So, you’re asking about Galactic Astrology? Yeah, I dipped my toes into that whole scene for a while. It wasn’t like I woke up one day and decided to become a cosmic guru or anything, but you know how it is, you stumble across something online, and down the rabbit hole you go.

How It All Started For Me
I was just browsing, really. Getting a bit bored with the same old stuff, and this term “Galactic Astrology” popped up. Sounded kind of grand, didn’t it? I figured, what the heck, let’s see what this is all about. My first thought was, “Is this like, astrology but with aliens?” Not quite, but it was definitely different from just reading about your Sun sign.
My initial process was pretty simple: I just started searching. Reading articles, watching a few videos here and there. Some people were super into it, talking about energies from distant stars and galaxies, things I’d never even considered. It was a whole new vocabulary, a whole new map of the sky, or so it seemed. I tried to find some beginner-friendly stuff, just to get a basic idea. It felt like a big, mysterious ocean, and I was just wading in at the edge.
Trying to Make Sense of It
After a bit of that, I thought, “Okay, how do I actually do any of this?” I found out there are specific points, like the Galactic Center, or certain fixed stars that practitioners look at. I even tried to find these in relation to my own, regular birth chart. Let me tell you, it wasn’t straightforward. It felt a lot like trying to assemble some complicated piece of furniture with instructions written in a language I only half-understood.
- I spent a good few evenings just trying to understand the different terminology.
- I’d look up one thing, and that would lead to three other things I didn’t know.
- Then I tried to see if any of these galactic influences actually felt, well, real to me.
One thing I noticed pretty quickly was that a lot of the interpretations seemed very… flexible. You know? One person would say this star cluster meant one thing, and another source would have a completely different spin. It wasn’t like learning basic math where two plus two always equals four. This felt more like poetry, open to all sorts of personal feelings and meanings. That was a bit of a hurdle for me, I guess. I like things a bit more concrete sometimes.
So, What Did I Actually Do With It?
After all that poking around and reading, did I become a galactic astrologer? Nope, definitely not. I didn’t suddenly feel connected to the Pleiades or anything like that. For me, the whole exercise was more about, I don’t know, stretching my brain a bit. It definitely made me think about how huge the universe is, and how many different ways people try to find meaning in it all. That part was actually pretty interesting.
As for practical, day-to-day changes? Can’t say there were any. I didn’t find any magic button that told me what to do with my life based on some far-off galaxy. But the “practice” itself, the act of researching and trying to understand something so different, that was the interesting bit.
Honestly, I just took it all in, chewed on it for a while, and then I kind of just… filed it away. It’s like when you visit a really unusual art exhibit. You look at everything, some of it makes you think, some of it just confuses you, and then you go back to your everyday life, maybe with a slightly wider view of things. That was my journey with Galactic Astrology. No big epiphanies, just a curious exploration off the beaten path. And sometimes, that’s worthwhile in itself.