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.
the three, at mid-sign · rising on the left horizon
A Taurus engine, a Libra tide, a Virgo door.
Taurus sun · Libra moon · Virgo rising
Your hands build one thing while your head argues about six others. The shelf still goes up straight.
A Libra moon refuels on harmony you can hear: beauty, fairness, a room with no live argument in it. Discord costs you double what it costs the others.
You hold steady on the outside while the tide underneath is already leaving for somewhere new. People read patience; tell them the truth before the tide does.
The internet writes Taurus off as stubbornness in a comfortable chair. Your Libra moon rewrites the chemistry: the needs underneath are narrated, argued, and footnoted. What looks like feeling less is thinking about feeling, at length, in private. You are not a typical Taurus; nobody with this moon is.
People trust you before you have said a word. The mask matches the face; what they meet at the door is what lives in the house.
In a room, you spot what's missing and quietly fix it before the introductions finish. Off duty, it's the playlist tuned for company, and the question 'what do you want?' asked twice as often as answered. The first is the Virgo at your door; the second is the Libra that lives in the house.
A solid door on a windy house. People bring you their practical problems and receive, delightfully, a theory.
Two parts Earth, one part Air, and the Air sits in your moon. The minority voice is why parliaments work: when the earth consensus feels too easy, that is the vote to consult.
A field guide, for whoever keeps trying: Come in steady; this door trusts consistency and clocks every sudden move. Once inside, give the conversation that doesn't check its watch: love here arrives through the ear. Send it to the ones who knock.
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.