There are seasons in life that don’t arrive with urgency. They arrive quietly.
This is transition energy — the kind that doesn’t demand action, productivity, or immediate answers. Instead, it asks for awareness. A pause. A moment of honesty about what’s no longer working the way it once did.
In astrology, this kind of energy mirrors the waning moon phase: a period associated with release rather than accumulation. It’s not about building something new yet. It’s about noticing what’s ready to be set down.
This phase often brings:
- A desire to let go of habits that quietly drain you
- A rethinking of promises made during exhaustion or survival mode
- Old goals losing their emotional charge — without failure, without guilt
At the same time, many people experience a pull toward the future. Ideas feel more visionary. Thoughts wander toward community, purpose, and what could be next — even while the body asks for rest. That tension can feel confusing, but it’s natural.
Where Hoodoo wisdom meets modern science
Periods of transition tend to increase mental activity while physical energy lags behind. Neurologically, your brain is reorganizing — evaluating patterns, updating priorities, scanning for what comes next. Spiritually, this moment is often described as the thinning: insight arriving before strength does.
Nothing is wrong with you if clarity shows up before motivation.
Instead of pushing through this phase, try working with it:
- Write down what feels heavy, not what feels urgent
- Clean one small space — a desk, a purse, unused phone apps
- Practice saying no without offering an explanation
These aren’t avoidance behaviors. They’re preparatory ones.
You’re not procrastinating.
You’re clearing the ground so what comes next has somewhere to land.
