Veronica wrote: Tue Oct 04, 2022 6:46 am
In thinking that there were lots of people born worldwide on that date and time, other people with very similar natal charts who did not seem to suffer this condition...
Yes, this is a correct way of looking at this. Let's break it down a bit.
Let's limit this to the U.S. for a moment - since the numbers are available and it still makes a good story. In the United States in 1942, 2,800,000 live babies were born. This (on average) is 7,621 people per day.
Approximately half were female, or 3,836.
Of course, Moon (which moved 15°19' that day) would have been in different locations, most of them in
closer aspect to the Taurus planets. Since the "day" reached from 0:00 Eastern time to 24:00 Pacific time (27 hours), Moon spanned about 17° in the zodiac.
Of these (approximately) 3,836 women, about one-third would have these Taurus-Scorpio planets in cadent houses (which seems to me a critical astrological factor). That's 1,279.
So something more than 1,000 women were born the same day with the same basic positions in the same segments of the chart that incline toward health issues. (This last division would also put the Mercury-Jupiter-Neptune trio near angles.)
So... your basic point... even if we limit ourselves to the U.S. (because I had those birth figures handy) and to this calendar day, and within that to women with the two main characteristics that seem most astrologically relevant, we still have over 1,000 women with the same factors.
Most of these 1,000 or so women likely menstruated. If there had been a single birthday where the vast majority of women did NOT menstruate, that would have been noticed sometime in the last 70 years. They surely all had other issues arise that expressed some of these themes differently, but surely nearly all of them menstruated.
So... we are left with the question of why this one woman (or possibly a few more we don't know about) was an exception. It could have been environmental, or something physically or psychologically traumatic could have occurred. I likely wasn't genetic since, by definition, none of our mothers and grandmothers could have had her condition! It's not hard to find articles about impact on the pituitary from toxic pollutants.
Personally, I still favor the idea of a trauma near puberty, but it might be simpler than that. We likely never will know.