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Your Horoscope for Cancer
by Susan MillerVenus will also be retrograde from March 1 to April 12 in your career sector (tenth house). Although the planet of love is currently in your professional sector, Venus rules your solar fourth house of home, other property you may own or rent, and your family. Looking at the pattern of your chart, it appears you may feel pulled in two directions, between the needs of family and those of your clients and managers at work. Home might present a few challenges, so have contingency plans, such a backup nanny or housekeeper, in case your regular helper cannot come in.
If you are renovating property and working with a contractor, you may have to make choices in the renovation process that will draw your attention away from work. This happens sometimes and is part of life, so do the best you can. Venus also holds sway over profits, giving you still another reason to wait until April (or better yet, the end of May) to sign any legal papers—the chances of making money from the deal will be far better if you wait to sign.
This month certainly accents communication, for the full moon lunar eclipse in Virgo due March 13 may find you preparing paperwork for you and another party to sign. Saturn will be conjunct the Sun, indicating that the deal you are considering is an important agreement with exceptionally long-range implications. It will require a clear-eyed, practical approach. Saturn slows everything down, which in this case is good—Saturn will have you looking at the fine print in detail. With Mercury retrograde, anything you can do to delay the signing process will work in your favor.
You will also have to do quite a bit of due diligence before making a commitment, for not only are Mercury and Venus causing difficulties due to their retrogrades, but so is Neptune (for a different reason). Neptune will be orbiting near the Sun while opposing the full moon, and since Neptune is known to obscure facts in that position, this indicates that you’ll need to identify misleading, ambiguous, or missing facts. If the commitment is a serious one, ask your lawyer to present a lot of questions and request supporting information.