Natal chart , Nizhny Novgorod
Sun in Taurus
Contents
Natal chart wheel
Chart data
Planetary positions
| Symbol | Planet | Degree | Sign | R |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sun | 29°40' | Taurus / Gemini * | — | |
| Moon | 16°52' | Aries | — | |
| Mercury | 04°24' | Taurus | — | |
| Venus | 03°26' | Taurus | — | |
| Mars | 08°32' | Aquarius | — | |
| Jupiter | 01°50' | Sagittarius | R | |
| Saturn | 26°26' | Taurus | — | |
| Uranus | 09°44' | Libra | R | |
| Neptune | 01°45' | Sagittarius | R | |
| Pluto | 27°03' | Virgo | R | |
| Chiron | 12°31' | Aries | — | |
| North Node | 18°31' | Aquarius | — | |
| Black Moon Lilith (Mean) | 28°50' | Virgo | — | |
| South Node | 18°31' | Leo | — |
The actual sign depends on the time of birth.
Major aspects
| Symbols | Aspect | Orb | Nature |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jupiter · Conjunction · Neptune | 0°05' | neutral | |
| Saturn · Trine · Pluto | 0°37' | harmonious | |
| Sun · Trine · Black Moon Lilith (Mean) | 0°50' | harmonious | |
| Mercury · Conjunction · Venus | 0°58' | neutral | |
| Mars · Trine · Uranus | 1°12' | harmonious | |
| Pluto · Conjunction · Black Moon Lilith (Mean) | 1°47' | neutral | |
| Sun · Opposition · Neptune | 2°06' | challenging | |
| Sun · Opposition · Jupiter | 2°11' | challenging | |
| Saturn · Trine · Black Moon Lilith (Mean) | 2°24' | harmonious | |
| Sun · Trine · Pluto | 2°37' | harmonious | |
| Uranus · Opposition · Chiron | 2°47' | challenging | |
| Sun · Conjunction · Saturn | 3°14' | neutral | |
| Mercury · Square · Mars | 4°08' | challenging | |
| Venus · Square · Mars | 5°07' | challenging | |
| Saturn · Opposition · Neptune | 5°20' | challenging | |
| Jupiter · Opposition · Saturn | 5°25' | challenging |
Planets in signs
Sun in Taurus
Steady ground. Picture someone who plants an orchard knowing the best fruit comes years later. That patience sits at the center of who you are. With the Sun in Taurus, a fixed earth sign, your identity is built on constancy, and by these years you’ve learned how much quiet strength that takes.
Reappraisal. At this stage, you likely find yourself weighing what you’ve gathered against what you actually value. Taurus loves to hold on, so real growth means asking which comforts still serve you and which have quietly become habits. Your birth chart points to wisdom earned slowly, through touch and experience rather than theory.
Mentorship. People trust what feels solid, and you tend to feel solid. Younger colleagues or family members may come to you for the kind of grounded, practical counsel you give without fuss. Sharing what you know, patiently and without needing to impress, is one of the warmest ways your core self shows up now.
Body and care. Taurus rules the senses, so tending your health means honoring the body as something worth maintaining, not driving hard and ignoring. Good food, rest, and steady movement aren’t indulgences here; they’re how you stay yourself.
What lasts. The Sun in Taurus cares deeply about legacy, about leaving behind something durable and useful. That might be a craft, a garden, a family, or simply a reputation for reliability. Let yourself define worth by what endures, not only what you can hold, and your later chapters gain real depth.
Moon in Aries
A quick flame. Your feelings arrive like a struck match: sudden, warm, hard to ignore. In your middle years, you know this well. When something stirs you, the impulse is to move, to speak, to fix it right now. Aries is a cardinal fire sign, and the Moon here wants to lead with the heart rather than wait for permission.
The heat of stress. Under pressure, you push back instead of folding inward. That directness has spared you years of quiet resentment, and it still serves you. Yet by now you may see the cost of the sharp word said too soon. The wisdom of these years is learning to feel the spark fully, then choose whether to act on it.
A steadier fire. The Moon in Aries sits in neither strength nor difficulty; it simply burns brightly and asks for awareness. Reappraisal suits you now. Look back at the fights worth having and the ones that only drained you, and let that sorting guide what comes next. Your birth chart points to courage as your emotional root, not something borrowed.
What you pass on. People are drawn to the way you meet life head-on, and younger friends or colleagues learn steadiness from your honesty. Guard your energy, since this placement can run the body hard when feelings run high. The legacy here is simple: show others that a warm temper and a kind heart can live in the same person, and that starting fresh is possible at any age.
Mercury in Taurus
A slow hand. Picture a craftsperson who turns a piece over before making the first cut. That patience is how your mind works with Mercury in Taurus, a fixed earth sign that steadies thought and settles speech. You reach conclusions slowly, and once you do, they hold.
How you think. You learn by doing, by handling the real thing rather than the theory of it. Ideas need to prove themselves in practice before you trust them, and rushed reasoning rarely moves you. By these years, that caution has become a quiet kind of wisdom, the sort younger people come to you for.
Voice and choice. Your speech is measured and plain, closer to a well-set stone than a flourish. When you decide, you weigh the ground under each option, so your choices tend to stand. Others may push for speed, but your steadiness is worth defending, not apologizing for.
Mentorship. This placement makes a natural teacher of the practical kind, patient with repetition and generous with time. If you carry a skill or a hard-won lesson, these are good years to pass it on in person, hands alongside words. What you show plainly tends to stay with people.
What to leave. As you take stock, think about the knowledge you want to outlast you: notes, recipes, methods, the small how-to of a life. Your birth chart favors legacy built from durable, useful things. Guard your energy too, and let rest be part of the plan, not an afterthought.
Venus in Taurus
At home. Venus rules Taurus, so this placement stands in its own domicile, one of the strongest positions it can hold. By your forties and beyond, that strength shows as a settled, unhurried way of loving what you love. You know your tastes, and you no longer apologize for them.
What lasts. You’re drawn to things that hold up over time: a well-made table, a friendship of thirty years, a garden that repays slow attention. Reappraisal at this stage often means letting go of what looks good but wears thin. What earns a place in your birth chart of values is what stays warm and useful, season after season.
The body’s wisdom. Comfort, for you, is not indulgence but good sense. Rest, decent food, touch, and a body treated kindly all carry weight now. Tending your health is part of the same instinct that makes you care for a home or a long affection.
Steady affection. In relationships you offer constancy, and you value being able to rely on someone in return. The risk is holding on past the point of ease, out of habit rather than care. A little honest review keeps your loyalty a gift, not a rut.
What you leave. Legacy, for a Taurus Venus, is tangible and personal: skills you can pass on, beauty you tended, people who felt safe near you. Consider what you’d like to hand forward, and mentor someone in the pleasures you’ve learned to trust.
Mars in Aquarius
A cooler fire. Picture a mind that acts on conviction rather than heat. With Mars in Aquarius, your energy moves through ideas, fairness, and the long view, not through raw impulse. By this stage of life, that steady, principled drive has become one of your clearest signatures.
How anger works. Your temper tends to run cool and detached rather than loud. When something offends your sense of what’s right, you argue the point instead of raising your voice. The risk is turning warm disagreements into cold ones, so let people feel that you care, not only that you’re correct.
Wisdom to pass on. You’ve spent decades acting on what you believe, often ahead of the people around you. That makes you a natural mentor for anyone learning to stand on their own reasoning. Share the thinking behind your choices, not just the conclusions, and younger people will carry it further than you expect.
Energy and the body. This placement likes movement that feels a little unconventional or shared with a group, from cycling clubs to something newly learned. In your birth chart, Mars rewards variety over grind, so keep your routine interesting enough that you’ll actually stick with it.
What to leave behind. Aquarius thinks in terms of the wider circle, so your legacy is less about possessions than about systems, ideas, and fairer ways of doing things. Ask yourself what improvement could outlast you, then put your remaining energy where it quietly keeps working after you’ve stepped back.
Jupiter in Sagittarius
At home. Picture a traveler who feels most alive on the open road, curious about every next turn. That is Jupiter in Sagittarius, sitting in its own sign. This is domicile, the planet at full power, so your instinct toward growth, meaning, and a broad view of life runs clear and strong in the birth chart.
Reappraisal. By your middle years, this placement invites you to weigh what you once believed against what you have actually lived. The old certainties get tested on the ground, not in theory. You tend to keep the beliefs that still hold weight and let the rest fall away without much fuss.
Wisdom and mentorship. Sagittarius is mutable fire, so your optimism stays flexible, ready to shift as you learn. That makes you a natural guide for younger people who need perspective more than answers. You give it best by sharing your own missteps honestly, not by handing down rules.
Health and rhythm. Big appetite for experience is part of this energy, and it asks for a steady frame to hold it. Movement, time outdoors, and room to explore tend to keep you well and even-tempered. Pace the enthusiasm, and it lasts.
Legacy. What you leave behind is less a monument than a way of seeing: generous, open, willing to ask the larger questions. Think about the ideas and encouragement you pass on, since those travel further than possessions. That, more than anything, is this placement at its finest.
Saturn in Taurus
A slow foundation. Think of someone laying stone by hand, unwilling to rush a wall that must stand for decades. That patience is the shape Saturn takes in Taurus, a fixed earth sign where discipline settles into steady, physical work. In your birth chart, this placement asks you to build things that last and to trust the value of doing so slowly.
Reappraisal. By your middle years, you know the difference between what you own and what actually holds meaning. Saturn here can make you protective, even reluctant to let go of what feels secure. The reflective task is to look again at your habits around money, comfort, and possessions, and to keep only what still earns its place.
Wisdom and mentorship. You’ve learned durability the hard way, through repetition and results rather than theory. That makes you a grounded guide for younger people who need calm more than cleverness. Offer your patience as a lesson: show how steady effort compounds, and how rushing rarely improves the harvest.
Health and rhythm. Taurus governs the body’s comforts, so Saturn asks for discipline in how you rest, eat, and move. Your strength is endurance, not speed, and honoring that rhythm keeps you steady for the long stretch ahead. Small, consistent care matters more than any dramatic overhaul.
What to leave behind. Legacy, for you, is tangible: a well-kept home, sound finances, skills passed on with care. Consider what you want to hand over, and start shaping it now, without hurry. What you build with patience tends to outlast you, quietly and well.
Uranus in Libra
A generation. Those born with Uranus in Libra, roughly between 1969 and 1975, carried a restless urge to rethink how people treat one another. Fairness, marriage, and the balance of power in relationships became open questions rather than settled facts.
Your own balance. On a personal level, this cardinal air placement gives you an inventive sense of justice that has matured over the years. You’ve likely questioned old scripts about how couples and colleagues should relate, and you’ve tested your own answers in real life.
Looking back. Now, in your middle years, you can weigh what your experiments actually taught you. Some unconventional choices about partnership or shared responsibility proved wise; others you’d shape differently, and that honest reappraisal is its own kind of wisdom.
Guiding others. Your instinct for equal footing makes you a natural mentor, someone who can help younger people see that harmony and freedom don’t have to cancel each other out. You lead best by keeping the conversation open rather than handing down verdicts.
Steady footing. Air signs can live too much in the head, so protect your calm by tending to rest, movement, and the quiet routines that keep you grounded. Balance in the body supports the balance you value in your relationships.
What lasts. The legacy shaped by this part of your birth chart is a fairer way of relating, passed on through example rather than lecture. Consider what agreements, friendships, and small acts of justice you want to leave standing behind you.
Neptune in Sagittarius
A restless faith. Neptune moved through Sagittarius from about 1970 to 1984, and it marked a generation drawn to big questions, distant cultures, and belief systems of every kind. The dream was of freedom and truth without borders.
Your inner compass. For you personally, this placement colors how you imagine a life well lived. Sagittarius is a mutable fire sign, restless and forward-leaning, so your intuition tends to reach toward the horizon rather than settle. You sense meaning in travel, study, and the stories people carry, and your birth chart ties inspiration to the search itself.
The midlife reckoning. Now, in your mature years, that same idealism asks for a second look. Some of the beliefs you once held with certainty may soften, and that’s not a loss but a ripening. Real wisdom often arrives when you can hold a conviction gently, aware it might not be the whole picture.
Guiding others. This is a fine placement for mentorship. You’ve gathered enough experience to point younger people toward their own questions, without handing them ready answers. Watch only for the temptation to preach; the truest teaching here comes through example and honest doubt.
What you leave. Think about legacy less as monuments and more as meaning passed on. Tend your health so you have the energy for it, and let your body’s rhythms ground a mind that loves to wander. What you leave behind may be a way of seeing, a generous curiosity others carry forward long after the details fade.
Pluto in Virgo
A generation of menders. Those born with Pluto in Virgo, roughly 1957 to 1972, grew up questioning how systems work and how they might be fixed. This is a cohort drawn to health, craft, and the quiet power of doing careful work well.
Reappraisal. Now, in your middle years, that instinct to analyze turns inward. You look back at old routines, jobs, and habits, and you weigh what still serves you against what has quietly worn out. This is honest stocktaking, not regret, and it clears room for something cleaner.
Wisdom through detail. Your depth shows in small, exacting things: the way you spot a flaw others miss, or fix what most people would leave broken. Over the years, that patient eye has become a kind of hard-won judgment. You know that real change comes from steady adjustment, not grand gestures.
Mentorship and health. You have plenty worth passing on, especially to those still learning their craft. Sharing your methods without hovering over every mistake lets others grow into their own competence. Tending your own well-being with the same care you give your work keeps that energy sustainable.
What to leave behind. The legacy of this placement rarely looks flashy. It lives in improved processes, mended relationships, and the skills you hand on to the next set of hands. As your birth chart suggests, you needn’t overhaul everything to leave things better; refine what matters, release what has run its course, and let the rest go lightly.
Aspects
Conjunction of Jupiter and Neptune
Two currents, one flow. Jupiter, the planet of growth and philosophy, sits right beside Neptune, the planet of ideals and intuition. In your birth chart, these two principles merge, so your sense of meaning and your imagination move as one. Faith and vision feed each other, and the result is a mind drawn to what lies beyond the plain and literal.
How it colors your life. You likely feel meaning most through compassion, art, or a spiritual thread that has run quietly through the years. This placement can widen your generosity and your creative reach, though it can also blur the line between hope and wishful thinking. By now you know the difference between an ideal that lifts people and one that leads you to overlook the facts.
Carrying it forward. At this stage, your gift is discernment: keeping the warmth of your ideals while testing them against what is real. Offer your vision as a mentor would, sharing what you believe without needing others to accept it whole. Protect your energy, rest when inspiration runs dry, and let what you leave behind be kindness grounded in honesty.
Trine of Saturn and Pluto
Structure and depth. Saturn asks for discipline and clear limits, while Pluto works underneath, dismantling what has outlived its use. With a trine between them, these two forces cooperate in your birth chart instead of grinding against each other. You can face hard truths without flinching and turn slow, demanding work into lasting change.
How it shows up. By this stage of life, you’ve likely rebuilt yourself more than once and come out sturdier each time. Endurance feels natural to you, so pressure that would break others often just sharpens your focus. Because the gift comes easily, though, you may coast on it, keeping old structures long after they’ve stopped serving you.
Where to aim it. Put this resilience to conscious use rather than letting it idle. Think about what you want to leave behind: mentor someone who could carry your knowledge forward, and let that shape your choices now. Guard your health as carefully as your commitments, since relentless effort has its cost. The real task is knowing what to keep, what to release, and when the work is genuinely done.
Conjunction of Mercury and Venus
Thought meets beauty. In your birth chart, Mercury and Venus sit together, so the mind that reasons and the heart that loves speak with one voice. Ideas arrive dressed in charm, and your judgments carry an eye for balance. You rarely separate what is true from what feels graceful, and by now you know how much that shapes your voice.
How it shows. People likely turn to you for a fair word or a tactful phrase, because you soften hard truths without hollowing them out. You learn best through beauty: a well-made sentence, a pleasing design, a conversation that flows. The risk is polish for its own sake, where a smooth surface hides a thought you never quite tested.
Where to take it. At this stage, your gift can become real mentorship if you let honesty share the table with tact. Say the plain thing when it matters, even when it costs you some elegance. Consider what you want to leave behind: not just pleasant words, but sound judgment others can trust and carry forward.
Trine of Mars and Uranus
How they meet. Mars gives you push and initiative; Uranus gives you the itch to do things your own way. In a trine, these two flow together without much friction. Your instinct for action and your taste for the unexpected have long worked as one, so bold, original moves feel almost natural to you.
In your life. By now you can likely see the pattern: quick reflexes, a knack for improvising, a refusal to follow a script that no longer fits. You’ve probably been the one who tries the new method while others hesitate. The easy risk here is coasting, letting a real gift idle because it never demanded effort to use.
Where to steer it. At this stage, the question shifts from proving yourself to passing something on. Channel that restless energy into mentoring, into fixing what others call unfixable, into projects with a longer horizon. Keep moving your body, since this current wants a physical outlet and rewards steady care. What you leave behind grows from the sparks you choose to tend, not just the ones you strike.
Opposition of the Sun and Neptune
The pull between them. Your Sun holds a clear image of who you are, while Neptune keeps softening that image at the edges. The two sit across from each other, so identity and idealism take turns tugging at the wheel. This isn’t a merger but a standoff, and it asks you to stay awake to both sides.
How it plays out. For much of your life you may have chased ideals that never quite matched reality, or lost yourself in service to others. At this stage, you can look back and see where inspiration lifted you and where illusion cost you time or health. The gift of the opposition is exactly this awareness, earned slowly rather than handed over.
Working with it. Let your dreams stay dreams without letting them erase the person having them. Pour the Neptune longing into creative work, quiet reflection or mentoring someone younger, so it has somewhere real to go. Think about what you want to leave behind, and hold onto ordinary anchors: rest, honest self-appraisal, people who see you clearly. Balance, not surrender, is what steadies this placement.
Opposition of the Sun and Jupiter
Two pulls at once. Your identity, the steady core of who you are, sits across from Jupiter’s urge to reach further and think bigger. One side wants to be true to a settled self; the other keeps whispering that there’s more to become. In your birth chart, these two never quite agree, and that friction is the point.
Where it shows. You may know the pattern well by now: promising more than the day can hold, backing a big idea, then quietly recalibrating. Jupiter can inflate the picture, so plans grow generous, sometimes beyond what’s practical. The opposition asks you to stay aware, to weigh optimism against what your energy and health can actually carry.
Toward balance. At this stage, the gift is judgment earned the slow way. Let your confidence serve something larger than your own reputation: mentor someone, share what you’ve learned, think about what you’d like to leave behind. When the two pulls come into balance, generosity stays warm without overextending you, and your worldview widens without losing the honest measure of who you are.
Trine of the Sun and Pluto
The self and change. The Sun stands for who you are, and Pluto for deep transformation. In your birth chart, these two meet in an easy, flowing trine. That harmony means your drive to renew yourself doesn’t war with your sense of self. Instead, you can shed old skins and stay recognizably you.
How it shows. By this stage of life, you’ve likely rebuilt yourself more than once and come out steadier each time. You carry a natural authority that others feel without your having to raise your voice. People may turn to you in hard moments, sensing you’ve walked through your own fires and made peace with them. This is real charisma, earned rather than performed.
Working with it. The one risk of such an easy gift is coasting on it. Because your resilience comes so readily, you might stop asking what you still want to change. So keep choosing your growth on purpose. Think about your legacy: the wisdom, the steadiness, the honest example you want to pass on. Mentor someone, and mind your health with the same seriousness you give everything else you mean to leave behind.
Conjunction of the Sun and Saturn
Two forces, one center. When the Sun and Saturn sit together, your sense of self fuses with the drive to be responsible. Identity and limitation share the same seat. You measure who you are against a demanding inner standard, and that standard rarely goes quiet. The father, or the idea of authority, often shaped this early.
A serious weight. In daily life, this can feel like a quiet pressure to prove yourself worthy. You may have carried duty young, doubted whether you measured up, and built real competence the slow way. By your middle years, that discipline has hardened into a kind of earned authority. People tend to trust your judgment because you’ve paid for it.
What to leave behind. Now is a good time to reappraise the standards you inherited and keep only the ones that still serve you. Let some of the old harshness go; you have nothing left to prove. Mentor someone with what you’ve learned, and mind your health rather than pushing through it. The legacy worth leaving is the wisdom, not the strain that earned it.
Square of Mercury and Mars
Word and action. Mercury shapes how you think and speak, while Mars supplies drive and heat. In a square, these two pull against each other, so thought and force rarely move in easy step. Your mind is fast and your tongue faster, and the gap between them is where the friction lives in your natal chart.
How it shows up. You likely think on your feet, argue well, and cut to the point before others have finished framing theirs. That same edge can turn to sharp speech, sarcasm, or a decision made a beat too soon. Over the years you’ve probably felt where a quick retort cost you more than a slower answer would have.
Turning the edge. Now is a good time to reappraise how you use that speed. Let the sharpness serve teaching rather than winning: a mentor who slows down turns a blunt gift into wisdom others can keep. Guard your energy too, since restless argument wears on the body over time. What you leave behind is measured less by debates won than by the clarity and steadiness you pass on.
Square of Venus and Mars
Two pulls at odds. Venus asks for closeness, beauty and ease, while Mars pushes to act, chase and win. In your natal chart these two meet at a square, so what you long for and what you go after rarely line up on the first try. The result is an inner heat that has followed you for years.
How it plays out. You may notice a familiar pattern: you want tenderness, yet your approach comes out sharp, or you crave excitement, then resent the peace it costs you. In relationships and creative work, passion and irritation often share the same room. That tension, though, is also fuel; it has kept your desires alive rather than settled.
Working with it. By this stage of life, you have earned the wisdom to name the clash instead of just feeling it. When want and will disagree, slow down and ask which one is really speaking. Physical activity gives Mars a clean outlet and protects the calm your body now values. Passing this hard-won balance on to someone younger may be one of the finer things you leave behind.
Opposition of Saturn and Neptune
Two pulls, one axis. Saturn wants structure, limits, and proof you can hold in your hands. Neptune leans the other way, toward faith, imagination, and a sense of something larger. In opposition, these two face off across your birth chart, so each keeps checking the other. The result is a lifelong conversation between the practical and the visionary, never quite settled.
Where it lands. In these mature years, the tension often surfaces as reappraisal. A dream you once served may look thinner now, and that ache of disillusionment can feel like loss. You may also swing between rigid caution and a longing to escape into vague hopes. At its best, this same axis lets you give an ideal real shape, turning a private vision into work others can lean on.
Working with it. Treat doubt as information, not defeat, and test your ideals against small, honest steps. Spiritual discipline suits you here: quiet, steady practice grounds the parts of you that fear the unknown. As you weigh what to leave behind, offer your hard-won realism to younger people as mentorship. A grounded dream is the legacy worth building.
Opposition of Jupiter and Saturn
Two pulls. In your natal chart, Jupiter opposes Saturn, so growth and limit face each other across an open field. One side wants to reach out, take the risk, believe in more. The other counts the cost, sets the boundary, asks whether the ground will hold. Neither is meant to win; the work is to let them talk.
How it shows. At this stage of life, the tension often surfaces as a quiet reappraisal. You may swing between bold plans and sober second thoughts, generous with your time one week and guarding it the next. Questions about health, pacing, and what you want to leave behind carry real weight now. The pull can feel like doubt, but it is really a call for honest measure.
Finding the middle. Treat optimism and caution as two advisors, not rivals, and let each speak before you decide. Your years of experience make you a natural mentor; share the hope and the hard-won limits together. When you plan something new, scale it to what you can sustain rather than what excites you in the moment. That balance is the wisdom this opposition keeps offering you.