Your Saturn return, explained gently
Around age twenty-nine, and again around fifty-eight, Saturn completes a full lap of the sky and returns to the exact place it held when you were born. Astrologers call it the Saturn return — and almost no transit is more feared, or more misunderstood.
Saturn is not a punishment. Saturn is an auditor. The return asks one question of every structure in your life — career, marriage, beliefs, habits: is this real, or is this scaffolding you forgot to take down?
The second return is the kinder one
The return of your late fifties carries the same question with thirty more years of evidence. What survives this audit tends to be unshakably yours. Many women describe the years after it as the most honest of their lives — fewer structures, all of them real.
"Saturn never takes anything that was truly yours. It only collects what you were holding for someone else."
Your year-ahead chapter maps your Saturn transits precisely — so you can meet the auditor with your books already open.