There are moments when the sky reminds us that clarity is not constant.
A solar eclipse aligned with a New Moon is one of those moments.
For a brief time, the light withdraws.
The familiar becomes unfamiliar.
The visible becomes shadow.
Across cultures, eclipses have been seen as thresholds.
Not good. Not bad.
But powerful.

A New Moon already represents beginnings — seeds planted in darkness.
An eclipse intensifies this by removing what blocks the next cycle.
That is why eclipses often feel emotional.
Or disruptive.
Or strangely quiet.
You may notice:
Sudden realizations.
Unexpected endings.
Old doubts resurfacing.
A need to retreat inward.
This is not a moment for immediate action.
It is a moment for witnessing.

Eclipses accelerate what was already unstable.
If something leaves during this time — a pattern, a belief, a relationship — it was already loosening at the roots.
The invitation is simple:
Pause before reacting.
Listen before deciding.
Observe before rebuilding.
In Right Living, darkness is not an obstacle to clarity.
It is part of the process.
The light always returns.
But what remains after the shadow passes — that is what truly belongs.

