Western Astrology.
Planets, signs, houses. Chart your birth through the Greco-Babylonian tradition that shaped modern horoscopy. Sun, moon, rising — and every placement the apps won’t tell you.
Read the full primer →Western astrology, Korean saju, and Thai muteloo — read in a single frame. Every morning, your day from three angles.







Muteloo joins three old divinatory systems into a single narrative. Every reading is simultaneously told in three voices — Western planets, Korean stems, Thai spirit counts. Straight from the web. No app required.





“The cards don’t tell you what will happen. They tell you what you alreadysuspect.”
Planets, signs, houses. Chart your birth through the Greco-Babylonian tradition that shaped modern horoscopy. Sun, moon, rising — and every placement the apps won’t tell you.
Read the full primer →Four pillars — year, month, day, hour. An East Asian reading of fate through five elements and ten heavenly stems. A language older than horoscopes, and a lot more specific.
Read the full primer →มูเตลู — Thai folk divination. Numbers, colors, directions, and spirit work to tune the energy of your day. Bangkok streetside practice, elevated.
Read the full primer →Most astrology tools were built for straight, cis, monogamous defaults. Muteloo wasn’t. Same-sex synastry, non-binary charts, coming-out timing, chosen-family readings, identity work — woven into every tradition we read.
Compatibility read beyond he/she. Chart two moons, two risings, two whatever — without the hetero defaults baked into most apps.
Four pillars that honour identity, not assignment. Our Korean masters read fate, not gender policing.
มูเตลู’s folk frame already holds kathoey, tom, dee, and beyond. Bangkok has always known.
Every reader in the Muteloo network has been personally interviewed and vetted. Thai muteloo masters from Bangkok and Chiang Mai, Korean saju specialists trained in Seoul’s lineage schools, Western astrologers from the UK and US. All briefed on queer-affirming practice.
Astrology isn’t a science. It’s a language — and we speak three of them.