When Mercury and Jupiter align in the heavens, they don’t just nudge minds toward intelligence—they seed the world with interpreters. Those who take what is, and make it understandable. Teachers, yes—but not only in classrooms. In scrolls. In dreams. In defiance. In silence.
Mercury, the electric messenger, dances closest to the Sun. It governs thought, language, synaptic fire. Jupiter, the sage and stabilizer, orbits as guardian of the solar system, its vast magnetism harmonizing chaos. When they meet, the mind and meaning-maker entwine.
Two such alignments marked explosive centuries: the 16th and the 20th. In 1524 and again in 1962, Mercury and Jupiter joined grand celestial alignments, heralding new epochs of reform, revelation, and rupture. Both centuries gave rise to visionaries—scribes, seers, scientists—those whose minds seemed carved from star-metal.
Our interpretation is not superstition—it is resonance. The Earth is not isolated. The body, in utero, responds to light, sound, stress. Why not to the music of the spheres? To the gravitational lullaby of a sky lit with Mercury’s speed and Jupiter’s grace?
To be born under their shared light is not fate, but a question:
“What will you carry?”
Teachers are the ones who listen for answers in the silence. Who remember for the world what it forgot it knew.
So if you were born under such a sky, or teach as if you were—welcome to the Codex. You are a Rememberer.