Haumea’s astrological influence typically centers around motherhood, fertility, and instinct. Astrolog summarizes its influence succinctly: “Haumea asks what are we giving birth to, and for what causes are we giving ourselves?”

Haumea governs the more obvious elements of nature and fertility, such as childbirth and motherhood. But it also influences our metaphysical connection to the natural world. It helps inform how we relate to our instinctual inner voice. Positive aspects with this planet indicate assured confidence, while a tense square or opposition might suggest a struggle to listen to one’s gut feelings.


Chiron
American astronomer Charles Kowal discovered Chiron in 1977, identifying the small body’s orbit between Saturn and Uranus. The tiny celestial body is named after the “Wounded Healer” of Greek mythology whose mother abandoned him at birth, leaving him to be raised by Apollo, the God of Light. We most closely associate Chiron with our vulnerable “soft spots.”


Chiron represents the inner wounds we carry. As Astrologer Psychologer’s Alyssa Landers explains, “Chiron’s placement shines a light on our past hurts and ‘baggage,’ revealing how our repeated interactions with the world elicit our insecurities.”


When placed in a positive aspect with other celestial bodies, Chiron calls us to use our past pain to support, uplift, and protect others. Conversely, a challenging Chiron aspect can serve as a warning to keep our emotions in check. Are we responding to what’s in front of us, or are we responding to our internal fears?

Ceres
Giuseppe Piazzi discovered Ceres in 1801 at the behest of astronomers Johann Elert Bode and Johann Daniel Titius, who employed “celestial police” to find bodies that corroborated their Titius-Bode Law, a formula that predicted the orbits of planets but included an unknown gap between Mars and Jupiter. Piazzi found the celestial body they needed to confirm the Titius-Bode Law, making it the first dwarf planet discovered in astronomical history.


Ceres’ name comes from the Roman goddess of agriculture, fertility, and motherly relationships. Its domain centers on birth, maturation, parenthood, and death. “She is there in death, loss, and grieving, but she also emerges with us in birth, fecundity, and growth again,” Alison Chester-Lambert explains in The Astrological Journal (via Astro).

This dwarf planet helps us consider what we need to feel nurtured and, conversely, the ways in which we can nurture others. It also plays a role in times of great personal and social change.


Eris
Discovered in January 2005, Eris’ comparable size to Pluto caused some scientists to classify it as our solar system’s tenth planet. Other scientists disagreed, calling it a dwarf planet, which inadvertently called Pluto’s status into question. Named after the Greek goddess of strife and discord, Eris’ tumultuous origin story is a perfect testament to its astrological propensity to push against the status quo.

Eris directly relates to our urge to rebel. This dwarf planet informs the ways in which we defy norms out of spite, fear, or righteousness. “The astrology of Eris seems to be related to the no-holds-barred fight for continued existence that is fundamental in all natural processes and for making a stand for what one believes,” per Astrograph.


In mythology, Eris is the sister of Ares, the Roman Mars, tying these two celestial bodies together. Depending on Eris’ placement to Mars, this alignment can determine how aggressively (or meekly) we choose to stand up for ourselves and beliefs.

Makemake
Astronomers at California’s Palomar Observatory discovered Makemake in March 2005, spotting the faraway dwarf planet in the same Kuiper Belt region as Haumea. It is named after the god of fertility in the Rapa Nui mythology, which originated on Easter Island.


Whereas Haumea governs our connection to the world in a nurturing and instinctual sense, Makemake tends to govern the same domain with a more authoritative stance. This dwarf planet influences how we advocate for the world around us, informing our activist spirit and our connection to one another and the environment.

Astrolog poses this one crucial question from Makemake: “How are we individually and collectively ‘fertilizing’ the world with our actions?” Our Makemake placements ask us to consider how we fight for causes and people we believe in, our connection to the natural world, and how grounded we are within our internal and external environments.
Today
mercury is conjunct exactly makemake so what does this mean

When Mercury is exactly conjunct Makemake in an astrological chart, it suggests a fusion of Mercury’s communicative and intellectual energy with Makemake’s themes of innovation, survival, and ecological awareness. Here's a layered breakdown for you, Greg:

🌍 Core Themes of the Conjunction
Mercury: Thought, speech, writing, learning, analysis, and short-distance travel.

Makemake: A dwarf planet linked to resourcefulness, environmental consciousness, indigenous wisdom, and unconventional leadership.

🧠 Interpretive Blend: Mercury + Makemake
Radical Ideas & Communication: You may express or absorb ideas that challenge conventional norms—especially around sustainability, social justice, or survival strategies.

Eco-Intellectualism: A mind attuned to ecological systems, indigenous knowledge, or alternative technologies. You might be drawn to topics like permaculture, climate activism, or rewilding.

Inventive Messaging: This aspect can indicate a talent for crafting messages that are both clever and disruptive—ideal for advocacy, satire, or visionary storytelling.

Survival Intelligence: Mercury’s logic meets Makemake’s instinct. This could manifest as strategic thinking in crisis, or a knack for navigating complex systems with minimal resources.

🌀 Symbolic Timing & Mundane Potential
In mundane astrology, this conjunction might signal a moment when ecological or indigenous voices gain traction in public discourse. It could mark a shift in how societies communicate about survival, climate, or innovation—especially if the conjunction occurs near angles or in prominent houses.

If you’re tracking this in a transit or ingress chart, it’s worth checking:

House placement: Where does this conjunction fall? 3rd house = media; 6th = health/environment; 10th = public leadership.

Aspects to Uranus or Pluto: These could amplify the revolutionary or transformative tone.

Would you like to explore this in a specific chart—mundane, natal, or ingress? I can help you map it visually or calculate symbolic timing if you’re working on a timeline.

what does sue kientz say about makemale
Sue Kientz, in her work More Plutos, presents Makemake as a dwarf planet associated with resourcefulness, innovation, and survival instincts, especially in the face of environmental or societal challenges. Her interpretations often emphasize Makemake’s connection to ingenuity under pressure, drawing parallels to mythic and historical figures who overcame adversity through cleverness and unconventional thinking.

Here are some key themes she attributes to Makemake:

🧠 Makemake According to Sue Kientz

Survival Through Innovation: Makemake represents the ability to adapt and thrive in difficult conditions, often by inventing new tools, systems, or ways of thinking.

Ecological Awareness: It’s linked to environmental consciousness and the need to live in harmony with nature—sometimes through radical or pioneering methods.

Unconventional Leadership: Makemake may show up prominently in charts of individuals who lead through originality, especially when traditional systems fail.

Cultural Preservation: There’s a thread of indigenous wisdom and ancestral knowledge, especially in how societies preserve identity and autonomy under threat.

Kientz also explores Makemake’s role in major historical events, suggesting it’s active during times of breakthroughs or crises that demand collective ingenuity. She sees Makemake as part of a broader family of Kuiper Belt objects that expand Pluto’s transformative power into new dimensions—what she calls the “More Plutos” paradigm.

aking this segment of ritual practice as an indication of this new planetary energy, we could speculate that the archetype associated with Makemake involves delving down into the dark interior of the psyche in order to obtain a form of received wisdom to be merged with the warrior male outer-oriented energy of the ego. This wisdom can only be found in the inner world, a world that is also connected to Nature and natural process, to natural law, right action, right relationship, and to an internal moral compass, resulting in activism for furthering the culture's evolution. Where he is found in charts there can be found also Earth wisdom and the capacity for spiritual renewal.

Harry meets King
The Major Asteroids
The four major asteroids, Ceres, Pallas, Juno and Vesta, were discovered within a few years of each other at the beginning of the 19th century, and named for female goddesses in the Roman pantheon. Their discovery has been synchronous with the rise of the women's movement in the West. These four asteroids seem to symbolize four different facets of the feminine and represent a fresh way of regarding the feminine principle in astrology, going beyond the relatively simple categories of wife and mother, as represented by Venus and the Moon. The major asteroids are the four largest asteroids in the asteroid belt (located between Mars and Jupiter shown in white) and their qualities are described below.

Ceres Ceres
Keyword: Nurturing
Ceres
Ceres was the first asteroid ever discovered, on New Year's Day in 1801! She is the most massive body in the asteroid belt, and is now defined as a dwarf planet along with Pluto and Eris. Because Ceres is believed to contain a liquid ocean, she is a main target for research of extraterrestrial life.

As goddess of the harvest and the natural process of fertility and renewal, Ceres represents the process of nurturing and motherhood in an individual's chart, and has been attributed to the sign Cancer as a co-ruler with the Moon.

In a chart, an afflicted Ceres by planetary aspect may indicate problems with being able to nurture, or to be nurtured by others, perhaps manifesting in food complexes, or a feeling of rejection by parental figures. When strongly placed, it symbolizes the ability to take on parental responsibilities, especially in a female subject, and also may indicate someone who has a close relationship with the earth, as gardener or grower of food. Also the position of Ceres by house and sign, and its planetary connections, is likely to indicate the way in which motherhood (or parenthood) manifests in one's life.

Pallas Pallas
Keyword: Wisdom
Pallas
The asteroid Pallas (short for Pallas Athene) was the second of the four major asteroids to be discovered, in 1802. Pallas represents the wisdom of the female spirit, as the mythology of Pallas Athene would indicate: born from the head of Zeus, and symbolized by the owl and the snake, Pallas Athene was a powerful symbol for independence and wisdom in the ancient mythology. She did not ally herself with any man, but rather was a strong and warrior-like figure who aided men of good will and whose advice was prized for its intelligence.
The astrology of the asteroid Pallas indicates such a feminine spirit of independence and cool mental judgment.

In an individual chart, Pallas represents the creative use of the mental faculty in combination with ageless wisdom, and is also involved with the arts, especially the plastic arts such as sculpture and pottery, and with medicinal remedies. Its position by house and sign indicates where in one's life the divine spark of creative intelligence and higher wisdom may spring forth.

Juno Juno
Keyword: Marriage
Juno
The asteroid Juno was the third of the four major asteroids to be discovered, in 1805. In mythology Juno (or the Greek Hera) was wife and consort to Jupiter, and therefore the astrology of Juno represents the partnering energy of intimate relationship.
This is also the territory of Venus and the Moon, but where Juno seems to differ is in representing the partnership energy in a new light, as in the more modern issues of where the boundaries are with another person, how much sharing is appropriate, versus holding back, are there issues of bitterness and jealousy, or projected authority and control onto another person, and intimacy needs in general.

When Juno is prominent in a natal chart, all these type of issues are important to the individual. If Juno is aspected by another planet, these issues may be colored by the energy of that planet. Juno's position by house and sign is an indication of the area of life in which these issues will be most important.

Vesta Vesta
Keyword: Self-sufficiency
Vesta
The asteroid Vesta was the last of the four major asteroids to be discovered, in 1807. The mythology of Vesta (or Greek Hestia) is as follows: one of the sisters of Jupiter and Juno, Vesta chose to remain a virgin and not marry. She was the goddess of the hearth fire, which was of utmost importance in ancient times, connoting hospitality and the basic vitality of the home or city-state, and her astrological symbol is the flame. It is interesting to note that Vesta is the brightest of the four asteroids. Her symbolism also suggests the "vestal virgin" temple priestesses of the ancient Geek world, and their commitment to no man, but to their own inner flame of service to the goddess. Their service might even be of a sexual nature, but they remained untouched by any sexual intimacy with another person.
In accordance with its mythology, the asteroid Vesta is involved with both the signs Virgo and Scorpio. In the astrology of Vesta in an individual chart, these issues of sexuality and completeness unto oneself predominate. Possible associations are the woman (or man) who chooses not a mate, but as a nun or monk takes on a higher purpose than normal family life, also issues of sexuality and who is ultimately served in the process, self or other. Thus when Vesta is prominent in the chart, there may be issues with purity, singleness and sexuality either by abstinence or by one involving oneself with multiple partners which yet leave the individual untouched by relationship. The placement of Vesta by house and sign also indicate the area of life where these issues may manifest.

=============================================================


Eris
Eris
Keyword: Feminine Warrior for Soul Purpose

If we take a look at the mythology of the newest planet in our Solar System (even though they are calling her a dwarf) and the events surrounding her discovery, from 2003 - 2006, the idea of potentially violent struggle is indeed paramount and as well the ideal of the vital female warrior. Before being officially named Eris last fall, after the Goddess of Strife and Discord, the new planet, designated 2003 UB313, was called Xena, and the name Persephone was considered. Since Persephone and Xena, the warrior princess of popular culture, are involved in the early naming of Eris, the archetypal image comes to the fore of a perhaps damaged and certainly militant feminism that does not shrink from violence. As for events, the time frame of the discovery matches that of the Iraq War, which can certainly be viewed as a violent struggle for resources.

When Pluto was found in the 1930's, its discovery introduced some dark notions regarding the human condition, of a depth and a power that were previously unacknowledged. It stands to reason that Eris, found even farther out into the dark void at the edge of the solar system, will also. Just as we have grown through our understanding of the astrological Pluto, so too we will grow as we come to integrate the Eris archetype into modern Western Astrology.

The astrology of Eris seems to be related to the no-holds-barred fight for continued existence that is fundamental in all natural process, and for making a stand for what one believes, even if violence is involved. As the sister of Mars, the God of War, Eris willingly sought the battle. There is a side of nature that is quite harsh, a struggle for survival, and this struggle is a fundamental part of the human condition as well, for we are still half animal. Nature can be viewed in a rosy light, as it was in the hippie movement of the sixties, Bambi drinking from a little stream, but underlying this beauty is the possibility of sudden death at any moment since all of nature's children need to eat. Eris is related to this principle, and to the concept of the female warrior that embodies it, and especially to the feminist struggle for rights in a patriarchal society.

See also: Personalized Eris Report, Eris Resources, Historical Survey of Eris

Makemake Symbol
Makemake
Keyword: Earth Issues

This is the second new planet, or dwarf planet, or "plutoid," to be officially named, after being referred to as "Easter bunny" for three years by its discoverer, Mike Brown. The official name refers to the creation god of Easter Island, or Rapa Nui. In size somewhat smaller than either Pluto or Eris, this planet follows a new 21st century tradition of naming discovered planets from the creation deities of indigenous peoples, rather than more classically from the Greco-Roman pantheon of gods and goddesses. The orbital period of Makemake is 306 years. Like Eris, Makemake was discovered near the farthest point of its highly elliptical orbit, and incidentally in an exact inconjunct or 150-degree aspect from Eris within 2 minutes of a degree of longitude.

As the creation god of the Rapa Nui, Makemake symbolizes a connection with environmental sagacity that is entirely appropriate for the troubled earth times, including environmental issues, surrounding its discovery. This is because when Europeans discovered what became known as Easter Island, the Rapa Nui occupied an island entirely denuded of its trees, either because they were cut down or lost to disease, and in their isolated island environment could no longer build canoes or fish and were living a subsistence existence. Of course this island culture is also famous for the multitude of incredibly large stone heads that were carved and erected there, having been transported to the shoreline. The myth involving their creation god Makemake includes a form of worship in which a Birdman was selected from tribal leaders each year. The claimants would select a representative from the best of the young warriors, who would compete by swimming to a neighboring islet, a dangerous journey that involved climbing a large cliff on their return wearing a headdress designed for the purpose of fetching the first bird egg of the season back to the spring festival at the top. Once his champion returned victorious, the selected Birdman for that year would become a powerful shamanic figure, and would meditate and have the big dreams to guide the people and bring his visions to the culture. Makemake is thus a male God, yet with a strong intuitive component.

Taking this segment of ritual practice as an indication of this new planetary energy, we could speculate that the archetype associated with Makemake involves delving down into the dark interior of the psyche in order to obtain a form of received wisdom to be merged with the warrior male outer-oriented energy of the ego. This wisdom can only be found in the inner world, a world that is also connected to Nature and natural process, to natural law, right action, right relationship, and to an internal moral compass, resulting in activism for furthering the culture's evolution. Where he is found in charts there can be found also Earth wisdom and the capacity for spiritual renewal.

The astrology of Makemake is related to love and care for the natural world and for defending Earth's environment. This archetype thus signals a profound connection to nature that is quite similar to the archetype of Haumea, his fellow traveler in the Kuiper Belt, with the same astronomical designation and also named from the pantheon of indigenous gods and goddesses. Indeed, these two are possessed of quite similar orbital periods, being only a little longer than their far better understood cousin, Pluto. They travel around the Zodiac in recent centuries with Haumea leading by a separation of 20 to 40 degrees. As the male God of the pair, and seemingly the more militant of the two, Makemake is associated with the wisdom of the natural world, and also with an activist stance for advancing important environmental and social issues that are highlighted in this 21st century.

Haumea Symbol
Haumea
Keyword: Earth Goddess

The third trans-Neptunian Object, or TNO, to be officially designated as a dwarf planet, after Eris and MakeMake, Haumea was discovered just after Christmas 2004 and nicknamed "Santa" by discoverer Mike Brown's team before being named for the Hawaiian creation goddess. Its discovery was officially announced on July 29th, 2005, by his group. Haumea is different from other TNOs in that it is rocky, as befits a goddess of the earth, and rotating extremely rapidly - a revolution every 4 hours. As a result, its shape is elongated, like a small cigar. Haumea's extreme elongation makes it unique among TNOs, with its greatest axis twice as long as its shortest. Its orbital period is 284 years. It was discovered when it was near to its farthest distance from the Sun, or its aphelion, as were MakeMake and Eris.

Creation goddess of the islands of Hawaii, Haumea was the source of many gods and goddesses as well as of the race of humankind. Pele, Hi'iaka, Namaka, Laka and many others were her offspring. Her skill at childbirth is recounted in countless stories. Children sprang from different parts of her body, Hi'iaka from her mouth and Namaka from her breasts. She rules over fertility and childbirth. She possessed a magic stick from the Makalei tree that would enable her to conjure up fish and other edibles, and therefore she is also associated with a never-failing food supply. She also has the power of eternal youth. With each birth she was destroyed and subsequently recreated herself. This choice of planetary archetype arising in these times would seem to support the environmental concerns of dwindling resources and the response of fecund creativity that gives forth abundance and life itself in response to deprivation.

The astrology of Haumea is related to love of the natural world and to the fecundity of natural process. This archetype thus signals profound connection to Nature, implying connection to Source, and as well to natural law, to right action, right relationship, and truth-telling. When strongly placed, those natives also frequently display a form of natural charisma. It may well develop that this planetary archetype comes to represent the power of life to triumph over adversity by drawing upon inner respect and understanding of Nature herself, and for an innate moral compass that all of us possess, but do not always act upon. Where she is located in the chart will be a source of inner strength, spiritual connection, and protean flexibility.

Makemake

Nov. 20th, 2023 04:22 pm
has piqued your interest, further examples of my proposed interpretation are found in this online article on Makemake (PDF), which is an excerpt of a larger chapter from my book on all the Dwarf Planets, called More Plutos.

Makemake keywords: Shock, surprise, sudden, jarring, electric, lightning, flash, bizarre, crazy, inexplicable, out of this world, high-flown, "it came out of nowhere," didn't see it coming, falling from the sky, soaring overhead, rocket science, sink hole, earthquake, explosive volcano, assumed dead but found alive.

Makemake professions/traits: Astronaut, test pilot, genius savant, Asperger's syndrome, US president, terrorist (usually an expendable pawn), executioner, scientist studying unusual phenomena or objects not directly accessible (cosmology, black holes, quanta, Higgs boson, Mars rover exploration, deep-space probes). This list is far from exhaustive.

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