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Monday, December 29, 2025

Astrologers Flag Four Zodiac Signs to Watch During September’s Eclipse Corridor

Practitioners say the Sept. 7–21 eclipse corridor will intensify career, relationship and home dynamics for Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius and Pisces; astronomers note eclipses are predictable celestial events

Science & Space 4 months ago
Astrologers Flag Four Zodiac Signs to Watch During September’s Eclipse Corridor

Astrologers are advising people born under four zodiac signs to be extra cautious during an eclipse corridor running Sept. 7–21, a fortnight they say will magnify personal and collective change.

Practitioners quoted by The Post said the two-week window between a solar and a lunar eclipse — commonly called an eclipse corridor — can bring rapid developments that stick, and that the current cycle falls along the Virgo–Pisces axis, which they say will make those signs and placements within them more sensitive. One astrologer described the period as a time when ‘‘significant events and new connections often begin and tend to stick.’’ Another warned that eclipse periods can be accompanied by disruptions ranging from accidents to broader social unrest.

The astrologers named Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius and Pisces as the signs likely to feel the corridor most intensely. Their readings, aimed at sun and rising signs, outline different focal points: career and public standing for Gemini; partnerships for Virgo; home and family patterns for Sagittarius; and personal initiative and independence for Pisces.

Polina Arutiunian, an astrologer on the spiritual guidance platform Nebula, told The Post that Geminis may experience changes in their tenth house of career and their fourth house of home during the corridor, and that the period could force a release of past comforts in favor of long-term planning and new responsibilities. Arutiunian said Virgos are likely to have the lunar eclipse fall in their seventh house of partnerships, a placement she said could reveal new relationship paths or clarify what they want from close partnerships.

Astrology chart imagery

For Sagittarians, Arutiunian suggested the corridor will highlight the fourth house of home and foundational patterns, promoting boundary-setting and attention to family and domestic matters. She said people under this sign might find opportunities to resolve home or real-estate issues, or to step back from social expectations that do not fit. Pisces, she said, will feel the cycle in the first house of initiative and selfhood, a configuration she said could reveal limiting relationships and prompt personal projects or renewed independence.

Palmist Ankur, another astrologer quoted by The Post, framed eclipses as periods that can bring trouble for groups and institutions, citing historical associations with accidents, disasters and leadership changes. He also noted, however, that an eclipse affecting a sensitive point in a personal astrological chart may act as a catalyst for necessary change rather than strictly negative outcomes.

Astrology practitioners typically refer to nodes, houses and sign placements when interpreting eclipses. The astrologers who spoke to The Post urged those affected to treat the corridor as a time to be vigilant about relationships, career decisions and personal boundaries, and to view upheaval as a possible prompt for constructive change.

From a scientific standpoint, astronomers describe solar and lunar eclipses as predictable alignments of Earth, Moon and Sun governed by celestial mechanics. A lunar eclipse occurs when Earth passes between the Sun and the Moon, casting Earth’s shadow on the lunar surface; a solar eclipse happens when the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun, temporarily blocking sunlight from part of Earth. Mainstream science does not support causal links between these celestial events and individual human affairs.

Observers and skywatching organizations note that while eclipses have cultural, historical and psychological significance, their physical effects are limited to changes in illumination and gravitational interactions already well understood by physics. Astronomers continue to use eclipse events for research opportunities, public outreach and observation of celestial mechanics.

Reda Wigle, an astrologer who blends historical and cultural perspectives into horoscopes, was cited as offering readings that integrate personal experience and broader narratives; practitioners such as Wigle are among those promoting readings and consultations during the current eclipse season.

Astrological communities often advise that eclipse energy can be felt in the week before and after the corridor itself, and that events beginning during this time may have long-term implications. People seeking guidance on how the corridor might affect them personally are generally encouraged by practitioners to consult their own astrologers for readings tailored to their birth charts.

The Sept. 7–21 eclipse corridor follows established astronomical calendars for solar and lunar eclipses but represents an interpretive framework used by astrologers to link those events to human affairs. Those interested in observing the celestial events associated with the corridor can consult astronomical resources for times and safe viewing practices, while those seeking personal guidance about potential life changes may turn to astrologers for chart-based interpretation.


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