MOON REMAINS in SAGITTARIUS until 5:38pm EDT on Wednesday, August 3 when it goes VOID OF COURSE until 8:37pm. See August 1 for more Sag info. Actions initiated during V/C
periods tend not to work out as planned. It's best to use this time for
inner creative work or planning future action.
MOON ENTERS CAPRICORN at 8:37pm and remains here until Sunday, August 6 at 5:22am. LAST ASPECT OF MOON: Moon Square Uranus in Aries.
Ruled by Saturn, the mountain goat Capricorn Moon is often a more solitary time
when our tendency is to resist expressing our emotions. Saturn creates form; form confines space, so we often feel Saturn through limitation. While best utilized for
disciplined work, often manifesting results responsibly within a business or executive framework, the hard Square to Uranus, indicates that actions initiated during this Moon
period will tend to have CHALLENGING results. Because Uranus reflects sudden changes and breaking things apart, circumstances are likely to shift
unexpectedly, create unwanted separations or be upsetting in some other
way. Someone may try to light a fire under you (or head butt you) when you're not yet ready to act. Saturn rules Karma and what guides us towards our purpose or true manifestation of our will. We might feel our purpose is hindered in some way. Saturn highlights authority figures or parents now, so there may be some separation or change in our relationship with them. Saturn/Capricorn also rules Time and moves much slower than Uranus in Mars-ruled Aries; trust your own rhythm and act when the time is right.
CAPRICORN SCENE: Hugo, 2011; Director: Martin Scorsese. There are so many Saturnian themes in this film! The narrative centers around young Hugo, played by Asa Butterfield (you might recognize him as an even younger Mordred from the British tv series Merlin) who lives inside a huge mechanical clock in a Parisian train station. His inventor Father, who was a huge influence on Hugo before his early death, taught him about making and operating mechanical devices. In this scene, he and his new friend Isabelle, played so delicately by Chloë Grace Moretz, converse about the concept of one's purpose being broken. Hugo has faith that, in time, their respective purposes will be revealed.
Film history lovers will appreciate the movie's homage to George Méliès, the original cinematic magician who directed the 1902 A Trip to the Moon. Enjoy this extraordinary piece of early cinema which is considered the first narrative film - the first to join separate scenes together into story form:
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