What's going on in the night sky right now? Find out with Star Lore Historian Mary Stewart Adams, who narrates the stories written across the sky each week in order to restore the mythic grandeur of knowing the stars. Here, ancient mythologies are woven together with poetry, astrology, contemporary astronomy, and the new star wisdom astrosophy, to reveal the brilliant story of now.
At solar eclipse, we let off steam; at lunar eclipse, we receive further forces of destiny. And this week, we're in between.
The poetry of the morning sky is undeniable this week, as the Moon descends through the dawn in the spectacular company of Saturn, Mars, Venus and Jupiter.
The Lyrid Meteor Shower kicks off International Dark Sky Week 2022. Get outside and let your soul bask in the radiant song of the stars
The planets have lined up to watch Sun and Moon trade places in the hemispheres and perform their cosmic contradiction this week.
The exciting celestial event that has the astrology community all a-buzz: the meet up of Jupiter and Neptune.
The Moon's position this week provides an optimal moment for something never attempted before: a photograph of the people of the Earth in infrared.
The Sun has returned North of the Celestial Equator and the planets are hanging around to see what path we'll take, before the first Full Moon of the season gets here.
If we still used the Julian system, then this week’s Full Moon on March 18 would be the “ides of March” a notorious date in ancient Roman history.
The configuration of planets and stars in the morning sky this week suggest that we’re in a “threshold crossing” moment.
Venus and Mars meet Pluto this week ~ what narrative in these meetings among the stars?
Aquarius season each year is the opening line of a fairy tale
It’s a week full of love, not just because of the date on the calendar, but because of what’s happening in the sky!
Each of us sailing to rescue our own individual dawn.
Though New year is Jan 1 in the Gregorian calendar system, cultural observances around the world vary widely
Astronomers thrust Webb into position; Paul makes a miraculous turn; Mars gazes on Venus.
Make it a new year of setting aside time for simple ceremonies of the cosmos in the everyday, and be sure to celebrate the Moon
What’s better at the dawn of a new year than an epic love story, etched across the sky in starlight?
What better way to end 2021 than with Dante and Venus?
Winter Solstice begins this week at 10:59 am on Tuesday, December 21st, when in the relationship between Earth and Sun, a mighty pause takes place, as though the Sun waits on Earth, who is tucking he…
Rudolf Steiner's Stars Spoke Once to Humanity verse and Comet Leonard.