Following is a description of the major timing procedures used by both modern and traditional astrologers, and suggestions for how you can prioritize the various timing mechanisms at your disposal. The second part of this chapter focuses on what you can cover realistically in a one-hour session through the use of transits and progressions. In later chapters, we will discuss the progressed lunation cycle, annual profections, and the Solar Return chart. The remainder of the traditional techniques will not be covered in this book.
Progressed Lunation Cycle
Unless you use the traditional methods of planetary time-lord periods to gain a sense of long-term influences, begin with the progressed lunation cycle. Every thirty years, the occurrence of a progressed New Moon (the progressed Moon is conjunct the progressed Sun) initiates the emergence of some kind of new vision or aspiration that grows to maturation twenty-one years later, and is brought to conclusion and summation at the closure of the cycle. A person’s progressed lunation phase indicates the current stage in this thirty-year process. Checking the degree of the progressed New Moon relative to the natal chart, the house in which it occurs, and conjunctions to natal planets gives important information about the meaning of the entire cycle. Some astrologers also look to the Sabian symbol of the progressed New Moon for a symbolic image that embodies the new direction. This method will be discussed in more detail in
chapter 8.1
Outer-planet Transits
You can assess the meanings of the outer-planet transits (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, Pluto) to personal planets and to the angles that are sensitive points. You can gain insight by using the progressed lunation cycle as a framework in which to evaluate individual transits. For example, a Pluto transit to the Moon during a New Moon phase has a directive completely different from when it occurs during the final Balsamic phase. The period of intensity for the individual is the strongest when transiting planets are approaching natal planets, gradually building up pressure that becomes most concentrated at the conjunction, and then dropping off in intensity as they separate. Their effect is especially strong when transiting planets retrograde back and forth over the natal planet. The passage of a transiting planet through a particular sign and house also has significance for the length of time that the planet is in the sign. Outer-planet transits to the outer planets have more of a generational than individual influence. If an outer-planet transit is not making an aspect to a natal planet or point, we won’t dwell on it, aside from a quick mention of the house it is activating.
Inner-planet Transits
The inner-planet transits (Moon, Sun, Mercury, Venus, Mars) move so quickly that their effects are transitory, except when they make a station and retrograde over natal planets, which lengthens their periods of influence.
Eclipses