Aspects
Imum Coeli Square Nemausa
There is a grind right at your base between the belonging you long for and the home or family you actually have, as if the ground itself were uneven. It can make settling feel like effort. Let the friction show you what your roots are missing, then repair the foundation rather than fleeing it.
Lean in — Repair the home base you actually have
Watch for — Do not keep moving to outrun unsettled roots
- friction
- foundation
- roots
Sources
- Forrest, The Inner Sky (1984)Reads Nemausa by its plain modern sense rather than classical myth, named for the spring spirit of a place, as a point of rootedness, the genius of place, and the healing of belonging.
- Hand, Horoscope Symbols (1981)Treats the meeting of the spirit of place and the Imum Coeli, home and roots, as a specific working relationship.
- Tierney, Dynamics of Aspect Analysis (1983)Reads the square as dynamic tension that drives growth through friction.