According to 5-D astrologers, the opening Saturn in Pisces cycle is tied to a shift in focus. Specifically, shifting attention from expressing your uniqueness to expressing the wholeness of what is integrated within you.
This process will take a fairly long time. Saturn will travel through Pisces until February 14, 2026.
According to 5-D astrologers, Pisces is about boundlessness, about potentials and possibilities.
In this sense, we are given the opportunity to feel an emotional connection with the eternal and boundless part of ourselves.
Read on to learn what obstacles may arise on this path, and how to step over fears to see boundless potentials.
The “Fly in the Ointment” from Saturn in Pisces and What to Do About It
When we talk about boundlessness, eternity, and the endless possibilities available to us, fears often start to rise up inside.
These are the very fears that ultimately prevent us from taking advantage of new opportunities.
This is not just about the opportunities you see, but also about those you simply cannot see because of the fear that has paralyzed you.
Accordingly, in the coming years, these themes will gradually begin to surface, show themselves, and unfold.
On one hand, the time of Saturn in Pisces is great. It allows you to expand and see the boundlessness of your soul’s nature, including its immortality.
On the other hand, it is a time when you will have to come face to face with your own fears. This especially applies to those people who are generally driven by fears in life.
Most fears are virtual in nature, meaning they are not tied to a real physical threat to a person’s life.
The only thing you can do with such virtual fears is to dive into them. There are no other options.
With preliminary preparation or by pushing through yourself, you dive into fears.
It’s great if you can do this virtually.
Exercise: Virtual Diving into a Fearful Situation
Take a situation that frightens you and start to zoom in on it, like on a tablet, looking more and more closely at the details.
Continue doing this until the situation turns into (light and dark) pixels. Then dive into the situation – as if between the pixels.
This exercise allows you to virtually dive deep – into the fear.
In doing so, you prepare yourself for the fact that diving into a situation/fear is possible and necessary, and most importantly, that you are capable of it.
Having prepared yourself this way, you do it in reality – you enter the situation that frightens you.
This exercise is suitable for working with psychological/virtual fears that are not associated with a physical threat to life, where the whole body reacts and is engaged.
You can learn more about the effect of Saturn on your life from the free course “Cosmic Laws”.
Ways to Work with Critical Situations
Trust is an attribute of the 4th dimension. Faith is an attribute of the 5th dimension.
In this case, we are not talking about faith in someone, but about Faith with a capital F.
Many people at different periods of their lives have hit rock bottom, when they lost absolutely all reference points and, in the end, gained a sense of faith.
When you “hit rock bottom,” you may feel like giving up and checking out of life. In such moments, a simple technique can help you, where you write out a “backup scenario.”
Write down what you will do if, in such chaotic and unstable times as now, something goes “critically wrong” for you. Based on real premises, you map out different options.
This greatly helps the mind, which by its nature dislikes uncertainty. The mind struggles when it is deprived of any reference points.
When you create a thread of reference points for your mind, you help it loosen its grip – to let go of those very frightening thoughts and negative scenarios.
Not everyone will be able to use this technique. This primarily applies to people who already generate an endless number of worst-case scenarios.
Such people need to move in the opposite direction – to expand their consciousness based on the principle “there are at least five scenarios” – neutral, good, better, best, and some fantastic one.
See also Why you choose between bad and worse and how to move to multi-option choice
By mapping out a “backup scenario,” you may notice that you are ready to do many things that previously caused you confusion or resistance.
Such writing helps you become aware of those things regarding which internal changes have already occurred within you, but which have remained unnoticed by you until now.
For example, you are going through a relationship crisis. You are “thrashing about” because you are emotionally and morally unprepared for a breakup. But your mind, at the same time, may be parallelly mapping out a backup plan – where you will live, what steps to take in case of a divorce, etc.
In other words, you “play out the situation.”
You draw up a scenario, play it out, and no longer think about it because a certain certainty appears here.
Often, after such a “playing out of the situation,” it can resolve itself.
When faced with tense situations, remember that all of this is temporary and transient. In your toolbox, you have a huge number of tools that can help you.
If some unpleasant news or thought has still affected you, it means that on the emotional/mental plane, you have hooks, triggers that you are holding onto.
Your task is to find those parts that got triggered and remove those hooks.
Self-reflection on the theme “what am I investing in”
According to the law of conservation of energy, nothing comes from nowhere and disappears into nowhere.
From a metaphysical point of view, where you direct your attention, energy flows, and it multiplies. Such is the mechanism of creation.
When fears rise within you and you go along with them, you thereby strengthen them. A common case is when you strengthen what you do not want to see in your life.
Your task is to look at what you have available in your life.
The human psyche is structured in such a way that negativity, evoking strong emotions, draws attention to itself.
Positivity does not evoke the same emotions as negativity. A person sees something pleasant, mentally checks a box – “well, that’s good,” if they even notice it at all.
But if it’s some kind of mess, emotions flare up immediately, a lot comes up, the person thinks about it, chews it over, constantly returns to it.
In the end, it turns out that you invest less energy (attention) into something good than into what irritates, outrages, or displeases you.
You pour your entire energetic volume into the negative, and as a result, it multiplies.
Now take a look at your life – what is currently in abundance in it?
That is exactly what you have been investing your energy into and directing your attention toward.
The best activity for reassessment and self-reflection is to review your life stories from the perspective of where you actually “invested,” resulting in what you have today.
It doesn’t matter what happened in the past. We are talking about the present moment, here and now.
What do you have available in the present?
For some, it’s endless anxiety; for others, a state of relaxation; for others, issues with the body.
It could be anything. In any case, it means that at some stage in your life, you invested heavily in exactly that.
And if this is not what you wanted to invest in and get as a result, reflect on how you can ensure that you invest more in and support something else in your life.
Engage in analyzing your personal creations. This is one of the tools for reclaiming responsibility for yourself.
When you see that some of your actions, choices, and decisions have led to something undesirable increasing and multiplying in your life, through the process of elimination, you can arrive at other choices and actions.
Look, observe, reflect, draw conclusions.
At the same time, learn responsibility for where you invest your energy and emotions.
Multiply the good, the kind, the bright – in your thoughts, words, and daily actions.
See also: Inverse Polarity, or Why What You Don’t Want Comes True
What helps you step over your fears? What proven methods do you use?
The article is based on a broadcast from the #couch_conversation section “#132 Reassessment and Reflection”