Astrology Fun, Part 2

It’s been a while since I’ve created a new Astrology Fun personality sentence builder (or character creator), but it’s been even longer since I’ve updated the blog with more astrology fun charts, so it’s high time!

I use your Sun sign, Moon sign, and Rising sign to create a sentence about you or your personality. It’s very unscientific, and it relies on astrological stereotypes, but it’s generally light-hearted. If yours doesn’t suit you, then consider it a fun “character creator” tool for writing or role playing or whatever.

Each chart starts with a carrier phrase and then completes the sentence using various adjectives, nouns, and predicates based on those three signs. The order of the natal chart positions changes from chart to chart, but the zodiac signs are always in standard order.

I use these three natal chart positions/signs because they’re what most people bother to remember from their natal charts, assuming they’ve even had one drawn up for them. If you’re not sure what sun signs, moon signs, and rising signs/ascendants are, then you should definitely get a natal chart spun up for you. You can find free natal chart generators online that just need your date, time, and location of birth. Those are all necessary for determining your rising sign, and they can be necessary for determining your moon sign. (Don’t get cute and try to change the location and amend the time based just on time zones because it doesn’t always work; I’ve tried.) And if you’re not sure of your birth time, I have a recent post designed to help you out: An Amateur’s Attempt at Determining Birth Time for Astrology.

In case this is your first time seeing some of my Astrology Fun charts, the first post about it was back in March of 2019. That post includes some of the early ones (including some of the most fun ones), as well as more of an explanation for how they work. I suggest you read that first, but in case you don’t, I’m repeating the general instructions here.

There are only five new ones, and the first is a continuation of the genre fiction/genre movie ones that I originally posted more than a year ago: Were I in the Wild West …

How These Work

For each chart, you start with the carrier phrase at the top of the chart.

  • For example, if I’m using the Wild West chart, then I will start with “Were I in the Wild West, I’d be a(n) …”

Then you find the zodiac sign in the first column that matches the first natal chart position (i.e., sun sign, moon sign, or rising sign) in the top row. The words in that cell continue the sentence.

  • For example, the Wild West chart starts with the rising sign, and my rising sign is Capricorn, so I would then take the word “bow-legged” as the next part of the sentence.

  • “Were I in the Wild West, I’d be a(n) …” becomes “Were I in the Wild West, I’d be a bow-legged …”

You then find the zodiac sign for the second natal chart position and add that to the sentence.

  • For example, the Wild West chart has the sun sign next, and my sun sign is Taurus, so I would then take the word “innkeeper” as the next part of the sentence.

  • “Were I in the Wild West, I’d be a bow-legged …” becomes “Were I in the Wild West, I’d be a bow-legged innkeeper …”

Last, you find the zodiac sign for the final natal chart position and finish the sentence with that phrase. This is usually the longest part of the sentence and, in some ways, it’s what the chart is really about.

  • For example, the Wild West chart has the moon sign last because that is most closely tied to inner desires and thus good for plot twists or real character development. My moon sign is Leo, so I would then take the phrase “who shoots the sheriff” as the last part of the sentence.

  • “Were I in the Wild West, I’d be a bow-legged innkeeper …” finally becomes “Were I in the Wild West, I’d be a bow-legged innkeeper who shoots the sheriff.”

See how that works? Enjoy!