|
I. Introduction
This short extract gives you a taste of your personal "Career and Vocation" horoscope by Liz
Greene. The small samples taken from various chapters convey an impression of the complete
vocation horoscope (18-25 pages) which can be
ordered as an E-Horoscope or a bound book in the AstroShop.
When we are children, people say to us, "What do you want to be when you grow up?" At that age, we
usually have dreams. When we are children, we are still capable of hearing the voice of the soul.
As we grow older, the questions change. There is no longer time for dreaming; we must now "face
reality" and think about how to survive in the big, bad old world.
This astrological report is about your vocation. It is meant to help you get a sense of what you
might be good at and what might be good for you, so that your working life has a meaning as well
as a pay cheque.
II. How You See the World
This chapter briefly describes your personal perspective on life and explains how you can best
express this in your career.
III. Your aptitudes and strengths
This chapter, which contains 8-10 pages, is one of the most comprehensive sections in the "Career
and Vocation" horoscope. Here is a short selection of three samples from the numerous aptitudes
described in the complete report.
An honest and realistic understanding of your fundamental strengths can help you to orientate
yourself in the world and put your energy into areas where you can hope to shine and achieve at
least many of your most cherished goals.
[..] You deserve the best possible education to feed your hunger for
knowledge and train your thinking faculties to the highest degree.
If you are drawn to the arts, you are likely to be attracted to theory as much as practise, and
you tend to bring as much intellect as feeling [...]
[..] Although this may have sometimes proven difficult in
your early education - for you probably found it hard to accept more shallow approaches to
subjects which interested you, and you may also have persisted in learning at your own rate of
speed and in your own way - in adulthood [...]
[..] This particular combination of qualities is not an easy one to handle, and it is possible that, at
different stages of your life, you have identified with one side and disowned the other. The more
you recognise that both exist within you, the better balance you will be able [...]
IV. Know Your Limits
This chapter describes your personal limitations and suggests how you can deal with these in your
professional life. In the complete horoscope, this chapter is about 5-7 pages in length.
Please click here to read a complete sample report
Recognising your innate limitations can help you to focus your energy in the right direction and
get the maximum fulfilment from your work.
[..] Logical thought matters a great deal
to you, and you are prone to rejecting the illogical. Yet there may be many kinds of logic, not
all cerebral; and the intuition has its own form of logic which is not always available to
conscious comprehension. Try to recognise that [...]
[..] You may also project what you fear in yourself, recoiling from what you perceive as
woolly thinking, over-imaginativeness, irrationality, or weakness in other; and this could make
things difficult in your relationships with work colleagues who might have much to contribute [...]
V. Working with Others
The two final chapters of "Career and Vocation" deal with the way you work together with your
colleagues in your everyday working life, and what success means to you personally.
One of the most important factors to consider in terms of your direction in life is how you work
with others. Everyone has his or her own style of relating in the working environment; everyone
has different needs and requirements.
VI. What Success Really Means to You
When people speak of "success", they generally mean a position of importance in the world's eyes,
or a job that yields lots of money and all the material pleasures and comforts that implies. But
success, in terms of the deeper issue of vocation, is a highly individual thing that means
different things to different people.
|