The almanac · the trio

One sky, three signs.

The sun is only the engine. Set the moon and the rising beside it and read what the three make together: nobody is a typical anything.

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the three, at mid-sign · rising on the left horizon

A Gemini engine, an Aquarius tide, a Sagittarius door.

Gemini sun · Aquarius moon · Sagittarius rising

The engine and the tide

You have a thought about your thought before the first one lands. Rest is a rumor you keep meaning to verify.

The tide, by name

An Aquarius moon refuels at one remove: the long view, the odd hobby, a room of your own inside the crowd. Togetherness with an exit is still togetherness.

The pace

You bend in public and hold in private: endlessly flexible about everything except the three things you will never move on. It helps everyone if you label the three.

The myth to ignore

The internet writes Gemini off as two people and neither one listening. With an Aquarius moon the rumor is, for once, nearly aimed right; you are the concentrated pour. The corrective is not difference but depth: you do the thing, all the way down.

The door

You enter rooms a size larger than you are. It is a lobby, not the house: the air lives further in.

The tells

In a room, you are mid-story within a minute, and the story is true, mostly. Off duty, it's the rabbit hole at one a.m., and affection delivered as a forwarded article. The first is the Sagittarius at your door; the second is the Aquarius that lives in the house.

The tide behind the door

A festival door on a thinking house. You arrive as an event and live as an essay.

The weather report

Two parts Air, one part Fire, and the Fire sits in your rising. The minority voice is why parliaments work: when the air consensus feels too easy, that is the vote to consult.

For the ones who love you

A field guide, for whoever keeps trying: Come in bold; hesitation reads as indifference at this door. Once inside, give the conversation that doesn't check its watch: love here arrives through the ear. Send it to the ones who knock.

The practice

Feed the moon first: say the inner weather out loud, to one person or one page. Unspoken it becomes static; spoken it becomes weather you can fly in.