18–24 May 2026 Theme: A fault-line opens under the family home.
The week arrives like a slammed door in a quiet house. Something in the walls of your life shifts, loudly, and the echo runs through every room.
The Sun burns in Taurus in your fourth house, the room where family claims, property papers and ancestral obligations are kept. A conversation or event around the home refuses to wait: a landlord names new terms, a parent demands a decision, or a repair turns into a full structural issue. With the Sun close to Uranus, the news does not follow the script — an unexpected move-out date, a surprise offer on a place, a sibling changing their stance on an inheritance. This is not mood; it is an email, a phone call, a key handed back, and it alters the map of where and with whom you live.
Your chart rulers split the action. Saturn in Aries in your third house of documents, siblings and local dealings tries to hold the line, but in Aries — a sign with no patience for Saturn’s slow, careful method — it cannot enforce the usual delays. You are pushed to sign, answer, or push back faster than you like. A brother, sister, neighbour or agent presses for an immediate reply while you are still reading the small print. Uranus in Gemini in your fifth house joins Mercury, sending jolts through your pleasures and responsibilities: your child’s timetable changes without warning, a lover alters plans, a creative project suddenly wants centre stage the same week the family situation peaks.
Venus and Mars, tight by sextile between your fifth and third houses, turn conversations into sparks. A flirtation slips into a blunt exchange. A meeting about a child’s schooling or a shared hobby becomes the place where an old third-house wound — shown by Mars conjunct Chiron — flares. Words you thought you had swallowed years ago come out sharp. Jupiter in Cancer in your sixth house expands the workload: as the domestic story unfolds, extra duties at work or a health regimen demand punctual attention, not promises.
The governing polarity runs between fourth-house home and third-house paperwork and siblings. A decision about bricks and bloodlines locks into writing, or a sibling’s stance on a property or family duty becomes final. By week’s end, something in your living situation stands changed in fact, not theory: a room stands empty, a box is packed, a set of keys sits in a different hand.
Call the family member or landlord who controls the property in question and state, in clear terms, whether you are staying under their conditions or setting a move-out date.