Your Horoscope for Capricorn
by Susan Miller
The reason I love this full moon so much is that almost all the planets will be buzzing with each other in the friendliest way. Mars, at the very pinnacle of your chart in your tenth house of fame and honors, will receive glittering rays from Uranus in your sixth house of work assignments, which suggests the work will be approved to start (or finish) on or near August 9 and will add to your reputation and prestige and will work to elevate your career. Additionally, Pluto is linked to Uranus and Mars, which suggests you may get a raise as a result. Your career will be on fire! All good! Uranus will lead this full moon, and the fact that Uranus is found at one point of a golden triangle of harmony—Uranus, Mars, and Pluto—is insanely good news.
You are ruled by Saturn, the planet chosen to take good care of you, and Saturn, too, will get into the act. Saturn and Neptune, both in Aries, will send cheerful greetings to both Pluto in Aquarius and Uranus in Gemini. Saturn and Neptune are in your fourth house, which ancient astrologers said ruled “the end of all matters”—how things work out. For you, the results should be stellar. Take seriously all that you do on or near August 9.
I checked to see if the moon would be “void,” which is not a good time to make any important initiations. When the moon is void, she is not communicating with other planets. A void moon is an ineffectual moon. I have an app (designed with my team) called “Moonlight Phases by Susan Miller,” and it will show you where the moon is every day of every year through the year 2050. It will also tell you when the moon is void and when it will no longer be void, and if you turn on notifications, you won’t have to constantly look at your app. It will remind you. You can find my app on the Apple App Store and Google Play Store with a one-time cost of $7.99—not a subscription.
The part that surprised me is that the August 9 full moon WILL be void—on August 9 from 3:56 AM ET (New York time) until the morning of August 10 at 2:50 AM ET. That’s 23 hours! My app has GPS built in so you can check the times the moon will be void and come out of void for your location. If you travel, the app will know your location and recalibrate the accurate time the moon will be void.