Your unconscious emotional response to the world is coloured by what you con-
sider to be good and worth striving for as a result of your upbringing.  This
means that you feel an inner sense of permission to express your emotions to
the full, and you will seek out situations where this is possible.  You will
not keep your feelings to yourself, and people will appreciate your emotional
enthusiasm, although to make the most of your emotional freedom of expression
you also need to take into account more practical considerations as well, as
you tend to be rather happy-go-lucky.  At best you are emotionally supportive
towards others, and your optimism can encourage them even when they are de-
pressed, but you sometimes overreact emotionally, since you feel so strongly.
Your unconscious emotional response to the world is at odds with what you were
taught about what you should consider good and noble to aim for.  This makes
you a restless person, for you are pulled in two directions.  At times you
will invest considerable emotional energy in pursuing goals which later turn
out to be of dubious value to you, and at others you will do what you believe
to be right only to find that you feel dissatisfied emotionally.  Although you
are a spirited emotional person with an abundance of enthusiasm, you need to
become more organised in your approach to reconciling the demands of your
feelings with what you were taught to be your purpose in life, otherwise you
are likely to be extravagant and wasteful in seeking emotional satisfaction.
Your unconscious emotional response to the world is supported and encouraged
by your learnt sense of what you should aspire towards.  You therefore feel
good about yourself, probably because your upbringing has taught you that
you feel happiest when you see the best in yourself and other people.  Your
optimism makes you able to be your natural self as you feel most secure in
this way.  You will want to share your good feelings with other people,
and to make the most of your abilities you will benefit from travel or fur-
ther education, provided you are allowed to choose the direction of your
studies and pursuits, for kind and tolerant though you are, you do not like
to feel that you are being pushed into something out of tune with your nature.
Your unconscious emotional response to the world works in one way: your bel-
iefs about how you should act to further your purpose in life work in another.
You probably tend to identify with one way of being rather than the other,
seeing the second way as belonging to others.  Thus you may show your feelings
readily and to the full, encouraging a spirited response from others which is
stronger than you imagined, in turn encouraging you towards further strong
displays of emotion.  Another possibility is that you identify with what you
believe is Right, despite your views going against the grain.  In either case,
the problem is one of excessive identification either with your emotions or
your beliefs, and you need to develop some moderation in expressing these.
Your unconscious emotional response to the world is supported by faith in
yourself as a person, probably as a result of an upbringing where you were
taught that feeling good in yourself results from having good motives.  This
means that you will value channelling your emotional and spiritual energies
in some creative way.  While this could mean just that you are popular and
enjoy having a good time, you will probably learn that real success requires
some effort, and you will want to find self-fulfilment via the pursuit of
wider interests than those directed towards immediate pleasure for its own
sake.  You may learn through travel, for example, finding you are able to
understand relatively easily how other peoples run their lives.
You may feel unsure about your beliefs, being confused as to whether you
ought to place your own feelings first, or your philosophical opinions.
You will learn more about both of these sides of yourself through your
interactions with other people, realising that it is not necessary to sacri-
fice your emotions for your belief system or vice versa.
You have a strong emotional nature, and a strong belief system about what is
right to aim for, but your feelings are often at odds with your beliefs,
for these two sides to your personality operate in quite different ways,
leading to a feeling of strain in these areas, until you learn that both are
important, but that one should not be overdone at the expense of the other.
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