Pluto is moving into Aquarius ready yourself for radical, once-in-a-generation revolution

Pluto, our planet of profound change, is changing signs — are you prepared? On Tuesday, November 19, 2024, death daddy Pluto will leave the patriarchal scaffolding of Capricorn and set up shop — or excavate the basement — in the professionally weird, utopian leaning space cowboy climes of Aquarius.What does this once-in-a-generation shift mean for you? Read on to learn more.

Named for the maiden-snatching, shadow-dwelling god of the underworld, the small but mighty planet Pluto is associated with destruction, subversion, depth, intensity, primal urges, the taboo, the criminal, the subterranean, subconscious forces, underworld journeys, and the dark and dangerous heart that beats below the veneer of civilization and the crust of the Earth itself.Sunny stuff, it ain’t.Find out what the stars reveal about your day with our Daily Horoscopes newsletter.

Please enter your name & birthday below Please provide a valid email address.By clicking above you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

Stay updated with the latest stories from the New York Post Explore more newsletters.Petit but potent, Pluto was discovered in 1930.

Pluto’s orbit is arduously long, with the planet changing signs once every twelve to thirty years.As an outer planet, Pluto influences the ideals and energy of an entire generation.As the master of ceremonies for death, Pluto teaches us that destruction is the wheel grease of creation.Apropos of this, Pluto is the planetary ruler of the fixed water sign Scorpio, which is associated with transformational trauma, shadow work, mind control, power struggles, and other people’s money.Like a skin suit, Pluto takes on the thematic energy of the sign it moves through.

In the future-focused, emotionally objective sign of Aquarius, Pluto’s slash-and-burn path will be interesting to behold.There is a utopian leaning to the water bearer archetype, and beca...

Read More 
PaprClips
Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by PaprClips.
Publisher: New York Post

Recent Articles