Synastry: Saturn Square Moon: How to Deal with This Difficult Relationship Aspect

Synastry: Saturn Square Moon: How to Deal with This Difficult Relationship Aspect

Okay, so I’ve been diving deep into this whole astrology thing, and let me tell you, the “Saturn square Moon synastry” aspect in relationship charts? It’s a DOOZY. I started by grabbing the birth charts of me and my partner.

I plugged our birth info—dates, times, and places—into one of those free online chart calculators. Boom. Charts generated. I have to find our moon sign and Saturn sign . Then I can start to check.

Digging into the Aspect

Next, I focused on finding the aspects between our charts. Specifically, I was hunting for that square between Saturn in one chart and the Moon in the other. A square, if you’re new to this, basically means the planets are about 90 degrees apart, which usually indicates tension and challenges.

547b49c238f936c56e04695177f6f7b8 Synastry: Saturn Square Moon: How to Deal with This Difficult Relationship Aspect
  • I used a highlighter (yes, a real one!) to mark any squares I saw. It’s so much easier to visualize that way.
  • I circled Saturn and the Moon in each chart, then drew lines connecting them if they were squared. It started looking like a chaotic spiderweb, honestly.

Making Sense of It All

Finding the square was just the first step. Next, I spent hours reading up on what Saturn square Moon actually means in synastry. Here’s the gist of what I gathered, in my own words:

  • It’s often about emotional restriction. One person (the Moon person) might feel like their feelings are being stifled or judged by the other (the Saturn person).
  • The Saturn person can come across as cold or overly critical, even if they don’t mean to.
  • It suggested that i might feel responsible for the Moon person’s happiness, which is like carring an invisible load.
  • It indicates that my partner maybe struggle with expressing emotions, leading to misunderstandings.

Putting it into Practice

It means, in a lot of ways and you really have to work, together, to change the way you’ve always done things.

This is just my experience, though. I’m not a professional, just a regular person trying to make sense of the stars.

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