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The Last Total Lunar Eclipse Until 2028: What to Know

  • Writer: Readings by Joey
    Readings by Joey
  • Mar 2
  • 3 min read

There are moments when the sky feels intentional — when the universe seems to slow down just enough for us to notice.


The upcoming total lunar eclipse marks the last time the Moon will fully slip into Earth’s shadow until 2028. That makes this event more than just another astronomical occurrence. It’s a pause. A closing chapter. A rare alignment we won’t witness again for nearly three years.



What Makes This Eclipse Different?

A total lunar eclipse occurs when Earth moves directly between the Sun and the Moon, casting a shadow that completely covers the lunar surface. As the Moon passes into the darkest part of that shadow, it doesn’t disappear — it transforms.


Instead of its usual silver-white glow, it deepens into shades of copper and red. This is why it’s often called a “Blood Moon.” The color comes from sunlight filtering through Earth’s atmosphere, scattering shorter blue wavelengths and allowing the red tones to reach the Moon.


Why We Won’t See Another Like It Soon

While lunar eclipses happen periodically, total eclipses — when the Moon is fully immersed in Earth’s shadow — follow a more complex rhythm.


After this one, we enter a quiet stretch. The Moon will not experience full totality again until 2028. Partial eclipses may come and go, but none will bring that complete descent into shadow and return to crimson light.


Sometimes the sky moves in seasons of intensity. Sometimes it rests.

We’re stepping into a pause between chapters.


What to Expect During This Lunar Eclipse

Total lunar eclipses often feel different from ordinary full moons. Even if you don’t follow astrology closely, you may notice subtle shifts in mood, awareness, or perspective.


Here’s what many people experience around eclipse periods:


Heightened Emotions

Eclipses illuminate what has been hidden beneath the surface. Feelings long set aside may rise — not to overwhelm you, but to be acknowledged and released.


Endings & Closure

Lunar eclipses are often associated with completion. A mindset, a pattern, or a dynamic may reach its natural conclusion.


Sudden Realizations

Clarity can arrive unexpectedly. Eclipses have a way of revealing truths quickly — like a light switched on in a dark room.


Fatigue or Restlessness

Some feel unusually tired. Others feel alert and wired. Both are normal. Your system may simply be integrating more than usual.

Think of an eclipse as an energetic checkpoint — not chaotic, but corrective.


What To Do During This Time

You don’t need elaborate rituals to honor a lunar eclipse. A little awareness is enough.


1. Slow Down

Eclipses are powerful, but they aren’t ideal for forcing major decisions. If possible, observe rather than initiate. Let insights settle before taking action.


2. Journal What’s Surfacing

Ask yourself:

  • What feels complete in my life?

  • What truth am I finally ready to face?

  • What am I being asked to release?


Writing during an eclipse often reveals surprising clarity.


3. Release Symbolically

Write down something you’re ready to let go of. Tear it up. Safely burn it. Physical action can anchor emotional shifts.


4. Ground Yourself

Hydrate. Step outside. Touch the earth. Keep your routine simple. The body stabilizes what the mind is processing.


5. Watch the Sky

Most importantly — look up. Witness the transformation. There’s something deeply centering about watching the Moon move through shadow and return to light.


A Gentle Reminder

Eclipses don’t create chaos — they reveal what was already shifting beneath the surface.

This is the final descent into totality before 2028. A quiet turning point written across the sky.

You don’t need to do anything dramatic.


Just notice.


Reflect. Release what’s ready.


Allow the next chapter to unfold naturally.


A Moment to Reflect

Celestial events have always marked time. Ancient cultures watched eclipses carefully, associating them with endings, revelations, and renewal.


Whether you view this through a scientific lens or a spiritual one, there is something undeniably powerful about watching Earth’s shadow claim the Moon — and then release it.


This is the last total lunar eclipse of this cycle.


A reminder that even shadows pass. A reminder that cycles close. And a reminder that even when the Moon disappears into darkness, it always returns illuminated.

 
 
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