Thursday, March 01, 2007

From Jonathan Cainer
Seven Year Cycle
Dear Jonathan,
I am fascinated by the 'seven-year cycle' idea. I am turning 56. What does this mean?
Arbra
Dear Arbra,
Saturn's movements are not exact to the calendar year. But roughly every seven years, Saturn gets about one quarter of the way round the cosmic clock face. Once every 28 years it returns to the zodiac position it held when we were born. That's when we face facts and make more realistic plans. It can be a tough time. It may require us to 'reinvent' ourselves. It always, though, heralds the onset of deeper discrimination and wisdom.
Your Week Ahead
Saturn moves slowly through the sky. It takes around 28 years to complete one cycle of the zodiac. Compared to Neptune, though, it is Speedy Gonzales. This distant outer-planet measures its progress in centuries. Every 36 years or so, the two align in opposition. Whenever they do, structures start to crumble. Established governments lose influence and popularity. Authority figures are called into question. People, meanwhile, become intoxicated by new, wildly idealistic ideas and beliefs. Saturn and Neptune are opposed right now, this very week, and will create this alignment one more time in late June. These are powerful times. History is being made all around us.
Jonathan Cainer Week Ahead Forecast

Read more about the Saturn-Neptune opposition from Penny Thornton
Penny Thornton's Astrolutely

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