Chiron Sesquiquadrate Natal Jupiter
Transiting Chiron sesquiquadrate your natal Jupiter creates an awkward angle between your wound-sense and your capacity for belief. Sesquiquadrate is friction without direct opposition, a 135-degree pressure that demands adjustment rather than resolution. During this transit, what you have relied on to feel safe or expansive may suddenly feel insufficient or even hollow. Jupiter's optimism and faith meet Chiron's deeper knowledge of what has been broken, and the two cannot easily reconcile.
You may find yourself caught between two conflicting impulses: the urge to believe in your own worth and potential, and a quiet, stubborn doubt about whether that belief can actually hold. This often surfaces as overcommitting to a vision of abundance or success, only to hit a point where you recognize the foundation beneath it is less solid than you thought. You say yes to the opportunity before checking whether your actual confidence matches the yes. The discomfort here is not that you lack faith, it is that your faith and your wound-awareness are suddenly pulling in different directions, and neither will quiet down.
This period can clarify where you have been using Jupiter's expansiveness to bypass Chiron's legitimate caution. Generosity, optimism, and risk-taking are real strengths, but they can also be ways of not sitting with the feeling that something is not safe. Over this window, the cost of that bypass becomes visible. You may experience setbacks in finances, relationships, or self-regard that feel less like failure and more like a reckoning, a moment where the story you have been telling about your own resilience meets the actual texture of your vulnerability. This is not punishment; it is clarification.
The invitation is not to abandon Jupiter's gifts, but to let Chiron's wisdom inform them. Abundance that acknowledges loss is more durable than abundance that denies it. Belief that has survived doubt is more grounded than belief that has never been tested. During this transit, allow yourself to feel both the wound and the capacity to move forward from it, not by choosing one over the other, but by letting them inform each other.





























