Your Birthday
Born on March 14? Your zodiac sign is Pisces (23°-24° Pisces). The Moon in the Pluto decan is not fear of the dark — it is the capacity to navigate through darkness with a sensitivity that light-dwellers cannot develop.
March 14 at 23°–24° Pisces brings the Moon (XVIII) into the Pluto-ruled third decan, creating a personality that has developed extraordinary navigational capacity in the unconscious realms. The Sabian symbol of a candle burning in a sealed chamber underground captures the essence: the native has learned to find their way in complete darkness, using a light that is invisible to those who have not descended to the same depth. The Moon in this position is not the Moon of surface emotion (the tides of daily feeling) but the Moon of the deep collective unconscious — the realm of archetypes, ancestral memory, and the foundational structures of the psyche.
The Pluto sub-rulership gives this lunar navigation a quality of inevitability. The native did not choose to descend — they were called. The deep unconscious is not an optional exploration for them but the territory they inhabit. Dreams are vivid, premonitions are common, and the native has learned to read the symbolic language of the psyche with a fluency that those who live on the surface cannot match. The Pluto influence ensures that this depth is not romantic but transformative — the native does not merely visit the unconscious; they are changed by what they find there.
Number 25 — Depth Navigation — adds the dimension of mastery to the lunar capacity. Twenty-five reduces to 7 (2+5=7), the number of wisdom and spiritual understanding, suggesting that the native's navigation of the depths is not instinctive but developed — a skill honed through repeated descents and returns. The personality tension is between the comfort of the depths (the native is at home in the dark) and the requirement to function in the surface world (where the candle's light is invisible, and the native's skills are not understood).
March 14 natives bring the quality of deep navigation to relationships. They can find their way through the most difficult emotional territory — relationship crises, unconscious patterns, the hidden dynamics that surface couples cannot perceive. Their love is expressed through the capacity to accompany their partner into the depths and find a way back. They are not afraid of the relationship's shadow material because they have navigated deeper waters alone.
The challenge is that the partner may not want to descend to the depths. The native's comfort with the dark can be frightening to someone who has never developed their own navigation skills. The native must learn that not every relationship issue requires a journey to the underworld — some problems are surface problems and can be solved on the surface. Partners who are themselves depth-oriented, who are willing to explore the unconscious dimensions of the relationship, will find the March 14 native an unparalleled guide through the dark.
Careers that reward depth navigation and unconscious literacy: depth psychology, dream work, artistic creation that channels archetypal material, research into the collective unconscious, and any role where the capacity to navigate the unseen dimensions of human experience is the primary competence. The native excels in work that requires descent — the period of immersion in the problem before the solution emerges. Career friction arises in environments that deny the existence of unconscious dynamics or that require all work to be done on the surface.