Your conscious attempts to organise your experiences operate in conjunction
with that part of your personality which provides you with a fund of ideas
which stem from your unconscious.  Your methods are therefore unorthodox and
appear to lack logic, though you are good at problems which require a relat-
ively unstructured approach or lateral thinking.  You are rather erratic and
inconsistent when it comes to implementing your ideas since you operate from
an unusual viewpoint, even if you are not aware of this.  However your inquis-
itive mind constantly asks questions and provides you with answers, and prov-
ided you learn to check that your methods are workable in practice, you may
come up with some brilliant, if idiosyncratic, solutions to problems.
Your conscious attempts to organise your experiences frequently lead to un-
expected situations.  Either you feel drawn to situations and people who appear
to be chaotic, and you try to sort them out into some sort of order, or you
find that despite your taking a logical approach to solving problems, you are
plagued by bizarre opposition from other people or adverse circumstances.  You
will have to get used to balancing your priorities, making room for organis-
ation and method where that is appropriate, and also allowing for the fact that
there is always some uncertainty and disorder in any situation, which cannot be
dealt with in a logical way.  Once you accept this paradox, your creative mind
can help you to arrive at original solutions to problems with less struggle.
Your conscious attempts to organise your experiences in a logical way are ass-
isted by a fund of creative ideas which stem from your unconscious thought
processes.  You will not be short on planning ability, but you may need to
develop some discriminative ability to sort out which plans are worth putting
into practice, since your mind works so fast that you cannot put everything
into practice.  You are likely to excel at solving problems which require
an original approach, and solutions will sometimes come to you out of the blue
when you least expect them.  You have a knack of doing things in the right
way at the right time, even if your behaviour appears quite strange to people
who employ more orthodox methods, for your intuition is highly developed.
You are likely to encounter problems when trying to organise your experiences,
due to a conflict between the need to have order and the need to enjoy chaos.
One of these needs is likely to be projected onto other people or the outside
world.  Thus you may find yourself attracted to bizarre situations or people
where your powers of organisation are tested to the utmost, and where you
have to develop methods to control them, however crazy these methods may seem.
Another possibility is that you may think yourself to be quite organised, but
find that your efforts are affected disruptively by unforseen circumstances
or by illogical people.  You need to accept that life is neither completely
chaotic nor completely predictable, then you will feel more at ease.
Your conscious attempts to organise your experiences in a logical way operate
in connection with a store of ideas which stem from your unconscious thought
processes.  This gives you a fertile mind with good organisational potential,
and to make the most of this you need to find out through experience which
areas on which to concentrate, for too many ideas enter your mind for you to
act upon all of them.  Your intuition is well developed and you are capable
of seeing the solution to problems very quickly, especially if you have not
been taught to think solely in logical terms.  You have a good understanding
of how to extract the essential features of a situation, although others will
think your methods odd as they are based on intuition rather than logic.
You may feel some confusion in organising your affairs, feeling that chaos
is not far away, and that attempts to achieve order may result in disruption.
You may also be dissatisfied with accepted methods, feeling that they are
too narrow in their approach, missing out on the overall picture.  As you
gain more self-confidence in your abilities, this problem should lessen.
You may feel stress when you try to organise your affairs, fearing that your
efforts will often increase the chaos rather than lessen it, or you may
give up trying to be methodical altogether, preferring to disrupt others'
attempts to organise things.  In either case, you are likely to be highly
strung, until you understand that both logic and disorder are acceptable.
ings.  In either case, you are likely to be highly
strung, until you understand that both log