Today’s Oracle takes us to the Pisces weekly for February 28, 2014.
This weekend’s New Moon is a custom-tailored event, designed to ease your way through life, open up your potential and remind you exactly who you are. You could not want a better — or more interesting — solar return chart. It’s so beautiful it’s worth describing the astrology in some detail. Within your sign, the New Moon lands right between the two main players there, Neptune and Chiron. It’s leaning a little in the direction of Chiron, a planet that is granting you the abilities and perceptual skills of someone from the 23rd century, which is how you might feel sometimes. But Neptune is right there, bestowing a blend of clairvoyance and creative inspiration that could light up the countryside all around you. The Moon-Sun conjunction does one other thing — it’s trine your ruling planet Jupiter exact to one-sixth of a degree. This shows how far you’ve come in your ability to receive nourishment from the world around you. Just a few days after the New Moon, Jupiter stations to direct motion in Cancer, releasing even more of your potential. So I suggest you plant yourself firmly in the present, look around at the astonishing opportunities that surround you and remind yourself every day that the doors are all open.
The Daily Oracle offers a horoscope selected randomly by our Intelligent Archive Oracle program, unique to Planet Waves. It’s also a database of my horoscopes going back to the late 1990s. You can use the Intelligent Archive Oracle to answer questions and give you ideas for how to handle problems and situations you cannot see through. This feature is available to our Galaxy, Backstage and Core Community members. See this link for more information.
Well worth the read folks
https://javed22.blogspot.com/2018/05/why-trump-is-ending-american-era.html?m=1
I really enjoyed the article Linda. Thank You.
Blessings in inspirational times SUE :-))
Linda — the only problem I see with that article is that the author quotes Martha Wescott as saying that Siwa is named for the Hindu god Shiva, but that is not true. The asteroid 140 Siwa was named after Šiwa, the Slavic goddess of fertility.
Now, we all know that death/destruction and birth/creation are part of the same cycle, and Pluto *is* the other planet the author was working with. So the analysis may still work in a sense — but I do feel it’s important to be accurate with the asteroids’ names, even though I know that many who work a lot with asteroids (such as Alex Miller) will often go with associations that “sound close” and do seem to work. That might be the case with Siwa/Shiva — however, there already *is* an asteroid definitely named after the Hindu god Shiva: 1170 Siva.