Your upbringing has affected you strongly, leaving you with firm preconceived
ideas about how the world should be, and the sense of discipline to make the
necessary changes to make the world conform more closely to your ideals.  This
can be a creative combination, resulting in constructive changes in your en-
vironment with lasting effects.  The only problem arises if your plans are not
realistic: they are after all based on what you were taught, and are not nec-
essarily workable in the real world.  This can lead to frustration and rest-
lessness, when the world does not respond as you expect.  You may then find
yourself alternating between efforts to maintain the status quo and attempts
to achieve progress, resulting in a rather erratic and unstable lifestyle.
Your upbringing has affected you strongly, but has left you finding it hard to
achieve a balance between your sense of duty and responsibility, and your need
to have freedom to explore your ideas about the world on your terms.  You are
likely to experience this conflict in one of two main ways, or perhaps both.
Sometimes you feel you are prevented from being as free as you would like to
be by pressure from other people or the demands of the outside world, and you
will resent this: at other times you will feel that other people are eccentric
and unreasonable, and that they need to be kept in check.  In either case you
are likely to feel a build up of tension, and you need to learn to release this
gradually, rather than allow a build-up to the point where you over-react.
Your upbringing has left you with a fine balance between conservative and pro-
gressive thinking, and the picture you have built up of the objective world
through your education is quite accurate, making you excel in scientific-type
thinking.  Your good balance between inventiveness and common sense means that
you are able to apply your novel ideas in practical terms.  You are keen to
develop a rigorous approach, and your ability to grasp an overall plan and to
manage the details in a disciplined way is a formidable advantage where any
form of research is involved.  You will probably prefer to control your own
working conditions, and you should have teaching ability, since you are per-
ceptive of those truths which remain the same throughout generations.
Your upbringing has had a strong effect on you, but it has left you with pro-
blems with discipline.  There is a conflict between your need to toe the line,
conforming to society's requirements, and your need to escape from the limit-
ations on your freedom that this imposes, by acting unpredictably and in a
non-conformist rebellious way.  You need to learn that there is a false di-
chotomy between freedom and conformity, though you may find it hard to see it
this way.  Until you do so, you are likely to go to extremes, perhaps con-
forming most of the time, albeit grudgingly, then rebelling in a stubborn way
which leads to problems with authority.  At other times you may be too easy-
going, then suddenly apply the brakes, leading to problems in relationships.
Your upbringing has left you with a fairly realistic view of the objective
world, and you are able to appreciate both the overall workings of society
and the details of everyday practical life.  You are able to attend to your
responsibilities and duties without feeling that your freedom is being tram-
pled upon, and you are also able to follow up your individual interests with-
out neglecting other important aspects of your life.  Your ability to combine
innovative thinking with practical common sense makes you well suited to sci-
entific thinking and planning, and you will probably want a job involving
these skills.  Your ability to understand people of a different age from you
enables you to enjoy the company of the very old and the very young.
You feel somewhat confused about the need for you to conform to your respons-
ibilities, for you also feel a need to be free from them to follow up your
own plans in your own way.  You need to discover that both these needs are
valid, and that there need not be a conflict betwenn them: it is possible for
you to develop rules for yourself so that neither need is neglected.
You are likely to feel considerable tension between restriction and freedom
in your life until you learn that the two are not incompatible.  Once you do
so, you will find that you can develop considerable patience and achieve a
great deal, but only once you have found a way to let off steam gradually.
You need to ensure that you make your own rules wisely and stick to them.
e you have found a way to let off steam gradually.
You need to ensure that y