Sun in the second house of the composite chart is the best possible position for any business or professional relationship whose primary aim is to make money or to gather material possessions.
The second house is the house of things that are valued, either tangible or intangible. Sun in this house gives you a strong drive to seek whatever it is that you collectively value. The point is that you will go after whatever you want, and you are likely to succeed simply because you put so much energy into the effort.
In a personal relationship such as marriage, in which you own things together, those things will be very important to the security of the relationship.
One danger of this placement is that there may be a conflict of values between you. It will not be easy for the two of you to compromise on such issues, so it would be best to decide whether your values are compatible before you embark on any kind of joint venture.
Moon in the First House
The composite Moon in the first house makes clear that in this relationship your feelings and emotions are very prominently involved.
Obviously, this placement is favorable to any relationship in which you want to relate on a close, intimate level.
You have a deep emotional understanding of how you get along. But the Moon can also create such a strong emotionalism that you are unable to stand back and look at yourselves clearly in terms of your relationship. Be careful to avoid such extreme emotional involvement.
A first-house Moon should give the two of you a strong sense of emotional compatibility. You will feel that you belong together and that you have much in common, which will indeed be true.
Moon Conjunct Venus
The conjunction of composite Moon and composite Venus is a most positive aspect for any personal relationship. It indicates a strong feeling of love between you that you will express openly. The relationship may even have something of a dreamy quality, as if it were too beautiful to be true.
The basic inner strength of this relationship should be great enough to overcome all but the worst problems.
In general, this is one of the most positive and useful aspects that a composite chart can have for a successful personal relationship.
Venus in the First House
Composite Venus in the first house signifies a relationship that is based on love and affection. The ultimate meaning of Venus is attraction based on the ways in which you are different rather than the ways in which you are similar.
You were probably strongly attracted to each other when you first met and as you learn more and more about each other, you remain strongly attracted.
The emotions aroused by Venus are quiet in their expression, friendly rather than wildly passionate. This kind of affection will sustain a relationship for a long time.
Technical details
The Composite horoscope is a symbolic chart, derived mathematically and never represented by a real planetary configuration on the sky. For all planetary pairs, for example both Suns in the natal charts of the partners, the Composite Sun is determined as the mid-point in between. Also the MC (Medium Coeli or cusp of the 10th house) is determined by this mid-point technique. So far all astrologers proceed the same way to get a Composite.
For finding the Ascendant and the other house cusps in a chart two different techniques are used. One school of thought, also adhered to by Liz Greene and other staff members at Astrodienst, computes the Ascendant and the other house cusps with the same mid-point technique. In the very rare case of an Ascendant falling into the west half of the chart, which is the wrong side, the Ascendant is corrected by 180 degrees, so that it comes to lie in the east half where is must naturally be.
The other wide spread school of thought uses a table of houses for the Ascendant. First a fictious birth time is derived from the mid-point MC, then for this time the Ascendant and other house cusps are read from the table. Because house table entries vary by geographical latitude, the latitude of a reference place is used here. The geographical longitude (east/west location) of the reference place is not taken into account, so that Naples, Italy and New York, NY result in the same Composite chart, because both cities are near 40 degrees northern latitude. The technique is called reference-place technique.
In his book 'Planets in Composite' Robert Hand describes both methods; we have decided to use the mid-point method with AstroText Partner, because the Relationship Horoscope by Liz Greene also uses this technique and many readers might be unnecessarily confused if we offered two kinds of partner horoscopes containing different Composite ascendants.
Mercury and Venus can sometimes have an unnatural position in the Composite Chart. In nature, Mercury is never more than 30 degrees from the Sun, Venus never more than 45 degrees. In the Composite, however, each of the two planets can also be in opposition to the Sun. In such cases, some Astrologers mirror the planet into the opposite sign. Robert Hand takes into consideration both possible positions. Our Astrodienst reports follow the method of Liz Greene, who does not do such a mirroring.
Sun in the second house of the composite chart is the best possible position for any business or professional relationship whose primary aim is to make money or to gather material possessions.
The second house is the house of things that are valued, either tangible or intangible. Sun in this house gives you a strong drive to seek whatever it is that you collectively value. The point is that you will go after whatever you want, and you are likely to succeed simply because you put so much energy into the effort.
In a personal relationship such as marriage, in which you own things together, those things will be very important to the security of the relationship.
One danger of this placement is that there may be a conflict of values between you. It will not be easy for the two of you to compromise on such issues, so it would be best to decide whether your values are compatible before you embark on any kind of joint venture.
Moon in the First House
The composite Moon in the first house makes clear that in this relationship your feelings and emotions are very prominently involved.
Obviously, this placement is favorable to any relationship in which you want to relate on a close, intimate level.
You have a deep emotional understanding of how you get along. But the Moon can also create such a strong emotionalism that you are unable to stand back and look at yourselves clearly in terms of your relationship. Be careful to avoid such extreme emotional involvement.
A first-house Moon should give the two of you a strong sense of emotional compatibility. You will feel that you belong together and that you have much in common, which will indeed be true.
Moon Conjunct Venus
The conjunction of composite Moon and composite Venus is a most positive aspect for any personal relationship. It indicates a strong feeling of love between you that you will express openly. The relationship may even have something of a dreamy quality, as if it were too beautiful to be true.
The basic inner strength of this relationship should be great enough to overcome all but the worst problems.
In general, this is one of the most positive and useful aspects that a composite chart can have for a successful personal relationship.
Venus in the First House
Composite Venus in the first house signifies a relationship that is based on love and affection. The ultimate meaning of Venus is attraction based on the ways in which you are different rather than the ways in which you are similar.
You were probably strongly attracted to each other when you first met and as you learn more and more about each other, you remain strongly attracted.
The emotions aroused by Venus are quiet in their expression, friendly rather than wildly passionate. This kind of affection will sustain a relationship for a long time.
Technical details
The Composite horoscope is a symbolic chart, derived mathematically and never represented by a real planetary configuration on the sky. For all planetary pairs, for example both Suns in the natal charts of the partners, the Composite Sun is determined as the mid-point in between. Also the MC (Medium Coeli or cusp of the 10th house) is determined by this mid-point technique. So far all astrologers proceed the same way to get a Composite.
For finding the Ascendant and the other house cusps in a chart two different techniques are used. One school of thought, also adhered to by Liz Greene and other staff members at Astrodienst, computes the Ascendant and the other house cusps with the same mid-point technique. In the very rare case of an Ascendant falling into the west half of the chart, which is the wrong side, the Ascendant is corrected by 180 degrees, so that it comes to lie in the east half where is must naturally be.
The other wide spread school of thought uses a table of houses for the Ascendant. First a fictious birth time is derived from the mid-point MC, then for this time the Ascendant and other house cusps are read from the table. Because house table entries vary by geographical latitude, the latitude of a reference place is used here. The geographical longitude (east/west location) of the reference place is not taken into account, so that Naples, Italy and New York, NY result in the same Composite chart, because both cities are near 40 degrees northern latitude. The technique is called reference-place technique.
In his book 'Planets in Composite' Robert Hand describes both methods; we have decided to use the mid-point method with AstroText Partner, because the Relationship Horoscope by Liz Greene also uses this technique and many readers might be unnecessarily confused if we offered two kinds of partner horoscopes containing different Composite ascendants.
Mercury and Venus can sometimes have an unnatural position in the Composite Chart. In nature, Mercury is never more than 30 degrees from the Sun, Venus never more than 45 degrees. In the Composite, however, each of the two planets can also be in opposition to the Sun. In such cases, some Astrologers mirror the planet into the opposite sign. Robert Hand takes into consideration both possible positions. Our Astrodienst reports follow the method of Liz Greene, who does not do such a mirroring.
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