Past Life: Astrology: Use Your Birthchart To Und...

"You aren't meant to drown in the mysteries anymore," Elara whispered to the empty room.

She realized her current obsession with "fixing" everyone’s problems was just the Scorpio South Node acting out its old survival patterns. The chart was telling her to stop. To build a garden. To bake bread. To find peace in the tangible world.

Elara traced the symbol—a downward-facing horseshoe. According to the chart, her past self had been someone powerful but shrouded in secrets, perhaps someone who met a dark end beneath the waves. As she looked closer, she saw squaring her South Node, suggesting a heavy debt of responsibility she hadn't quite paid off. Past Life Astrology: Use Your Birthchart to Und...

She had always felt an inexplicable, crushing anxiety whenever she stood near large bodies of water. No trauma in this life explained it. But then, the astrologer had pointed to her in the Eighth House, sitting in the watery sign of Scorpio.

That night, for the first time, Elara didn't dream of the dark ocean. She dreamt of a mountain, solid and unmoving, under a clear Taurean sky. She woke up realizing that her birth chart wasn't a set of chains—it was a map showing her exactly which old doors to close so she could finally walk through a new one. "You aren't meant to drown in the mysteries

The story wasn't just about the past, though. Her —the "North Star" of her soul’s purpose—was in Taurus in the Second House. It was a call away from the stormy, emotional depths of Scorpio and toward something stable, earthy, and simple.

The overhead lights in Elara’s apartment flickered as she stared at the circular map on her screen—a chaotic web of lines and symbols that supposedly held the blueprint of her soul. The title of the workshop she’d just attended, “Past Life Astrology: Use Your Birthchart to Understand Your Karma,” echoed in her mind. To build a garden

"The South Node is your 'exit point' from your last life," the instructor had said. "It’s your comfort zone, but also where you carry your oldest baggage."