Your conscious attempts to organise your experiences operate within the con-
text of a broad theoretical system which you developed in an attempt to und-
erstand the limitations of your upbringing, and to break free from them. You
therefore show a strong tendency to organise yourself in your own way, even
if your methods are highly unconventional, for you have a strong belief that
you know best.  You also arrive at original solutions to problems more quickly
than most people, for you do not have to work out the answers from first prin-
ciples.  This may make you rather restless and impatient, especially if you
feel that others are slowing you down, or if you think other people are trying
to prevent you from using your own particular brand of genius.
Your conscious attempts to organise your experience operate in an original way,
but you are also likely to get things out of proportion, until you learn to
find a balance between the importance of theoretical considerations and the
need for attention to execution of the detailed steps of a plan.  Otherwise,
you are likely to experience considerable disruption in your affairs, which
may come about in either of two principal ways.  You may stubbornly persist
in doing things eccentrically, despite strong criticism from others who con-
sider you to be a rebel, or you may feel that other people are doing things
the wrong way, and that you have to correct them.  Once you curb these tend-
encies, you will become able and original in theory and in practice.
Your conscious attempts to organise your experiences are assisted by ideas
about the world you developed about the world you developed in response to
your upbringing.  You are able to take original short cuts in arranging your
affairs, relying on a theoretical framework which helps you to solve prob-
lems at a stroke, rather than on a step by step approach.  You are likely
to be attracted to unusual pursuits and new territory, where your talent
for the application of general principles to the solution of a particular
problem is likely to be of most use to you, and you prefer life to con-
tain a few surprises, so that your active mind can have some exercise.  An
independent thinker, you want to avoid too much routine.
Your conscious attempts to organise your experiences operate in an original
way, and you have the capacity for genius, but you need to develop a better
sense of timing, for you tend to be highly erratic and impatient when it
comes to putting theory into practice.  Thus you may have some brilliant
ideas, but you fail to capitalise upon them in practice because your mind
moves on to something else, or you may fear irrational antagonism from
others if you do things your own way.  You need to develop more self-con-
fidence in your own methods and ideas, then the two will interfere with
each other less, and you will become less likely to engage in compulsive
criticism or stubborn resistance towards the actions of others.
You have an original approach to organising your experiences, for your
methods operate according to a sound theoretical framework developed in
response to your upbringing.  This means that you are able to take some
short cuts when solving problems, not so much because you have practical
experience of similar situations, more because you have a talent for the
application of general principles to the solution of a specific problem.
This ability needs some conscious development on your part, and with a
suitable education you will learn the necessary discipline to enable
you to put your original ideas into practice.  You will also enjoy pursuits
which demand an unusual approach, and you will develop skill in these.
You may feel somewhat confused when it comes to organising your experiences,
for you are rather self-conscious about your methods, feeling that they
conflict with how you think you ought to understand the world in theory.
With experience, you will learn that your methods are perfectly alright,
even if they sometimes seem rather alien to yourself or to other people.
You are likely to feel some stress when attempting to organise your exper-
iences, for your methods are at odds with what you believe to be establ-
ished theory.  However the difficulty exists in your own mind as a result
of your upbringing, and you will learn through experience that both att-
ention to detail and to the overall plan have a discrete role to play.
 and you will learn through experience that both att-
ention to detail and to the overall plan have a discrete role to