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I’ve been Celestial Gatekeeping with the Jupiter Venus Conjunction alignment. Up in the early pre dawn hours this week
Under clear skies Such a gift To myself Quiet Peaceful So divine with starlight And the Inner Union ~ that is sparked with Jupiter meeting Venus in the sky Is….so many things… Venus as Diamond Inner Earth HUG Putting on the crystalline love squeeze Coal becomes Diamond Under great and deep pressure Deep within the planet Dark, still, quiet And full of ALL the LIGHT Jupiter as Expanse Wide Open as the Sky Space for all of creation Father Sky Zeus Jovian Father Throwing electric light love across the sky The spark, the flash of action Squeeze meets Expansion When these two forces These two planetary bodies align on our sky They bring us to the place of Balance of Opposites Yin /Yang Inner/Outer Contemplations and activations under an early am sky show Celestial Sky Lights
Dance in the predawn sky Aug 12, 2025 as seen from Grafton, MA Jupiter above Venus (right side of pic) Gemini twin stars Pollux & Castor (left side of pic) Antares with the Moon
Tonight Antares is the brightest star in the constellation Scorpius and marks the heart of the Scorpion. A beautiful sight. Antares is orange red and just above the moon (right now). COSMIC RISING OF SUN & SIRIUS
AUG 3, 2025 Cosmic Rising is an astronomical alignment gateway- when two celestial bodies rise together on the eastern horizon. This morning, Aug 3, our Sun & Sirius rose together. Each morning from now Sirius will rise a bit earlier and earlier, until it rises enough before the sun that we can see it in the pre dawn sky. This first view of a star as it emerges into the dawn sky is called the Heliacal Rising. The date of this rising depends on where you live (latitude), your weather, your vista/elevation so there is no one calendar date of this celestial event. Where I live - we expect our first glimpse around Aug 17-20 ish. I live about 42deg north of equator. Sirius has not been visible since mid May. Every year it merges into the daytime sky with the sun mid-late May and reemerges mid-late August, so not visible to us here for about 70 days a year. As Sirius is the brightest star in our night sky - dancing with rainbow disco ball sparkle codes- we sure do miss seeing it when it “goes solar”. Sirius is the brightest star in the Canus Major (Dog) constellation - giving it the nickname “The Dog Star” and these days when Sirius joins the sun we call “The Dog Days of Summer”. We are emerging from the Sun Sirius combo daytime sky corridor - and as always this gateway/corridor is very intense and full of charge/fire. |
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