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Growing Pains: Astrology in Adolescence

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The mere mention of the word ‘teenager’ can strike fear into the heart of the bravest soul, and yet there are some truly heroic individuals who make it a life-long mission to teach them. Alex Trenoweth is one such teacher. She also happens to be an astrologer. Her official subjects are Religious Studies, History and English, but from reading Growing Pains you will quickly find that her true passion is the actual students themselves.
Using the cycles of Jupiter and Saturn she untangles the confusing conundrum of why groups of students are so different from each other year on year, and sometimes even within year groups. How is an already overworked teacher supposed to cope with this ongoing challenge? Alex Trenoweth has the answer.
You can watch a youtube interview with Alex here, where she discusses the background to the book and her experiences as a teacher.
And an interview here with Stormie Beaston on Jupiter Saturn Cycles for Parents and Teachers
Alex has a new book out! Mirror Mirror: Famous People and the Actors Who Portrayed Them is a fascinating compendium of 100 films, using synastry to understand how actors managed to portray real life personalities to such an extent that sometimes we forget exactly who is on the screen.
Victor Olliver said of it, “If ever a book should come with a carton of popcorn, it’s Mirror Mirror. Prodigiously researched, painstakingly detailed to satisfy the worst cases of data freakery, and beautifully turned out, this is a book that (like all good movie franchises) most probably will end up with a sequel and a prequel.

Alex Trenoweth

Alex Trenoweth

Alex Trenoweth, DfAstrolS, ISAR CAP, MA (CAA) is a professional schoolteacher as well as an astrologer specialising in child development, ...

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Steph Johnson, Esoteric Technologies 'Growing Pains Astrology in Adolescence' is a well-written introduction to how astrology can help teenagers and those who are teaching or parenting them. If only such a tool had been around when I was younger! It is easily accessible. This is not an academic tome and nor does it seem to be intended as one. Rather it is meant to give parents, teachers and teenagers a bridge for communication and understanding.   Lyndall McQuinn, Shamanic Astrologer, Australia... This is a fascinating book on astrology because it is aimed at people who educate children as opposed to parents or astrologers. The concept that all children benefit and thrive under the one educational approach is challenged in this book. That adolescence is a similar journey for each child is also challenged. Instead Alex has focused on two planets that both have important stations at the beginning of adolescence and discusses the way we as adults guiding the youth can learn to interact with the growth cycles. The two planets that she focuses on are Jupiter which returns around about eleven or twelve years of age and the Saturn opposition at around fourteen.  These planets are called the social planets and represent opportunity and discipline.  Alex discusses how these two planets in sign, and with relation to their rulers, may express in a young person and in a group of young people. The book is easy to access. I quickly found myself looking up the combinations of my children and then a stretch further back in time to my own generational adolescent times. This proved very insightful; for a parent of three children it allowed me to see the difference in generational learning for my family dynamics. But as Alex points out, parents only have a small number of children to guide through this life stage whilst educators can have a class of twenty or a school of hundreds. Via year levels Alex provides a glimpse of the position of Jupiter and Saturn in each generation that lets you see how one year level may be very focused and ready to learn whilst another may not find academics to be a priority. Having prior knowledge is a great basis to begin but Alex goes on to suggest ways one might engage or relate to a particular sign combination. She also paints a picture of what you can expect that year level to portray. Alex concludes each chapter with a case study of a celebrity which she explains she chose because although these peoples’ lives were difficult around adolescence, they were the achievers. They had managed to make good of their life choices.  She follows through their lives with an emphasis on Jupiter and Saturn aspects. I thoroughly enjoyed this book and I know it will be a book I will keep close by to refer to when I am working with youthful clients. It is totally practical, not only for the youth but also to summarise turning points in any life at the adolescent stages. It paints a picture of the generational patterning within a one to two year framework. It highlights the difference between one year and the next regarding attitudes to opportunity and a two-year difference towards attitudes around authority and discipline. Following a client’s life through the aspects of Jupiter and Saturn makes for an interesting and different analysis of a life. This is the picture of how we use our opportunities and respond to authority and discipline.   Reviewed by Ronnie Dreyer Horoscope Guide January 2019... As the title of this well-written, informative, and inspirational book indicates, Growing Pains illustrates how astrology can be used by teachers and parents to gain insight into the challenging behavior and attitudes of adolescents. The book is also meant to give teenagers an opportunity to understand themselves a bit better through astrology. Few are as well-equipped to do this as the author, Alex Trenoweth, who uses her experience as a secondary school teacher, astrologer, and parent to take on this task, which to my knowledge has not been done previously in an astrology text. In her own words: “As a teacher of adolescents, I wanted to use my skills and knowledge as an astrologer to enhance my career and yet at the same time be accessible to my colleagues as well as the parents of my pupils….Although my astrology colleagues help people from all walks of life and almost all ages, they tend to avoid adolescents, who need the most guidance. And so, this book is for adolescents, the people who love and care for them and anyone who is curious about how to get the most out of life.” (p. xiii) Trenoweth does this by focusing primarily on the positions of Jupiter and Saturn—Jupiter rules the areas where we are confident and can move forward, while Saturn, the planet of discipline, rules the areas that we fear and must overcome. The book is divided into one chapter for each sign placement of Jupiter and Saturn providing a precise and instructional overview of how teenagers with these positions behave, learn, and respond, and how a teacher or parent can use this knowledge to have a positive influence on them. Each chapter also shows what happens when Jupiter opposes natal Jupiter at the age of six, and when Saturn opposes Saturn at the age of 14 to 15. The author describes the teacher with that natal placement, and then fine-tunes Jupiter and Saturn by describing how their dispositors act in each sign. In the chapter on Jupiter in Scorpio, Trenoweth describes how that placement combines with the position of Mars and Pluto (Scorpio co-rulers) in each sign, and then in the chapter on Saturn in Cancer she describes the Moon’s position in each sign. She finishes each chapter with a celebrity example to show how that person’s formative years contributed to who they became as adults. Since the positions of Jupiter and Saturn do not change throughout the day, she uses both timed and untimed charts including Alfred Hitchcock, Sean Connery, Robert Downey Jr., Cher, Leonardo DiCaprio, and others. I would have preferred only timed charts since they are readily available, but each case study is nonetheless applicable. Alfred Hitchcock, for example, has Jupiter in Scorpio, and his lonely childhood and love of mystery obviously influenced his approach to films. The book concludes with the chapter, “The Variation of Jupiter and Saturn Cycles in One Academic Year.” Since Jupiter changes signs every 12 to 13 months, and Saturn changes signs every two and a half years, groups of students who will be in the same grade throughout their school years share the natal positions of these two planets. For example, a child born in 2005 will be 13 years old during this current 2018-2019 school year. In 2005, Jupiter was in Libra until it went into Scorpio on October 25, whereas Saturn was in Cancer until it went into Leo on July 16. That means there are three distinct groups of teenagers who are presently 13 years old:
  • those born between January 1-July 15, 2005 who have Jupiter in Libra and Saturn in Cancer;
  • those born between July 16-October 24, 2005 who have Jupiter in Libra and Saturn in Leo; and
  • those born between October 25-December 31, 2005 who have Jupiter in Scorpio and Saturn in Leo.
Until I read this final fascinating chapter, I had never thought of viewing groups of students, who go through their entire childhood and teenage years closely intertwined, according to the characteristics and significations of those two planets. The author has done a wonderful job explaining this, and while every individual’s chart is unique, this presents a fascinating overview that can enhance how teachers and parents approach adolescents. In this chapter she compares Drew Barrymore, born February 22, 1975 with Jupiter in Pisces and Saturn in Cancer and Angelina Jolie, born June 4, 1975 with Jupiter in Aries and Saturn in Cancer, to show how two people, who would have been in the same grade at school, differ not only in their attributes, but in the timing of their first Jupiter return (around the age of 12) and their first Saturn opposition to natal Saturn (around the age of 14). The appendix includes tables of Jupiter and Saturn sign ingresses, and their conjunctions, rounding out an extremely informative book, and one that should be on every astrologer’s bookshelf. Even if you are not a teacher or no longer have teenagers living at home, you can use the insights found in this book to advise people who do.   Erin Sullivan, author USA... This is the book for our times! Alex’s personal experience as a teacher, mother, and astrologer is woven together beautifully. I was touched by her caring attitude toward the delicacy of the role of teacher, and educator – and parent! A much needed book in an increasingly complicated world for young people coming of age. All teachers (and parents and students) will learn a lot from reading Growing Pains. Lori Hoyt, practising teacher in the USA... As a teacher, I use astrology, at times, to help me understand at-risk students. Trenoweth’s book Growing Pains is an extremely helpful resource in explaining how planetary birth (natal) Saturn and Jupiter placements help determine how a child learns and relates to others in the classroom. Whether you interact with young people in personal or professional contexts, I think you’ll find her insights to be both fascinating and useful. Highly recommended. Cassandra Tyndall, astrologer and mother, Australia... Every parent wants the best for their child, especially when it comes to their education. Growing Pains is an indispensable resource for understanding your child’s unique template for learning. This book offers an objective perspective, along with insightful guidance and practical tips to help you navigate your child’s journey through school. Rod Suskin, astrologer, South Africa... Alex Trenoweth does that rare thing few astrologers find a way to do: take real astrology out into the world of laypeople and show them how to benefit from its insights. This book can help adolescents themselves, teachers and parents understand one of the most important and powerful pairs of cycles in astrology and discover the wealth they have to offer. Alex draws on her experience as a teacher and astrologer to show how the cycles can be used to grasp and get the best of critical developmental cycles and presents them in a way that brings out the richness and depth of astrology in her inimitable style. I am so pleased this book is out in a new edition: unlike the latest theory on adolescent development, its value to parents and students will never go out of style. Christeen Skinner, Cityscopes London Ltd. UK... How I wish that this wonderful book had been around 36 years ago when I became step-mother to a 13 year old! Not only would I have learnt so, so much from this excellent work by an experienced, thoughtful, caring teacher and very fine astrologer, but I am confident that I would have bought copies for his friend’s parents and often exasperated teachers. As it is, I have already gifted this to local teachers and plan to buy a copy for another mother today. This work is a valuable addition to any astrological library but to parents and teachers it should be seen as one of the finest works on understanding the adolescent and working through those Growing Pains. Alan Bronstein, teacher, USA... As someone who taught high school for thirty years, but who knows little about astrology, I can say I found many things that Alex Trenoweth presented had classroom implications and applications. Alex uses astrology in the classroom for a better understanding of individual students as well as transits that correlate to age and grade-level periods of intellectual and emotional development. Her ideas that relate to the Jupiter and Saturn transits can have practical applications in curriculum development. Some of what she conveys has already been learned by practical experience by many teachers. For example, if anybody asked me what are the most difficult ages to teach, I'd say 14 or 15. Astrologically, this would be the period of their Saturn opposition wherein a sense of independence is combined with a "healthy" opposition to authority. We teachers would blame it on puberty, which is also true, but also fail to see it as a rite of passage or coming of age in the educational sense. Perhaps her most practical tip for a teacher might be to simply make a class list of students by their birth dates (oldest to youngest). In the high school classroom, I've noticed the difference between the older and younger students in the class both in behavior and ability. In the lower grades, the difference is even more pronounced. Finally, when you get down to it, education is our nation's number one problem. If we are to have citizens who are both productive and responsible more resources are needed to provide students and educators with more options and not more standardized testing. They're the ones that will be left to solve problems left by previous generations. Shankar Nash Kapoor, Justice (retired) Delhi High Court, India... Sensitive, kind and caring teacher and author of Growing Pains, Alex Trenoweth has identified herself with troubled adolescents. Her in-depth study of astrology, with psychological input, coupled with an intense urge to search for solutions to help such adolescents, have been brought together in this marvelous book. Alex has paved a mid-path between a highly technical approach and a total ignorance about the synchronicity between cosmic planetary motions. Using the planets of Jupiter and Saturn, she demonstrates the waxing and waning of periods of growth and expansion with periods of trials and tribulations. Studying the cosmic cycles of these two major planets would be extremely rewarding for parents, teachers and guides as well as for the adolescents as themselves. It is a must-read for anyone who works with children—or for adults who still have the child within. Chrissy Philp, UK... If every parent and every teacher read this book it would be a better world. Kids have suffered educationally, not because teachers don’t care, but because a lack of understanding of their inbuilt dissimilarities and associated specific needs is not conducive to the flowering of their potential. This book, written by a teacher and astrologer, will put this right. Not only does it offer insightful and humorous descriptions of character, and methods of getting the best out of that character, it also offers descriptions of famous personalities that come with handsome portrait drawings, and these descriptions allow you to see how the character traits you learn about manifest in the real world. I love this book. Roy Gillett B.Ed [Hons Ldn], UK... Astrology is an invaluable tool to understand individual and whole year groups of school pupils. Alex Trenoweth’s Growing Pains draws on her pioneering work in the classroom. It is recommended reading for teachers, parents and, indeed anyone who wishes go beyond projecting their own expectations, and instead relate to children and adolescents as they are. Astrological Journal of Great Britain... Concerned parents are going to find this book helpful, as regards guiding and encouraging their teenage children, and what kind of encouragement is likely to prove effective. The different zodiac signs lend ‘colour’ to the working of these two spheres. Its author Ms Trenoweth is a mother, schoolteacher and professional astrologer so is able to explain these things out of real experience. There are cheerful books giving tips about bringing up teenagers, however this one gives that much-needed help in terms of the different zodiac signs of Jupiter and Saturn. Plus, modern readers will not fail to appreciate use of a celeb bio-pic for each one of these, to help build up the picture. For any teacher who believes character-building is more important than exam results, this has to be an important book. By using celebs in this way, Trenoweth focuses on the concept of success, to show how people have used their God-given talents to make something of their lives. In today’s schools, encouraging pupils is far from easy and the twelvefold pattern here described indicates how this should be done. As a head-of-year in a modern Academy she has put these findings into practice, in a way that made sense to her schoolteacher colleagues. Anne Whitaker, UK... Growing Pains is a really inspired and useful way of using the Jupiter and Saturn cycles to help kids, parent and teachers through the stormy waters of adolescence. Ana Andrade, Peru... Alex Trenoweth delights us by creating a bridge between astrology and education that informs the readers of the cycles of Jupiter and Saturn in the growing process of adolescents on their way to adulthood. Undoubtedly, this book is a unique combination of Alex’s experience as teacher and astrologer. A must-read! Hedley Spargo, teacher, UK... Alex has highlighted this area of astrology to the great benefit of parents who care to listen. What she has to say is perceptive and wise. Her pupils would have been nurtured so well by her understanding of ‘where they were coming from’. I commend you to Alex, her books, and what she has to say. Chris Turner, Australia... Teenagers!!! Part child, part adult, sometimes full monster!!! At least they appear so. The sad truth is they appear that way, simply because we adults have forgotten what our experiences of the world were when we were that age; or we simply have no understanding of how their minds work. That will all change when you read this wonderful book by Alex Trenoweth. Her experience as both a high school teacher and an astrologer has made not only an understanding of these years easily available, but she offers wonderful insights as to how to make your relationship with your teenager more meaningful. If you want to help your teen make the most of these changes s/he is experiencing, then this book is a must, whether you are a teacher or a parent.

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