Your September 2024 Horoscope for Aquarius
by Susan MillerIn the following year, we will have eclipses in this same family on March 3, 2026, and August 28, 2026. There will be one last one in the Virgo-Pisces family on February 20, 2027. For more information, see my Table of Eclipse Dates From 1945 to 2050, and read my “How to Deal with Eclipses” article . You will find them on the lower left side on the home page of AstrologyZone.com.
With Neptune so prominent at the eclipse of September 17 in Pisces this month, make sure your partner is being fully transparent with you. Be careful. I am not happy that the full moon will be conjunct Neptune, indicating you will face a great deal of ambiguity. It will be hard to get to the facts, for Neptune will cover the matter with its trademark thick, lacy fog. Neptune obscures reality and makes it look prettier than it really is. You may fall for wishful thinking, so someone may offer you a way to make fast money, but if the scheme sounds too good to be true, you can be sure it is.
Wishful thinking works in other ways, too—your expectations may be too high, and if you expect an unrealistic sum, you may later be a little disappointed that the sum is not larger for a deal you make this month. Again, I could be wrong, as I cannot see your entire chart, so if you are in the middle of a major financial deal, you need a personal astrologer to sit with you—and you also need an accountant, lawyer, and financial advisor to look at the entire situation.
I recently was speaking to a reader who loved to trade stocks (as an amateur) on the stock market. She trades all the time and told me she made lots of money. I asked her if she was consulting her accountant, for she may be giving most of her money back in taxes due to capital gains. She had not consulted a financial planner or accountant—I urged her to do so, though I didn’t want to break her spirit or her fun! I was simply trying to protect her. You don’t have to follow any expert’s advice, but it’s always good to check in with the advisor with fiduciary responsibility to you, perhaps at your bank to hear what they have to say.