Natasha Weber on Cosmic Climate, Free Will, and Navigating the 2026 Transition
Something feels off in 2026, and you already know it. Maybe you can't name it precisely, but there's a tilt to the world right now, a sense that the ground beneath familiar systems is shifting in ways that resist easy explanation. If you've caught yourself staring at headlines with a mix of dread and curiosity, wondering whether this stretch of uncertainty is just noise or something more structural, this conversation is for you.
I sat down with Natasha Weber [https://www.astrotash.com/], the award-winning Australian astrologer known as Astro Tash, to explore a question that's been circling my mind for months: Can astrology offer a practical framework for navigating a period that feels genuinely unprecedented? Not vague mystical reassurance, not doom predictions, but something closer to pattern recognition and timing, a way to read the conditions and make grounded decisions about how to respond.
Natasha brings over 25 years of study to this conversation, and what struck me most is the way she strips away the mystique without diminishing the substance. She describes astrology as "cosmic climate" or "astrological weather," and the analogy lands immediately. The planets don't make us do things. They set up conditions, and then we decide whether or not to carry the umbrella. That distinction between fate and agency runs through the entire episode, and it's the piece I think most people are hungry for right now. You don't want to be told what's going to happen to you. You want to understand the environment you're operating in so you can make sharper choices.
We get into the specifics of what makes 2026 such a seismic year astrologically. Saturn and Neptune meeting at zero degrees Aries, the very starting point of the zodiac, for the first time in decades. Uranus is entering Gemini for the first time in 84 years. The return of Leo-Aquarius eclipses, which last cycled through during a period of significant political upheaval. Natasha walks through historical parallels with striking concreteness: the fall of the Berlin Wall during the last Saturn-Neptune conjunction, the collapse of the Romanov dynasty during the one before that. She's not drawing these connections loosely. She's using cycles the way a historian might, looking at what happened during the same planetary alignments in previous eras and asking what rhymes now.
One of the most fascinating moments in our conversation came when Natasha described something deeply personal: looking at her own chart and not liking what she saw for a particular year. Rather than accepting it passively, she used her knowledge of solar return charts to physically relocate to Japan on her birthday, shifting the mathematical framework of her year ahead. That relocation placed her strongest planetary influences into the house of publishing, and that turned out to be the year she published her book with Penguin Random House. It's a small, vivid example of what agency looks like within this system. You're not rewriting the sky. You're choosing where to stand under it.
We also spent time on the question that I think sits underneath everything right now: artificial intelligence. Natasha connects the acceleration of AI to Pluto's entry into Aquarius, a transit that won't complete until 2044. She frames this not as a prediction but as a description of the era we've entered, one defined by intelligence, technology, and the tension between cool logic and human compassion. The last time Pluto was in Aquarius, the American and French revolutions were reshaping the Western world, and the Industrial Revolution was beginning. The parallel isn't subtle. And the question she poses is worth sitting with: Are we using this technology as a tool, or are we handing our power over to it?
What I keep coming back to is something Natasha said almost in passing, the phrase "as above, so below." It's ancient, but in this conversation, it felt urgent. We are all of us living through a transition between ages. The Age of Pisces, with its emphasis on religion, spirituality, and compassion, is giving way to the Age of Aquarius, with its emphasis on technology, intelligence, and collective humanity. These epochs last roughly two and a half thousand years. Most people who will live in the Aquarian age will simply know it as the way things are. We happen to be the ones standing at the threshold, which is disorienting and, if you hold it at the right angle, extraordinary.
This episode is not about converting anyone into an astrology believer. It's about offering a different lens for a moment when the usual lenses feel insufficient. Natasha's insistence on pairing every difficult transit with a remedy, her refusal to deliver hard news without a pathway through it, reflects something I think we all need more of right now: honesty that doesn't abandon you, and frameworks that leave room for what you choose to do next. What questions are you asking about this period in your life? And what would it mean to stop waiting for certainty and start reading the weather instead?
Check out Natasha's free birth chart service: https://www.astrotash.com/services/star-charts/ [https://www.astrotash.com/services/star-charts/]
Learn more about Natasha: https://www.astrotash.com/
Dr. Rod Berger is a keynote speaker, moderator, producer, author, and expert in strategic storytelling. Berger’s book, The Narrative Edge: Authentic Storytelling That Meets The Moment (Wiley), hits bookstores in late 2025. He draws on more than 4,000 interviews conducted worldwide for Forbes, Entrepreneur Magazine, and Fair Observer, including a cover story about former Virgin Entertainment co-founder Jason Felts, for Los Angeles Magazine, as well as various podcasts. He has captured the narratives of investors, CEOs, renowned entrepreneurs, bestselling authors, scholars, and cultural icons such as NBA legends Magic Johnson and Charles Barkley, as well as United Nations officials and Van Halen’s Sammy Hagar, while also exploring the behind-the-scenes world of Formula 1.
Berger has met with the Crown Princess of Sweden, Pope Francis, United Nations officials, and NGO leaders, covering stories of water insecurity with WaterAid, the intergenerational refugee crisis faced by displaced Sudanese in Uganda, and the impacts of child marriage in Western Africa with the Le Korsa Foundation.
Berger served as a guest lecturer at Vanderbilt University’s Owen Graduate School of Management for nearly two decades, focusing on the power of storytelling in business.
He has partnered with The Jim Henson Company to create a television show, The Ultimate GOAT, that combines his passion for distant lands and storytelling with culture, sports, and puppetry for family programming.
Berger conducts moderated keynote events that blend storytelling with live, on-stage narratives featuring cultural icons such as Opal Lee, the recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom, a Nobel Peace Prize nominee, and recognized as the “Grandmother” of Juneteenth. In 2023, Berger received the inaugural Pangea International Literacy Prize and delivered his TEDx Talk, “Story is Our Currency.” He lives in Franklin, Tennessee, with his wife and two children.
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