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Horoscope today, June 8, 2025: Daily star sign guide from Mystic Meg

Horoscope today, June 8, 2025: Daily star sign guide from Mystic Meg

The Sun8 hours ago

OUR much-loved astrologer Meg sadly died in 2023 but her column will be kept alive by her friend and protégée Maggie Innes.
Read on to see what's written in the stars for you today.
♈ ARIES
March 21 to April 20
Mercury and Jupiter make a well-managed, joy-bringing team in family matters, giving you the tools to tackle any issues.
The Strawberry Moon of adventurous spirit opens new emotional doors – all you have to do is go through.
Aries luck factor starts with someone who shares your initial, so ask those questions.
2
♉ TAURUS
April 21 to May 21
Words are your key to finding common ground, even with unlikely people, and forming a blueprint for personal progress.
Even if they're just for your eyes, get those dreams written down. When you make them real, you reinforce them.
In love, the full moon's intensity wakes feelings you may have forgotten.
Get all the latest Taurus horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions
♊ GEMINI
A time of feeling you had to deny your own views can end as positive planets flow into your personal zone of right and wrong.
What matters is who you really are, and how you show this, so stand tall and strong.
Perhaps a team or couple's plans may be unexpected, but your chart is set up to support them.
Get all the latest Gemini horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions
♋ CANCER
June 22 to July 22
Your sign vibrates with Jupiter optimism and energy, and you are starting a year of personal discovery.
How this looks is up to you, but try not to waste your new dynamic potential.
Mercury adds the kind of self-knowledge that keeps things real, especially with romance.
A challenging health change can reap rewards.
♌ LEO
July 23 to August 23
The Strawberry Moon in your prizes and surprises sector promises unusual winning streaks, which you'll relish.
If passion is a priority, you have a super-ambitious Venus position that keeps you asking emotional questions of yourself and others.
Mercury plays detective to en- hance research.
Luck circles 'T' days.
♍ VIRGO
August 24 to September 22
What home means to you is in the full moon spotlight – by the end of the week, you can be making big decisions.
Jupiter drives your community and celebrity chart, so get ready to shine in a local role or to lead a team of strangers who become pals.
Your love profile is big on learning.
A familiar face can surprise you.
Get all the latest Virgo horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions
♎ LIBRA
September 23 to October 23
Now planets of luck and logic are installed in your success sector, barriers can fall.
You can now talk or think your way into the right project or partnership. Instead of doubting your judgment, celebrate it.
In love, it's vital to make a choice and stop trying to keep options open.
Routine greetings can mask romance.
♏ SCORPIO
October 24 to November 22
Freedom, adventure and hope are the themes of your chart – opening up a year of personal development.
You have learned so much lately, even from tough times, and this is your golden ticket to the future.
It's tempting to look away from cash questions, but face them and lose the fear.
Passion and 'B' make an intense mix.
Get all the latest Scorpio horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions
♐ SAGITTARIUS
November 23 to December 21
The confidence to change and to shine are lining up for you thanks to Jupiter and Mercury.
You can step out of the life you've settled for and move towards the one you deserve, starting today.
With a personal full moon, passion power is off the scale – use it with kindness. Your luck factor takes you back three years.
Get all the latest Sagittarius horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions
♑ CAPRICORN
December 22 to January 20
Solo dreams are good, but shared hopes are better over the next year.
Golden planet influence encourages group efforts and gives you the charisma to fit in anywhere.
A role on a screen can be a factor, while Mercury's deal-making skills can finally get agreement over the line.
Love may have thrilling secrets.
Get all the latest Capricorn horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions
2
♒ AQUARIUS
January 21 to February 18
You start to see how much of your wellbeing is in your own hands, which helps you step away from overly demanding influences.
Your own timetable for change is your key task this week, as power planets are right behind you.
In love, security at any cost is wrong for you – is it time to offer your heart more freedom?
Get all the latest Aquarius horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions
♓ PISCES
February 19 to March 20
Fun and flirtation are all around this week – you just need to reach out.
So step back and let yourself lighten up a bit.
This can bring hot new faces closer, but also add insight to your inner plans.
The Strawberry Moon emphasises ambition so, instead of apologising for your goals, get ready to celebrate them.

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Before I head out the door this morning into the great outdoors of Montana to cast a fly in the river, I will make a short and sweet statement about former president Donald Trump's tongue-in-cheek compliment of my competitive fortitude,' Faldo posted on social media. 'For those who took his comments seriously, I must say that I am amused that I need to clarify and announce that I have zero interest in and no intention of taking a political position.' But this swift distancing should not be mistaken for a lack of interest in politics. Faldo Farm in Montana is where he calls home and he watches the news there every morning. More often than not, the news cycle centres around Trump. 'Well, we quite like the guy,' Faldo says. 'I quite like the guy. I get on fine with him. Boy do they get wound up with that stuff, but day-to-day it's very good out there.' 'Britain is struggling' Faldo may have grown up in leafy Hertfordshire, but he has no plans to return home to the UK. And it was a walk down one of the UK's wealthiest high streets that reaffirmed to him that the nation is in trouble. 'We walked down Eton high street because we used to live near there and it's looking a bit rough,' he says. 'You know, things have gone down. The shops are closing, there's boarded up windows and I'm disappointed to see that the country is struggling, to be honest. And, I mean, that's a shame.' So, could the UK learn from Trump's America? 'You've got to say the attitude [in the US] is good,' Faldo says. 'It's back to the good old psychology of life. You've got to be seeing good things and saying good things. Self-hypnosis is really powerful, you know?' Pushing out his bottom lip, and hunching over his putter, he continues. 'If you're saying life is miserable and I'm fed up then, guess what, life is going to be miserable and you're going to be fed up. But if you wake up in the morning and think, 'What opportunities have I got today?' or 'What am I going to enjoy today?' 'It's a simple trick. I do it. What am I going to enjoy doing today? Then you go completely at it and you're already looking forward to doing something that you are going to enjoy.' There is something else Britain could adopt from the US, too, it turns out. 'The best thing about America is that you can turn right at a set of traffic lights [even if the light is red]. That's very useful. It just makes sense. You arrive at the junction and you can just keep going. They should bring that in over here, but left.' Faldo's criticisms of his adopted country are, on the other hand, rather minor. And both relate to food. 'The worst [thing about the US], oh my goodness. Well probably the bread. Now we're being told not to eat their bread because of all the impurities that they've discovered. 'I'll tell you the other bad thing about America is that you go for breakfast in New York, and they chop the melon in a certain way. And you go to California, you go 2,000 miles away, and they chop it the same. 'You go across Europe and every country is a little bit different. They go for the same across the whole country.' Melon aside, there are other things Faldo misses about home, with the British sense of humour and its television shows top of the list. Would I Lie To You? being a particular favourite. 'It's embarrassing if you can't keep up your club speed' On Faldo Farm, he sticks to a morning routine that begins at 5am before the rest of the household is awake. Faldo remains dedicated to his hobby of fly fishing while TikTok has become an unlikely source of inspiration for the 67-year-old to stay fit. 'I love TikTok,' he says. 'I'm an obsessive TikToker. I'm always telling Lindsay, 'My TikTok doctor said this', or, 'my TikTok chef said that'. 'I look at all these exercises and I think to myself, 'oh, I can try this' and 'oh, I can try that.'' Slapping his stomach, which sounds incredibly solid, he adds: 'I'm just trying to get this big blooming lump to keep moving and to keep the speed up. That's the hardest thing. As we get older, it gets embarrassing if you can't get the blooming club speed up.' Away from his punditry and assiduous fitness routine, Faldo's chaotic calendar also includes designing golf courses and running the Faldo Series, an event which promotes junior golf events. It is a sharp contrast to his idyllic farm life. 'When I'm at home, I'm at home. But when I'm on the road, I'm busy. In two different worlds,' Faldo says before parting with some suitably folksy advice. 'You've got to enjoy what you're doing. I know that much. And if you're not enjoying it, find something and jump ship because we don't know how long we've got. 'And if the worst comes to worst, get yourself some puppies. Because every day is a great day with puppies.'

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