Your August 2023 horoscope reflects a journey through this summer’s Venus Retrograde. Venus essentially making a remix—this is the time to notice how the goal posts of your values and desires have shifted. Maybe you revisit an old love or artistic muse. If you’re on the road this month, you might find yourself physically, or emotionally, back in a familiar setting where your heart was once on fire. The question to ask this time is: What lights you up now?
Steph Koyfman is a writer and astrologer best known for her work as Lady Cazimi.
The urge to try new flavors and spend a little too lavishly will be heightened as Venus squares Uranus (on the 9th) and Jupiter (on the 22nd). It’s an indulgent summer, for better or for worse, but at least you won’t be bored at the gelato stand.
On August 23, the Sun enters Virgo, and Mercury stations retrograde in the same sign. Virgo Season is perfect for visiting wine country or taking any slightly nerdy, educational trips you’ve had on the back burner, so consider this your permission (not that you needed it…). Mercury will be up to Mercury’s tricks, though, so budget in extra time to get to your destination, and avoid booking future travel until mid-September if possible. Otherwise, it might not hurt to spend a little extra for a refundable ticket.
Below, find the complete August 2023 horoscope for every sign. A quick note: We refer to your signs as “rising” signs, also known as your ascendant sign. Horoscopes are more accurate when read this way—using your birth time and location, you can quickly find your rising sign online (it takes less than 30 seconds).
There are months to put your nose to the grindstone, and months to give yourself over to play. This August, the work is to follow your impulses to wherever life feels most creative, invigorating, and juicy. For parents, try taking your kids somewhere that will allow you to reconnect with your own inner child. Revisiting a destination where you were once wildly in love might also help you recover a sense of eros and aliveness that has potentially gotten lost in the shuffle of obligations. With Jupiter squaring Venus from your second house of resources, you’ll probably be tempted to overspend on lavish meals and other treats, so try and stay attuned to what feels like a resonant “yes” and what feels like mindless consumption.
With your ruling planet, Venus, deep in the throes of her retrograde season, no one will fault you if you cool your jets for a bit this month. With the retrograde taking place in your fourth house of home, family, and ancestry, it’s very possible you’ll literally be spending more time at home, or potentially going back to your hometown to mend some ties or resolve an important matter of
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Labor Day is right around the corner, and what better way is there to kiss summer goodbye than with one last adventure? Right now, a handful of travel companies are coming in clutch with late summer deals, while others are looking ahead to fall, winter, and beyond to make sure you have something to look forward to when the temperatures start dropping.
Airfare costs for domestic flights are expected to level off and even drop this month before rising again ahead of the holiday season, according to a new report.
Travelers to Las Vegas can add more items to their to-do list this month. JW Marriott Las Vegas Resort & Spa and Rampart Casino have announced some exciting August 2023 promotions, including CBD spa treatments and other promotions for National Relaxation Day, a variety of food specials, free entry to see live bands and opportunities to win a variety of prizes, including cash.
August brings the last month of peak seasonal temperatures. There is also a last hurrah of summer travel before school resumes. Labor Day weekend signals that fall is right around the corner. As has been the case for most of the year, the travel restrictions are minimal for most destinations.
July delighted stargazers with the year’s first full supermoon, and there’s more where that came from this August — a lot more. This month will see not one but two supermoons, along with multiple planet sightings, the peak of a powerful meteor shower, and ideal star-cluster viewing.
The first thing that strikes me about Kalma Saun is that there is nowhere to hide. Brilliant white tiles stretch from floor to ceiling and buffed steel faucets reflect the glare from fluorescent lights—as if I am standing in an interrogation room rather than Tallinn’s oldest public sauna.
Earlier this month, the Fury 325, a roller coaster at North Carolina amusement park Carowinds, was shut down after a visitor spotted a crack in one of the ride's steel support beams.
You’ve probably been warned to follow pedestrian signals in New York City if you’d prefer not to risk your life. But, you may not know the reason Manhattan’s summer streets routinely fill with crowds of people unapologetically snapping photos. For a few glorious moments twice per year, that rule of thumb is intrepidly ignored.
In the days after Britons voted in favor of leaving the European Union, England seems to be learning a lot about itself—and not in the way you’d hope. The social media hashtag #PostRefRacism emerged this week to highlight increased public expressions of racism in the U.K., ranging from xenophobic graffiti and verbal threats to public harassment.
Airlines for America, the primary trade group representing U.S. airlines, is expecting a record rise in air travelers this spring—4% compared to last year. That nets out to roughly 145 million travelers through April 30, or 2.4 million travelers per day.
There was considerable hand-wringing in the run-up to the Thanksgiving holiday that travelers would be facing something just this side of hell on earth. Packed planes. Overflowing overhead bins. Overcrowded gate areas. Endless check-in lines. And even longer lines to clear security checkpoints.