Your unconscious emotional response to the world is coloured by your consc-
ience structure.  This means that you do not express your feelings spontan-
eously, for you first of all have to check them against the demands of your
conscience.  You take your feelings very seriously, and, depending on your
upbringing, you are likely to control your feelings quite strictly, unless
you consider your emotions to be "appropriate", or to attempt to ignore them
altogether.  You might also use your common sense to try to obtain material
security instead of emotional security, as you do not trust your own feeling
nature.  You need to learn to take yourself less seriously, and you may need
help in realising that you do not have to stick to rules you learned long ago.
The free flow of your feelings is blocked by your conscience structure, as a
result of your upbringing.  You may have grown up feeling that you are no
good as a person, or you may have been taught the importance of putting pract-
ical considerations ahead of emotional ones.  You may have been set an unfort-
unate example by a stern parent or an otherwise difficult childhood.  You may
feel obliged to accept the many tedious burdens that are placed upon you in
life, and you may feel unable to relax and enjoy yourself.  You may even be
critical of others who appear to take life too easily, adding to your problems
by alienating them.  You are capable of developing considerable understanding
and trust through self-analysis, and you should never reject a helping hand.
Your unconscious emotional response to the world is coloured by your consc-
ience structure in such a way that the two cooperate well together.  Thus
your feelings are usually appropriate, though you may not express them too
easily, since you tend to be rather conservative emotionally, disliking too
much open display of feeling.  In fact you feel more comfortable when your
feelings can operate within a structured environment, and you therefore show
a practical turn of mind, with considerable patience and common sense.  You
prefer traditional serious forms of recreation, rather than anything too
unorthodox or impractical, but you should not close yourself completely to
new emotional experiences or you will miss some opportunities.
You have strong feelings, but you may find it hard to express them, feeling
that because they are private and subjective they are not important in re-
ality.  This may lead to problems in achieving a proper balance between
your strong sense of duty and your strong need to satisfy your own emotional
wishes.  You may not be aware of this conflict, and are more likely to ident-
ify with one or other part of it.  Thus you may feel that other people try
to stifle your feelings, or that you have to put a check on other people's
emotional expression.  In either case, you are likely to feel lonely and
misunderstood until you come to terms with the fact that you are attempting
to sort out your own emotional problems through other people inappropriately.
You have strong feelings and a strong sense of duty, this combination ind-
icating that you are sensitive to what other people think of you.  You may
be rather reserved about showing your feelings openly, unless you feel that
they are appropriate to external reality, for you are keen to be seen to
show the correct emotional responses.  This may give you a reputation for
shrewdness and common sense, together with a liking for concrete results
for your efforts, which can then be approved by society.  Your ability
to place your feelings within the context of external reality and expect-
ations may allow you to help others who have problems with their feelings,
by providing them with emotional support and appropriate "reparenting".
You may feel some confusion in balancing your need for emotional self-
expression with the demands of the outer world, which may lead to problems
in the area of control of your feelings.  Until you learn through experience,
you may incur criticism for showing your feelings, or you may tend to try to
curb the expression of feelings in yourself or in other people.
Your need for emotional security conflicts with your sense of duty, as the
two operate in different ways, leading to stress and loneliness until you
learn to handle feelings and duty more appropriately and in their proper
contexts.  Then you will find that you can allow yourself free emotional ex-
pression at times, and obey your strong conscience at other times.
 will find that you can allow yourself free em