Your keen involvement with philosophical matters and in developing a personal
code of conduct is quite noticeable to other people, for your natural initial
approach to life is coloured by ideas about right and wrong developed from
your upbringing.  You come across as a confident optimistic person with high
ideals, and one who is not afraid to express them openly and honestly.  You
are likely to need a considerable amount of freedom to seek out the experience
you need for your personal growth, and you are also keen for other people to
do the same, which means that you are tolerant of a wide range of people and
their ways of being.  The exception occurs when someone offends your sense of
propriety, in which case you become quite outraged unless they repent quickly!
You are likely to develop much of your philosophy of life through your invol-
vements with other people, and you will require freedom to meet people and
travel to places which help you to grow.  When you are young, you may feel
somewhat overawed by older people, feeling that you have to put them first,
rather than act spontaneously in your own right.  Once you are older, you
may be tempted to tell people what they should be aiming for as a result of
wanting to share your experiences with them.  Neither of these should be a
real problem, unless you take things too far, and overall you will be a
seeker after truth.  You will feel most at ease if you are in a position to
find things out for yourself, and you will probably be fairly optimistic.
You will not want to be too tied down in life, for you feel the need to
find out as much as you can about the world, partly because this is what
comes naturally to you, and partly because you set a high value on develop-
ing a philosophy and understanding of life which enables you to grow as a
person.  While you are young, you may find it difficult to settle down to
anything too serious, for everything seems so interesting, especially if
your sense of humour is aroused.  You are likely to get on well with other
people, for your generally optimistic outlook is usually popular.  As you
mature, your enquiring spirit will encourage you to broaden your horizons,
and you can achieve a great deal, provided you learn some persistence.
There is some conflict between the way you approach situations naturally
and spontaneously when you are feeling calm and relaxed, and how you be-
have under pressure.  Your upbringing has had a strong effect on you, en-
couraging you either to achieve a great deal, or to deal with people who
are powerful in some way.  You have high ideals, and you make high demands
of yourself and other people at times.  You tend to send out double mess-
ages, although you may not be aware of this, and people react quite str-
ongly to your behaviour.  If you can learn to settle down a bit, you will
be able to use your energy constructively, rather than waste it in either
attacking the world, or in defending yourself from it.
Your initial approach to life blends in well with your need to develop a
sincere code of moral conduct, and you come across as a genuine honest
person with an interest in personal growth and the good of society at
large.  Your optimistic approach to life is based on a firm belief that
you are pursuing the right course in life, a belief which you will want
to reinforce through travel and/or further education.  You will want to
be involved with groups of people, for this will give you positive feed-
back, and the respect they hold for you may mean that you take a leading
role in the group.  You need a fair amount of personal freedom to allow
you to satisfy your considerable curiosity, and you should do well.
You may feel some confusion about when to act naturally, and when to act
in accordance with moral principles which derive from your upbringing.
It may take you some time to learn that both ways of being are valid,
and your philosophy of life will be that much the richer because you
have had to find out from experience what works for you in practice.
You are likely to feel some stress in finding out a philosophy of life
for yourself, since you feel a conflict between the need to act naturally
and the need to conform to the moral code you inherited from your upbring-
ing.  In fact both needs are valid, and once you sort out your priorities
your philosophy will be that much the richer, being based on experience.
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