Thursday, 12 October 2017

{Outer Circle Scorpio}[12th January 1988]

[Redbook4:311][19880112:1805e]{Outer Circle Scorpio}[12th January 1988]

19880112.1805
[continued]

Bearing in mind that all this* involves being wise after the event – **[SX]'s position is interesting in general terms of Circles Analysis because (short-circuiting the questions-and-answers approach)*** (he is a Scorpio and) twice in the six years or so during which I have known him**** he has (from his own account) made up his mind to change his occupation and his life only to find that before he could actually do so new circumstances at work had involved him to such an extent that he felt unable to leave his job. This sounds terribly characteristic of Outer Circle Scorpio (S~).#


*[See last previous entries.]

**[[Redbook4:287][19880104:1622e]{Marital Crisis}[4th January 1988]ff]

***[See last 4 previous entries, [Redbook4:308-311][1988012:1805]{Question-and-Answer method: Gender Orientation*}[12th January 1988]ff]

****(possibly, although less clearly, once additionally between the other two times)

#[and of lots of other Individuals...? The question, I suppose, is whether people born at that time of year are more likely to stay in a job at the expense of their own life-change plans than are people born at other times of year. For myself, born at the “opposite” time of year, I suspect that I would be more likely to treat a change of circumstances at work, presumably involving new responsibilities etc., as an incentive to a change of occupation and life, than as an obstacle to it. <20170804>]





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