to a start with the Sun and Moon sharing the same degree of Sagittarius with the core of our galaxy on Dec. 18. As New Moons go, it was above and beyond. Yet, it was also only a beginning.

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Little more than a day after a Sagittarius New Moon for the ages, Saturn came home to Capricorn for the first time in nearly three decades. The very next day, the Sun followed Saturn into Capricorn to precipitate an unprecedented solstice.

The new season had barely gotten underway when the last Mercury retrograde of 2017 ended on Dec. 22 (or Dec. 23, depending on what side of the Atlantic you reside). Last, but not least, Venus joined the Sun, Saturn and Pluto in Capricorn for Christmas.

Any one of the astrological events during the last week could easily have been the highlight of many a month. Indeed, you would be well advised to keep an eye on any earthlings born during that time. Even so (and all along) there has been a subtle, yet very pervasive undercurrent represented by Mars in Scorpio moving into this Thursday’s water trine aspect with Neptune in Pisces.

With the passage of time, it could very well be Mars trine Neptune that astrologers refer to when making sense of this year’s final days. With something more than a cursory look at the zodiac for today and tomorrow, you can see it now.

Earlier today, for example, the Aries Moon reached 90 degrees of separation from the Capricorn Sun for the monthly aspect known as the lunar first quarter. Not incidentally, Aries is one of two signs (along with Scorpio) where Mars has dominion. What’s more, Capricorn is where Mars is exalted.

In other words, both luminaries (the Sun and Moon) are shining forth from a background in which Mars is a substantial theme. The same can be said for Venus, Saturn and Pluto (all now clustered in Capricorn). Ditto for Jupiter (also in Scorpio with Mars), and Uranus (hanging out at the end of Aries).

Since the ruler of Sagittarius is Jupiter (and because Sagittarius is, after all, a fire sign) it would not be too much of a stretch to say Mercury is also expressing itself through a good bit of Martian influence.

Basically, for all but one of the sign-ruling planets (Neptune, in its own Pisces dominion), Mars is the boss right now. That’s what makes this approaching water trine aspect from Mars to Neptune so important.

The astrology of Neptune is a bit murky, to say the least. After all, Neptune has made only a little more than one orbit of the Sun (and one complete circuit of the 12 zodiac signs) since it was first identified while moving through late Aquarius in 1846. That’s not much experience to draw upon. As a result, any given astrologer’s interpretation of Neptune tends to say more about the person than the planet.

By comparison, Mars is as familiar as the back of your hand. Whenever the word “I” is used, Mars is there. Wherever the self asserts in response to its environment, Mars is there too. Whether struggle is faced or initiated, Mars has always been and will always be present. For good or ill, Mars either pushes or pushes back.

Were it not for Neptune, Mars might be all we have right now. And that’s how the undercurrent of Mars 120 degrees away from Neptune could very well make this final week of 2017 more than any other factor.

Because astrology is not only about what happens. More than anything, astrology has to do with awareness, choice and (above all) learning more than anybody who has gone before about both yourself and that which is not you.

For the handful of days ahead of us, try pushing yourself to learn something new that is not about you. By doing so, you will be honoring the inherent initiative of Mars, but in a way that is anything but familiar. If you can do simply that, you will be honoring Neptune as well. You will also very possibly be taking both your life and the world somewhere besides where it has too often gone before — and need not go again.

Offered In Service


dec7-7-2017

The Art of Becoming, the 2018 Planet Waves Annual by Eric Francis, will be your best guide to the major astrological shifts ahead. If you pre-order now, you’ll not only get all 12 signs of the written reading for $99, but we’ll include three extra videos covering the forthcoming sign changes of Saturn, Chiron and Uranus.

The Solstice, Saturn, and Mercury Direct

By Amanda Painter

First things first: today is the winter solstice, and Mercury is in the throes of its storm phase as it prepares to station direct tomorrow. While another astrological event happening currently is arguably ‘bigger’ or more important, Mercury stationing is the one that’s probably having the most noticeable — and possibly frustrating — effect in your regular, everyday life right now.

Photo by Amanda Painter.

Photo by Amanda Painter.

If you feel as though your decisions, statements and attempts to get things done are like the equivalent of Jello or a rubber band at best — or a revolving door or banana peel on the floor at worst — that’s what’s going on. To have Mercury stormy and stationing so close to a major holiday, especially one that often involves a great deal of shopping, planning and travel for many people, is challenging.

So, this is your reminder to take everything with a grain of salt; if you can’t seem to stay focused, you can at least try to stay flexible. Patience and a sense of humor will help a lot — and that will be the case all the way through Monday. Luckily, having Sagittarius involved should help in keeping attitudes and expectations on the lighter side. Remember that laughter is probably closer to the spirit of the season (along with gratitude and generosity) than perfectionism is.

That is: You are enough.

As mentioned, today is the (winter) solstice: when the Sun enters Capricorn to begin the new season, which occurs at 11:28 am EST (16:28 UTC). It’s the shortest day and longest night here in the Northern Hemisphere, though it takes a while for any increase in daylight to be noticeable. Seasonally — despite cultural expectations — we’re being urged to draw inward, conserving energy for the longer days ahead.

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