![]() (Click Astrology Hub’s Free Gift offer when it pops up to watch the Mars retrograde video for a visual explanation.) Planets with orbits closer to the Sun have a shorter distance to travel therefore they routinely “lap” the outer planets. We all know the planets revolve around the Sun. Certainly, as any astrologer knows, we don’t see this many retrogrades happening at the same time very often.īut, I wondered, exactly how often it does happen? And what might it mean for us? Understanding Retrogradesīefore we can explore the question together, you’ll have to understand what a retrograde actually is. “ Five retrogrades occurring at once is rare, occurring only 4 percent of the time.” ![]() While I was working on Astrology Hub’s Full Moon in Scorpio article last week, I was struck by a factoid shared by astrologer Jamie Partridge: ![]() As Mercury turns retrograde this week, he’s joining four other back-tracking planetary players - Mars, Pluto, Saturn and Jupiter.
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