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 Virgo engine, an Aquarius tide, a Taurus door.
Virgo sun · Aquarius moon · Taurus rising
Your hands build one thing while your head argues about six others. The shelf still goes up straight.
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.
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 internet writes Virgo off as a critic with a label maker. Your Aquarius 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 Virgo; 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 claim a seat and make it look like it was always yours. Off duty, it's the rabbit hole at one a.m., and affection delivered as a forwarded article. The first is the Taurus at your door; the second is the Aquarius 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.