Eris Sesquiquadrate Natal Mars
Transiting Eris sesquiquadrate your natal Mars creates a particular friction: the part of you that moves forward meets the part that refuses to be overlooked. Mars is your capacity to act, to want, to push toward what matters. Eris, in transit, presses against that directness with a question that feels like an obstacle: Am I being heard? Am I being erased? The sesquiquadrate is not a soft angle, it creates irritation, a sense that your assertion is somehow incomplete or that your effort is being dismissed even as you exert it.
During this transit, straightforward action may feel insufficient. You push, but something in you suspects the push won't land, or that you're being excluded from the outcome even as you're doing the work. This often manifests as anger that arrives before clarity, frustration at a system, a person, or a dynamic that seems designed to neutralize your effort. The real pressure here is that you accelerate your assertion in response to the phantom exclusion, acting harder rather than pausing to ask whether the resistance is real or whether you're fighting a story about being peripheral.
What surfaces during this window is the difference between asserting what you want and fighting to prove you matter. You may find yourself in situations where you're tempted to make your presence undeniable through force, insistence, overstatement, or refusal to be ignored, the very moves that confirm the exclusion you're reacting against. The friction this transit creates can clarify which of your drives are genuine and which are reactions to perceived dismissal. That distinction matters more than the intensity of your push.
The useful move is to stay aware that Eris is showing you where you've internalized the belief that you must fight to be counted. Direct your Mars consciously during this period. Know what you actually want separate from the need to prove you're not invisible. The cost of confusing these two is exhaustion and resentment, the feeling that you've been fighting the whole time and still weren't enough.





























