Late in the lunation cycle — a closer, an editor, a finisher.
Beyond the planets
Beyond the ten classical planets, a chart is anchored by a few other points worth reading.
Ascendant (ASC) — the sign rising on the eastern horizon. It shapes how the moment meets the world.
Midheaven (MC) — the highest point in the sky. The vocational signal, where the moment's energy aims.
Chiron — a small body that moves between Saturn and Uranus, read as a sign of where the long-way teaching lives.
North Node — not a body but a mathematical point of the Moon's orbit. It marks the direction of growth.
Ascendant in Leo10° 51′
MC in Aries29° 37′
North Node in Cancer8° 49′℞
Chiron in Aries1° 28′
Aspects · by strength
Sun trine MC
0° 48′
Moon square Pluto
0° 49′
Mars sextile Saturn
0° 54′
Mars sextile Pluto
1° 00′
Mercury square Neptune
1° 17′
Venus square MC
1° 18′
Venus square Uranus
1° 55′
Venus sextile Chiron
0° 32′
Jupiter trine Uranus
1° 18′
Moon square Saturn
2° 43′
Sun conjunction Jupiter
5° 19′
Sun square Chiron
2° 38′
Uranus conjunction MC
3° 13′
Mars trine Neptune
4° 57′
Saturn conjunction Pluto
1° 54′
Sun trine Uranus
4° 00′
Moon opposition MC
6° 46′
Jupiter trine MC
4° 31′
Jupiter square Chiron
2° 41′
A chart pattern is a meaningful geometric shape formed by three or more planets connected by aspects. These configurations are read as unified dynamics rather than individual aspects.
We split patterns into two views. Classic includes the shapes established in modern astrology — T-Squares, Grand Trines, and more. Extended adds geometric configurations that carry meaning beyond traditional astrology: closed shapes formed by any combination of aspects.
No named patterns this time. The chart's structure shows up in its aspects and shape rather than in classical pattern configurations.
Your chart next
The sky at your moment.
This wheel is today. Put in your birth date, time, and place — see the wheel you were born under.