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Moon Sesquiquadrate Neptune

135° · minor aspect · tense · default orb ±2°

Moon sesquiquadrate Neptune joins the luminary of body and instinct to the modern planet of dissolution at 135 degrees, an angle whose tense minor rank places the pairing among the quieter afflictions of twentieth-century practice. Practitioners read the combination as feeling diffused: moods without evident source, domestic matters entangled in vagueness, sympathy that erodes boundary. Neptune's correspondence lists contribute the sea, chemicals, and imagery, the Moon's contribute household and the public, and writers locate the friction where those registers cross, in collective sentiment and in imagination flooding routine. The minor angle keeps the note faint but persistent.

Traditional reading

Both the aspect and the planet lie outside classical doctrine, the sesquiquadrate belonging to the Kepler-era minors and Neptune to the discoveries of 1846, so no sect, dignity, or reception scheme was ever framed for the pair. The Moon applies and separates within hours, which leads practitioners to weight the contact only when close in a nativity. Psychological astrologers tend to read the angle as porousness of feeling, while the event-oriented cosmobiology school listed Moon-Neptune hard minors under deception, sensitivity, and weakened vitality, a divergence of school rather than of source.

Classical reading

One and a half squares (135°). Classified as inharmonious. Adds friction similar to the semisquare.

Modern reading

Modern reading: agitating tension late in a developmental cycle. Pressure to express or resolve.

The two bodies

Other MoonNeptune aspects

More on the Sesquiquadrate aspect in general.

This is cultural and astronomical reference, not personal prediction or advice.

Last reviewed .