How a mirror-voice natal reading works
From your birth date and time to a reading that names patterns rather than forecasting events — what happens between the math and the words.
You open @astrologyaime_bot in Telegram and tell it three things: the date you were born, the time, and the city. That’s all the bot needs. Time matters most for the Ascendant and the house cusps — without it we can still read the planetary placements, but house structure stays approximate and we’ll say so.
Behind the scenes the bot calls Swiss Ephemeris — the same astronomical library Astrodienst (astro.com) and most working astrologers have used since the early 1990s. It returns the geocentric position of the Sun, Moon, every classical planet, the lunar nodes, Chiron, and Lilith, to arc-second precision. It also computes the Ascendant, the Midheaven, and the twelve house cusps in whatever system you choose (Placidus by default, Whole-Sign on request).
That table of positions is the input. The interpretation is the output. Between them sits a language model — currently a GPT-5-class system — given a long, careful prompt that tells it: write in mirror-voice, name what the chart shows in concrete sentences, avoid “energies” and “shadow self” and “archetypes”, do not predict events, do not flatter, do not pad. The result is a reading you could imagine a thoughtful astrologer writing for you in a café — not a horoscope app’s daily forecast.
Your first reading covers Sun, Moon, and Rising for free. Premium unlocks a twelve-page natal portrait covering aspects, planetary dignities, and the major house emphases, written in essay form. Follow-up questions to the bot keep the same chart in context — you don’t re-enter your data, and the conversation builds across weeks. See the FAQ for what we will and won’t say, and what happens to your birth data.