SAN PEDRO DE ATACAMA, CHILE - AUGUST 26: The Milky Way appears over the Valle de la Luna in the Atacama Desert, considered the driest place on earth on August 26, 2022 near San Pedro de Atacama, Chile. The extreme aridity makes the Atacama Desert one of the clearest places on earth to view the night sky. Much of the region receives less than half an inch of rainfall per year, and some areas none at all for hundreds of years. Located in Chile's northern third between two mountain ranges, the Atacama is possibly the oldest desert on earth, experiencing extreme aridity for at least 3 million years. The area is home to the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) telescope. The Valley of the Moon is so called because of its lunar and even Mars-like appearance. (Photo by John Moore/Getty Images,)

Photo by John Moore/Getty Images

Mercury Retroshade: The Astrology Term That Changes How You Think About Retrograde

You already know about Mercury retrograde. You’ve blamed it for the awkward text you sent your ex. You’ve side-eyed your laptop when it crashed during an important email. But here’s the thing — the retrograde itself might not be the whole story. If you’ve been feeling the cosmic chaos before or after the “official” retrograde window, there’s a reason for that, and it has a name: retroshade.

So What Exactly Is Mercury Retroshade?

The concept of “retroshade” refers to Mercury’s retrograde shadow period, which occurs both before and after a Mercury retrograde, according to The Cut. Think of it as the warm-up act and the encore to the main event. The retrograde gets all the headlines, but these bookend periods deserve your attention, too.

The term was coined by astrologer Lisa Stardust after she observed that the pre- and post-retrograde phases can be more complex than the retrograde itself, as reported by Vogue. That’s worth sitting with for a second — the phases surrounding the retrograde may actually pack a bigger punch than the retrograde period everyone obsesses over.

If you’ve ever felt like the disruptions started hitting before retrograde technically began, or lingered well after it supposedly ended, retroshade might explain why. It’s one of those concepts that, once you learn about it, makes the whole retrograde cycle click into place on a deeper level.

The Three Phases, Broken Down

The full Mercury retrograde cycle is often described as a three-part sequence consisting of the pre-shadow phase, the retrograde period, and the post-shadow phase. Here’s what each one involves and why it matters for your day-to-day life.

Phase One: The Pre-Retroshade

During the pre-retroshade period, Mercury begins moving through degrees it will later revisit during the retrograde and post-retrograde phases. This phase is associated with early developments of issues that will unfold more fully during the retrograde.

In plain terms, this is the preview. Small hiccups, emerging tensions, or new situations might start bubbling up. That minor miscommunication at work? The uneasy feeling about a decision you just made? These could be early signals of themes that are about to take center stage. Pay attention during this window — it’s your heads-up about what’s coming.

Phase Two: The Retrograde Itself

The retrograde itself occurs when Mercury appears to move backward, during which time previously emerging issues are addressed. This is the phase most people are already familiar with — the period associated with communication mishaps, travel delays, and technology glitches that flood your social media feeds with memes.

But within the context of the full three-part cycle, the retrograde is really the middle chapter. Those seeds planted during the pre-retroshade? This is when they fully bloom — for better or worse — and demand your attention.

Phase Three: The Post-Retroshade

In the post-retroshade period, Mercury returns to those same degrees for a third and final time. This phase is associated with gaining additional information and making final decisions related to matters that surfaced during the earlier phases.

This is your resolution window. If the pre-retroshade introduced a problem and the retrograde forced you to sit with it, the post-retroshade is when clarity tends to arrive. It’s the phase where you can finally move forward with decisions that felt murky or premature during the weeks before.

The Dates You Need to Know

For the current cycle, the pre-retroshade occurred from February 11 to February 26, followed by the Mercury retrograde from February 26 to March 20. The post-retroshade period in Pisces runs from March 20 to April 9.

That means the full cycle stretches from February 11 all the way through April 9 — nearly two full months. If you’ve only been tracking the February 26 to March 20 retrograde window, you’ve been missing significant portions of the cycle on both ends.

The post-retroshade period running through April 9 is especially worth marking on your calendar. If decisions or situations have felt unresolved since mid-February, this final stretch is the window associated with gaining the clarity and information needed to wrap things up.

Why Retroshade Is Worth Adding to Your Astrology Vocabulary

Understanding retroshade elevates your astrology knowledge beyond the standard “Mercury is in retrograde” conversation. Instead of treating retrograde like a single disruptive event, you start to see it as part of a broader arc — one with a beginning, middle, and end, each with its own distinct energy and purpose.

It’s the kind of concept that makes you sound like the most astrology-literate person in your group chat. And thanks to Lisa Stardust giving it a catchy, memorable name, it’s easy to talk about without getting lost in technical jargon about planetary degrees.

So the next time someone asks if Mercury retrograde is over, you’ll have a better answer: not quite — there’s still the retroshade to get through.

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