Your September 2025 Horoscope for Pisces
by Susan Miller
A reader once said to me, “I had a terrible eclipse. I found out I needed surgery on my shoulder. Afterwards, I had to have physical therapy that went on for months.” I asked this reader if the surgery was successful. The young man replayed yes. Do you still have pain? No. I asked if the surgery caught the problem in time before it worsened? The young man again nodded yes.
Well then, this was not a bad eclipse but rather a wonderful one! Think about it! If he hadn’t gone to a doctor and discovered that something was wrong, he would still be in pain today. Problems like this never get better—they only get worse if not attended to. If he didn’t know, he may have let things go and may have even lost some of the strength and flexibility of his shoulder. The eclipse gave him an early warning. It was a great eclipse! As you see, “bad” can be good—give an eclipse time to bring on its second act and fully unfold the new information it will present.
I will admit that at times, eclipses ask much from us. Sometimes someone is “eclipsed out” of our life—they move away or quit their job or break up—something happens. We discover strengths within that we never knew we had. We always learn from eclipses.
My mother, Little Mom, as I would affectionately call her, used to tell me that we never learn much of anything in times of ease and comfort. It is times of challenge that we learn and grow, when we display our true character. Eclipses give us a chance to strengthen our character further.
She used to tell me it was when we are in the boxing ring, we show determination, courage, independence, and staying power. When the bell rings, the round ends, and the referee pours water over us and gives us a fluffy white towel to dry off and feel refreshed—that’s not the key part of life, that is simply the resting period to reset and catch our breath so that we get the strength to go back in the ring of real life.
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