Instead we can own them, create good boundaries, and take responsibility for ourselves. They don’t have to have the final say in our lives. Saturn teaches us that while our wounds are always with us, they don’t have to define us. Or do you want to thrive? Do you want to get in touch with your wound to create real, lasting healing? Do you want to heal others through sharing your pain and making sure you never inflict the same pain on others? Do you want to be free? He pushes us to decide how much power our pain should have over the way we structure our lives, and makes it very clear that the decision is ours alone.ĭo you want to stay mired in pain? Do you want to be debilitated? Do you want to keep recreating those painful situations over and over hoping something will be different this time? Do you want to blame yourself and feel unworthy? Saturn urges us to take responsibility for the role our wounds play in our lives.
MAGI ASTROLOGY JUNO TRANSITS HOW TO
We own it, and we get to decide how to handle it.Īnd that’s where Saturn comes in.
But once they exist, we are the stewards of our own pain. I don’t mean that we create them or that we aren’t sometimes victimized. The truth is, we are all responsible for our wounds. Either the person has to go back to childhood and revisit those experiences, or they have to find a way to recreate the situation in their present life so they have someone to lash out against.Īnd all that is understandable! Bringing these two energies together can feel unbearable. So while there may be blame to spread around, it’s usually not helpful. But the problem is that Chiron rules old trauma, the kind that is with us no matter where we go or who we meet. Saturn rules responsibility and karma, after all. This transit brings with it a tendency to search for something to blame for the pain. I have also seen people swing the other way, lashing out at perceived slights and being completely unable to hear what anyone else is saying. I have seen people having this transit withdraw, becoming lost in their internal world, ruminating on their own weakness or on the unfairness of it all. Inevitably, something comes along that triggers the original trauma and brings Chiron issues to the forefront. Now mix that energy with Saturn, which points out our inadequacies and makes us feel small and lowly. It’s also the place that teaches us to heal ourselves and others. It’s the place where we’re always hurting, always vulnerable. That’s too bad, because it has the potential to both harm and heal depending on how you respond to it.Ĭhiron represents our wound. This is an incredibly painful transit, and there’s very little written about it. Lately I’ve run into a number of people, both clients and people I know personally, who are having Saturn transit their natal Chiron.