How to read your own birth chart
The first time you see your birth chart, it looks like the cockpit of a very old aircraft: a wheel, twelve slices, and a scatter of glyphs that clearly mean something to someone. Here is the gentlest possible map.
The wheel is the sky at your birth, frozen. The twelve slices are houses — areas of life: self, money, communication, home, and so on. The glyphs are planets, each a different voice in you: the sun is your purpose, the moon your needs, Mercury your mind, Venus your loves, Mars your drive.
The three things to find first
Your sun (who you’re becoming), your moon (what you need to feel safe), and your ascendant (how you arrive). Read those three together and you already know more than any horoscope column will ever tell you. Everything else — aspects, transits, nodes — is commentary on that trinity.
"A birth chart isn’t a verdict. It’s a map of weather patterns — and you are still the one driving."
Or skip the years of study: your astrossoul report reads the whole cockpit for you, in plain language, reviewed by someone who’s flown for decades.