Above you have the input form for the Progressed Transitor. This program translates portions of a year to portions of a day to create a day-for-a-year progression (in green). The original date (assumed to be natal) is shown at the top left and the progressed date and time (corresponding to the future date) are underlined in green next to it. The future date is given at the top right. The natal information is not shown. The progressed chart is drawn in green and the future (transit) date is drawn in blue. What this program provides is a chart, aspect table, and parallel list as calculated between the progressed date and the transit date. This technique is not commonly considered mainstream. In effect, with this you can compare the person's tendencies on a day to that actual day.
This program doesn't compare progressed dates to progressed dates and it doesn't compare transits to transits. It doesn't display natal information at all. It calculates one progressed date from the natal specifications and compares it to the future date. Significant events in life should throw at least a few flags. John Willner, an astrologer who has used this technique, states that it has a lesser tendency to influence unless there are a lot of aspects and parallels stacking on top of each other. He goes further to say that these sorts of relations usually produce what might be called the static (noise) of life and only become important when compounded. It stands to reason that some useful information can be gleaned from the comparison. You just need to understand what kind of information you're getting. Be honest about what you see.
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