If you want a relationship to last, you need to have Saturn contacts.
Saturn is the planet of responsibility, hard work, reality, dedication and time. A relationship can’t survive if the people in it don’t feel a sense of responsibility for one another. Any meaningful relationship requires work and effort, and a mutual sense of obligation binds people together.
Relationships that last have to pass a reality test. Summer romances don’t need Saturn contacts, flings don’t need Saturn contacts, but if you want lasting love, you want Saturn contacts. Saturn contacts form enduring bonds.
The negative side to Saturn contacts is that they can feel like a burden. They can be like a heavy weight resting on your shoulders.
If you are the Saturn person in the aspect connection then you may limit or restrict the other person in some way, or that person will feel like you do. The other person in the relationship may feel inhibited around you.
At worst, Saturn contacts are just depressing. When responsibility and duty overtake pleasure and fun a relationship loses its appeal.
Ready or not, Saturn makes you grow up. Saturn ages whatever it touches. The planets that Saturn contacts get a lesson in maturity.
If you don’t want to grow up, you might reject Saturn’s energy. You may resist responsibility and maturity and feel that people are holding you back. You may resist forming lasting connections with people.
What does each planet gain from a Saturn contact in synastry?
Sun-Saturn
The Sun person learns to be a more mature version of who he is. He comes into his own.
Moon-Saturn
The Moon person gains emotional maturity and no longer gives in to child-like emotional displays.
Mercury-Saturn
The Mercury person learns to communicate like an adult.
Venus-Saturn
The Venus person learns what it’s like to be in a mature relationship.
Mars-Saturn
The Mars person learns to act like an adult.
Jupiter-Saturn
The Jupiter person learns about realistic optimism and expectations.
Saturn-Saturn
These two Saturns learn about shared responsibility and equal dedication.
Uranus-Saturn
The Uranus person learns to temper the urge for freedom with the need to establish ties.
Neptune-Saturn
The Neptune person learns the limits of illusion, fantasy and idealism.
Pluto-Saturn
The Pluto person learns about the limits of power struggles in a relationship.
Saturn
- Cronus, Chronus, or Kronos (the word cronos may mean "crow")
- Father Time
- Ate his kids
- Castrated his father, Uranus
- Crow
- Sickle
- Brother, and husband, of Rhea
- Father of Jupiter, Neptune, Pluto, and Chiron
- Grandfather of Persephone
- Son of Uranus
- Youngest of the 7 Titans
- Jupiter / Saturn make a conjunction every 19.859 years
- Saturn / Uranus make a conjunction every 45.363 years
- Saturn / Neptune make a conjunction every 35.87 years
- Saturn / Pluto make a conjunction every 33.42 years
- Ageing & Maturation
- Discipline & Restraint
- Fear & Reality Checks
- Limitation & Boundaries
- Making do with less
- Manifestation & Crystallization
- Responsibility & Hard Work
- Seriousness & Gravity
- Structure & Order
- Wisdom gained through age & experience
- Working harder for the same outcome
- Elder
- Father Time
- Grandparent
- Killjoy
- Loner
- Old Fart / Fuddy duddy
- Old Guard
- Old Maid / Cat Lady / Spinster (maybe with Venus or Moon)
- "Old Soul?" (with Neptune)
- Rule Maker
- Stick in the mud
- The Denied
- The Establishment
- The Neglected
- The Wizened
- Wise person
- Cut back
- Demarcate your boundaries
- Draw a line in the sand
- Get real
- Get serious
- Get your affairs in order
- Give yourself a reality check
- Go minimal
- Just say no!
- Learn the lesson, then move on
- Less is more
- Limit interations wherever Saturn falls
- Trim the fat
- Use your time wisely
- Aches & pains
- Aging
- Cut backs
- Getting wrinkles
- Going bald
- Gray hair
- Lack
- Limitation
- Low resources
- Maturation
- Neglect
- Responsibility
- Restrictions
- Slim margins
- Trimming
- Working harder for the same outcome
- Pushing Through Time: Synodic Cycles and Their Developing Phases by Georgia Stathis
- The Greek Myths: Volumes 1 & 2 by Robert Graves