Is there such a thing as a moon cusp?!


Question: I've always seen that I have a Libra moon, however I'm on a website now which show the moon changes and it looks like on my birthday the moon changed from Libra to Scorpio. What does that mean?? Am I really a Libra moon or a Scorpio moon? Or is there a cusp?


Answers: I've always seen that I have a Libra moon, however I'm on a website now which show the moon changes and it looks like on my birthday the moon changed from Libra to Scorpio. What does that mean?? Am I really a Libra moon or a Scorpio moon? Or is there a cusp?

trust me on this one, ANY planet can be on the cusp. here are some general "guidelines" (for lack of a better word) on cusps through the planets.

sun: orb of 6 degrees
moon: orb of 5-6 degrees
mercury, venus, mars, and jupiter: orb of 4-5 degrees
saturn and uranus: orb of 2 degrees
neptune and pluto: orb of 1 degree

this is based on how fast each planet moves. since saturn, uranus, neptune, and pluto are "outer" planets and move slower, they stay in a sign much longer the "inner" planets do. so, their orbs are smaller due to the fact that more people have similair degrees.

depending on your moon's degrees, i'd say you are both a libra and a scorpio moon. so, in other words, if your moon is more than 24 degrees into libra, then you have a libra-scorpio moon.

hope this helps! (and don't pay attention to those who come on here just to "disprove" astrology)

More than likely. Cusps make you read twice as much stuff to find a fit. It's like having 24 more signs! Not only is there straight Cancer. There is the Gemini/Cancer and the Cancer/Leo that lasts a few days each.

I've said it before. Astrology has so many exceptions to it's own rules, it make the rules worthless.

The moon is in indifferent signs for different years. During your birth, the moon was probably in libra. Many years later the moon could be in another constellation. Venus does that too. In the West our calendars are based on days of solar light, therefore one year is equal to the time taken to spin around the sun. Some ancient calendars are lunar. Yet none seem to rely on Venus. :)



The answer content post by the user, if contains the copyright content please contact us, we will immediately remove it.
Copyright © 2007 enter-qa.com -   Contact us

Entertainment Categories