Your birth chart is a photograph of the sky at the exact moment you took your first breath. It doesn't move. But you do — and so does everything in the heavens
Transit Cycles: Timing Life Events Through the Planets
Your birth chart is a photograph of the sky at the exact moment you took your first breath. It doesn't move. But you do — and so does everything in the heavens above you. The planets keep traveling, and as they form new angles to the planets in your natal chart, they activate different parts of your life. This is the practice of transits: watching the moving sky touch the fixed you.
What a Transit Actually Is
A transit happens when a planet in the current sky forms an aspect — an angular relationship — to a planet in your natal chart. If your natal Sun is at 15° Leo and transiting Jupiter is moving through Leo and reaches 15°, Jupiter is conjunct your Sun. The aspect is exact, and so is the activation.
The outer planets move slowly, so their transits last a long time. Saturn spends about two and a half years in each sign, so a Saturn transit to a natal planet can color a full chapter of your life. Jupiter moves faster, spending roughly a year in each sign, so its transits feel like yearly seasons of growth. The personal planets — Mars, Venus, Mercury, the Sun and Moon — whip through quickly, bringing brief but pointed activations that last days or hours.
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Calculate your chartThis layering is what makes transit work feel so alive. A Saturn transit to your natal Venus is a long, slow curriculum about love and values, but a Mercury transit over your natal Moon might simply make you cry during a commercial on Tuesday afternoon.
The Outer Planets as the Background Score
When astrologers talk about big life chapters, we're usually watching the slow movers.
Saturn transits tend to bring structure, pressure, and consequence. When Saturn crosses a natal planet, it asks you to grow up in that area of life. A Saturn return — when Saturn comes back to the place it was when you were born — is the most famous transit, marking the threshold into real adulthood somewhere around age 29.
Uranus transits break things open. When Uranus hits a natal planet, the area of life it rules gets electrified, disrupted, and liberated. Sometimes this looks like a sudden move, sometimes a sudden insight, sometimes a sudden ending that turns out to be a beginning.
Neptune transits dissolve. Boundaries blur, dreams get louder, and you may find yourself unsure what is real. Neptune transits can be deeply spiritual or deeply confusing, and usually both.
Pluto transits transform. When Pluto touches a natal planet, something dies so something else can be born. These transits are intense and non-negotiable, but the people who work with them honestly tend to come out the other side with more power, not less.
Working With Timing
The most practical question people ask is: when? A few tools help.
First, look at the exact degree. If transiting Saturn is at 14° Pisces and your natal Moon is at 15° Pisces, the transit is building. When Saturn hits 15°, the aspect is exact — that's the peak. Most transits have an orb of influence of about a degree on either side for the outer planets, and a tighter orb for the faster ones.
Second, watch the dates the transit goes exact, then goes retrograde, then exact again, then direct and exact a third time. Many transits activate in three waves, like a story told in three drafts.
Third, pay attention to what house the transiting planet is moving through in your chart. The houses show where life is happening — fourth house for home and family, tenth for career, seventh for partnerships. A planet transiting your tenth house is going to show up at work, even if it's not aspecting anything.
Transits Don't Act Alone
A transit is never the whole story. It's one note in a chord. If transiting Saturn is opposing your natal Moon while transiting Jupiter is trining your natal Sun, you're being asked to take responsibility for your feelings at the same time that opportunity is opening in your sense of purpose. The Saturn part doesn't cancel the Jupiter part, and vice versa. They layer.
This is why experienced astrologers look at the whole sky for a given week or month rather than chasing single transits in isolation. Life is a chord, not a note.
How to Track Your Own Transits
You don't need to be an expert to start. Get your natal chart — you only need your birth date, time, and place. Then look at what sign the outer planets are currently moving through and notice when one of them enters the sign of a planet in your chart.
A simple way to begin: the moon sign you were born under becomes activated every month when the transiting Moon returns to that sign. Notice what shifts in your mood and body. Track it. Over time you'll build a personal ephemeris of your own rhythms.
From there, add the faster planets. Where is Mercury right now relative to your chart? Venus? Mars? Then, slowly, build up to Saturn, Jupiter, and the outer planets.
Living With the Sky
Transits aren't predictions in the sense of a fixed future. They're invitations. When Saturn crosses your natal Venus, you will feel something about love and money — that's the transit. What you do with that pressure is yours. Some people use a Saturn transit to get serious about their finances and come out more secure. Others resist, and Saturn gets heavier. Same transit, different choices.
The moving planets are the largest rhythm we participate in. Larger than the calendar, larger than the economy, larger than the news cycle. Learning to read them is learning to read time itself — not so you can control it, but so you can move with it instead of against it.
Watch the sky. It's already watching you.


