2024.05.19 02:58 lesbothrashhead why am i so unhappy?
i do everything i can to improve myself everyday but i’m so miserable :( i would appreciate insight i’m so lost submitted by lesbothrashhead to astrologyreadings [link] [comments] |
2024.05.12 18:38 justmorenergy What can you tell about me from my chart?
I've been studying astrology for a couple weeks now and found it fascinating how accurate some of my interpretations are, Therefore I seek insight on other peoples opinions and knowledge of me based off my birth chart. submitted by justmorenergy to astrologyreadings [link] [comments] https://preview.redd.it/ctngme96x00d1.png?width=700&format=png&auto=webp&s=2c4ee8e65490c86ad5d18dadb0fec84a72be9058 |
2024.05.09 18:18 Hairy-Departure-5451 End of marriage?
Is there any way to tell if all the current Transits could indicate the end of a 10 year marriage? submitted by Hairy-Departure-5451 to AskAstrologers [link] [comments] |
2024.04.29 21:24 ConsciousRun6137 German Biologist Stefan Lanka Bet €100,000 the Measles Virus Doesn’t Exist. He Won.
Excerpt..In November 2011, German biologist Stefan Lanka publicly issued a bold challenge. He offered the hefty sum of 100,000 Euros to anyone who could prove the existence of the measles virus. submitted by ConsciousRun6137 to u/ConsciousRun6137 [link] [comments] Lanka was inspired to issue the challenge after witnessing an intense and sustained propaganda campaign that year by both the World Health Organization and the German government, urging people to get vaccinated against measles. Article here…Measles vaccine lie. https://preview.redd.it/qwg1gzffygxc1.png?width=768&format=png&auto=webp&s=05cea4727dd0621865942c9e06efba47d6ddf124 Billions of doses of measles vaccines have been administered since their introduction in the early 1960s. Authorities constantly admonish the importance of measles vaccination, and whenever a measles ‘outbreak’ occurs it is invariably blamed upon unvaccinated folk.The existence of a measles virus, therefore, is presented as a given. Which means Lanka should have been flooded with offers to take up his challenge.After all, who could resist the opportunity to legally score a quick and easy €100,000? Turns out proving the existence of a measles virus isn’t so easy. There was only one response to Stefan’s challenge. Not from one of the world’s countless virologists or microbiologists, or vocal health authorities, but from a bright-eyed medical student called David Bardens. On January 16, 2012, Bardens emailed Lanka and asked if the challenge was still current. Lanka replied in the affirmative. On January 31, 2012, a cocksure Bardens replied with the following message: “With the detailed compilation of literature attached I have given you both the proof of the existence of the measles virus and the required images and information on the diameter of the measles virus. Please transfer the amount of € 100,000 to the following account […] I would like to thank you for the opportunity to acquire such a relatively big amount of money with such a relatively little effort. With best regards, David Bardens” The literature tendered by Bardens as ‘proof’ of the existence of the measles virus consisted of the following titles, which will herein be referred to as “The Bardens Six”: Enders JF, Peebles TC. Propagation in tissue cultures of cytopathogenic agents from patients with measles. Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine, 1954 Jun; 86 (2): 277–286. Bech V, Magnus PV. Studies on measles virus in monkey kidney tissue cultures. Acta Pathologica et Microbiologica Scandinavica, 1959; 42 (1): 75–85. Nakai M, Imagawa DT. Electron microscopy of measles virus replication. Journal of Virology, 1969 Feb; 3 (2): 187–197. Lund GA, et al. The molecular length of measles virus RNA and the structural organization of measles nucleocapsids. Journal of General Virology, 1984 Sep; 65 (Pt 9): 1535–1542. Horikami SM, Moyer SA. Structure, Transcription, and Replication of Measles Virus. Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology, 1995; 191: 35–50. Daikoku E, et al. Analysis of Morphology and Infectivity of Measles Virus Particles. Bulletin of the Osaka Medical College, 2007; 53 (2): 107–114. Sorry, But I Asked for “Proof”Lanka replied to Bardens – correctly – that the studies did not meet the requirements. They did not prove the existence of the measles virus.Bardens, not understanding the difference between a dubious claim and valid scientific proof, promptly sued Lanka for non-payment. When the case was heard, the court’s medico-legal ‘expert’ was Andreas Podbielsky, from the University of Rostock. Podbielsky just happened to be … a virologist. This was like calling an astrologist to give ‘expert’ testimony on the validity of horoscopes. Little surprise that, on March 12, 2015, the court ruled in Bardens’ favour. Lanka was ordered to pay Bardens the €100,000. Incredibly, the court made this decision despite Podbielsky admitting that none of The Bardens Six reported the results of any control procedures. The 2015 ruling is the part of the story the mainstream media want you to hear, and fell all over themselves to report.“A vaccine denier bet $100,000 the measles virus ‘doesn’t exist.’. He lost,“ trumpeted the Los Angeles Times. The LA Times article relied heavily on ad hominem attack to portray Lanka as a screwball. According to uber-snide LA Times writer Michael Hiltzik, Lanka had “a long history of pseudoscientific outbursts,” was prone to “denial” and “pure publicity stunts,” and was allegedly the latest of “cranks blowing up their own case in court.”Having tripped over itself to ridicule Lanka, the glorified trash rag that is the LA Times was too embarrassed and no doubt too compromised to ever report on what subsequently transpired. Ditto for the hordes of other outlets that gleefully reported the original decision, but suddenly suffered a monumental case of writer’s block when it came to reporting what happened next. Lanka, you see, promptly appealed the decision. The case was then heard by the Higher Regional Court (Oberlandesgericht) Stuttgart on February 16, 2016. After reviewing The Bardens Six, the court agreed they failed to meet the contest requirements as set by Lanka. The criteria stipulated a single publication that both proved the existence of the measles virus and measured its diameter. This was hardly an unreasonable request. If I go into the Australian outback, allegedly discover a never-before-seen animal, and write up a detailed report on the Koalaroo, it would be expected I provide a bit more morphological detail than just “adult members of this new species are big. Real big. I’m talking h-u-g-e. I mean, you should see the pecs on these things!” The original decision was reversed and Lanka got to keep his €100,000. In December 2016, Bardens tried to get this ruling revised, but the court saw no reason to do so. Outside of Germany, the mainstream media response to the appeal result was deafening silence. The response of ‘fact-checkers’ (aka globalist-funded liars) and virus believers was to dismiss the appeal ruling as a result of fortuitous technicality.Interestingly, none of these fact-fudgers or virus stalwarts ever discuss The Bardens Six – the actual studies submitted by the then-student as ‘proof’ the measles virus really exists.There’s a reason for that. The Bardens Six Didn’t Prove Diddly SquatAfter his initial 2015 victory, Bardens told an interviewer, “You could hand the virus to Lanka on a silver platter if it were a bit bigger – he would probably still deny its existence.”He added, most ironically, “Unfortunately I had to learn in recent years in my discussions with anti-vaxxers that their opinions are often so stuck that you have no chance to reach them with any facts.” This is the smug derision with which mainstream ideologues regard those who quite reasonably ask for proof of something’s existence. So let’s take a look, in chronological order, at the slop a mainstream stalwart holds as ‘proof’ the measles virus exists. This will reveal just who the intractable dogmatists really are. Enders & Peebles 1954.If you’ve done any research into the history of measles, you’ve no doubt come across the name John Enders. In 1954, he and colleague Thomas Peebles claimed to have cultivated “cytopathic agents” from patients with ‘measles.’Those of you wise to virology’s “cytopathic effect” charade will already know where this paper is going: La-la land. The duo begin their paper by writing: “Numerous attempts have been made in the past to propagate the agent of measles in lower animals, in chick embryos and in tissue cultures. The results of different investigators were often at variance or directly contradictory. It has been made reasonably clear, however, that monkeys, especially M. mulatta, are moderately susceptible to experimental inoculation.” (Bold emphasis added).Ah yes, yet another ‘virus’ we are incessantly told is hyper-virulent, potentially deadly, and necessitating urgent population-wide vaccination, but suddenly suffers stage fright when examined under experimental conditions. So Enders and Peebles set out to cultivate this socially awkward virus, and to demonstrate its virulence via the “cytopathic effect” wank, which is nothing more than voodoo science done First World-style. Here’s how this absurd charade works: You take some samples (in this case, throat swabs, blood and feces) from people who reportedly suffer the disease in question. You begin your experiment with the assumption that these samples contain a ‘virus.’ You spin the samples around and around at high speed in a centrifuge to separate the fluid and sediment. You then take some of the mix and place it in a test tube or petri dish containing a ‘cell culture’ consisting of, among other things, antibiotics and bovine fetal serum.Note that nothing has been isolated here. Quite the opposite has occurred: You’ve taken a gob of phlegm, which contains a whole bunch of other yeccch aside from a mythical virus, and you’ve added more items to it, including bovine fetal serum which contains RNA and possibly DNA.Because you are work in a profession built upon lies, you call this mixture a “viral isolate.”You then take this anti-isolate, and mix it with a bunch of cells. Not just any cells; to pull off this fraud, you need a special cell line that will give you the results you want. The cell line of choice is African green monkey kidney cells. After mixing the heavily adulterated sample you call an “isolate” with the cell line, you let the mixture sit. You periodically place the mixture under an electron microscope, and when you notice the added cells are starting to deform and die off, you yell “bingo!” You triumphantly write up a paper claiming you have ‘isolated’ said ‘virus.’ In reality, you haven’t isolated diddly squat, but you assume the “cytopathic effect” (cells dying) is proof that there’s a nasty cell-wrecking virus in there. One of the most fundamental rules of science is control your variables, which is why valid scientific experiments are always performed with control subjects or samples.There is nothing valid about the virus isolation gig, however. It is a sham, so you scrupulously avoid performing the exact same procedures on samples from healthy humans not suffering from said ‘virus.’That would undermine the whole charade, and put a quick end to all those lucrative grants and Nobel Prize nominations. It would also bring an end to the virus farce, an extremely lucrative source of fear porn for megalomaniacs and drug companies alike. The above pretty much describes what Enders and Peebles did, but a few other observations are worth noting. The authors reveal they tried to get this cell culture/cytopathic effect ruse going with the following cell lines: Human embryonic lung, human embryonic intestine, human embryonic skin and muscle, human foreskin, human uterus, human kidney, embryonic chick tissue, rhesus monkey kidney and rhesus monkey testis. In other words, to create the cytopathic effect that supposedly demonstrates isolation of a ‘virus,’ they tried a vast array of cell lines – everything from penis trimmings to monkeys’ balls. Yet they settled on just two: Human kidney and monkey kidney cells.Why kidney cells and not, say, skin cells, the latter being a far more intuitive choice for examining a disease that involves outbreaks on the skin?Because the antibiotics used in all these cytopathic effect experiments are kidney toxic. In their experiments, Enders and Peebles used both penicillin and streptomycin.Little wonder that African green monkey kidney cells have become the cell line of choice for cytopathic effect experiments: They can be relied upon to deform and die in the presence of kidney toxic antibiotics, hence giving researchers the results they are after.But that wasn’t all. While the Enders and Peebles experiment hardly constitutes “isolation” of a ‘virus,’ let’s assume there really was a ‘measles virus’ lurking in their cell cultures. If this were the case, it would be reasonable to assume that when this anti-isolate was administered to living entities, instead of glass receptacles, it would trigger the disease of measles. Well, it turns out Enders and Peebles did have a crack at this. They tried ‘infecting’ two litters of suckling white mice with their so-called isolate. What happened? Stugatz. Despite being directly injected with the porqueria concocted by Enders and Peeble, “The animals remained well during an observation period of 21 days.” I have to wonder if Bardens even read the six papers he submitted as proof, or whether he just read the misleading abstracts, like most interns and physicians who bother reading journals do. If Bardens had read this paper closely, he should’ve realized Enders and Peebles didn’t isolate anything. They even inadvertently admit it:“Although we have thus already obtained considerable indirect evidence supporting the etiologic role of this group of agents in measles,” the duo wrote, “2 experiments essential in the establishment of the relationship remain to be carried out. These will consist in the production of measles in the monkey and in man with the tissue culture materials after a number of passages in vitro sufficient to eliminate any virus introduced in the original inoculum. The recovery of the virus from the experimental disease in these hosts should then be accomplished.” “The findings just summarized support the presumption that this group of agents is composed of representatives of the viral species responsible for the measles.” (Bold emphasis added)The bottom line is that Enders and Peebles 1954, the first paper confidently put forward by Bardens in his attempt to prove Lanka wrong, was a hopelessly confounded endeavor that didn’t isolate Jack Schiesen. We are supposed to just “presume” the virus was lurking there somewhere in the hopelessly adulterated cell culture mixtures. Although not mentioned in the paper, and despite not having isolated anything, this is the experiment that would later be cited by others as having discovered the “Edmonston strain” of measles virus. Bech & von Magnus 1959This paper reports “the isolation of five strains of measles virus in cultures of trypsinized monkey kidney cells.”We could write this paper off based on that alone, but the authors also claim they identified the strains by serologic tests and even transmitted the disease to monkeys. As with Enders and Peebles they used bovine amniotic fluid in their culture, and they added penicillin and streptomycin to the mix. Once again, they produced the ‘cytopathic effect’ in cytopathy-prone monkey and baboon kidney cells. Which again means they didn’t isolate diddly squat. Furthermore, what they generously called an ‘isolate’ could only be obtained from the samples of seven of the 13 patients, despite all specimens being collected within 40 hours of rash onset. The researchers then claimed to have detected measles antigens in the blood of four patients. However, no control procedures were performed with measles-free patients, so we don’t know whether these antigens were truly unique to the condition we know as measles, or something you could find among any random sampling of people. Even if they were unique to measles patients, there is no proof they represented a ‘virus’ because no virus was ever isolated. Two monkeys were then ‘inoculated’ intranasally and orally with the so-called ‘isolate’ of one of the patients, a 6-year-old girl whose mixture evinced measles ‘antigen.’ Eleven days later, one of the monkeys developed a “universal rash” allegedly spreading from head to toe. I say “allegedly,” because while the researchers were happy to pepper their paper with multiple microscopy images of the in vitro cytopathic effect, there was not a single picture of the measled monkey. In humans, measles is accompanied by high fever, cough, runny nose, red watery eyes and a rash that lasts 5-6 days before fading. However, the affected monkey showed normal temperature throughout, and its skin rash lasted only 24 hours. No other symptoms were reported. The other monkey showed no symptoms at all. So the affected monkey reportedly suffered a brief skin breakout, but its sequelae were not consistent with what we call measles. But let’s assume for a moment that this monkey’s brief skin flare-up was caused by the administration of throat fluid from an unwell six-year-old human. The question then becomes: Was it the throat fluid – containing countless elements – from a sick human that made the monkey sick, or a measles ‘virus’ that the researchers never isolated but simply assumed to be present because they subscribed to the cytopathic effect ruse? We’ll never know because no virus was ever isolated. Another pertinent question is what would have happened to that same monkey if it was administered the throat fluid of a healthy six year old girl? We’ll never know because, as is par for the course in this absurd isolation charade, no control procedures were performed at any juncture. So we have a study that again never isolated anything, in which only 7 of 13 patients had samples which could be made to do the cytopathic wank, and only 4 that could show ‘antigens.’ It reported on two monkeys, one of whom suffered a brief skin breakout and no other symptoms commensurate with measles; the other experienced no ill effects at all. As with Enders and Peebles 1954, this paper provides lots of assumptions and presumptions but no proof of a virus. Nakai & Imagawa 1969This paper describes “electron microscopic observations of the various stages of measles virus replication and the morphological changes induced in HeLa cells.”While not as ubiquitous as monkey kidney cells, HeLa is another cell line popular among those perpetuating the cytopathic effect charade. This cell line is named after African-American woman Henrietta Lacks, who unfortunately passed away from cervical cancer in 1951 at only 31 years of age. During the brief period between her diagnosis and passing, Henrietta underwent radium treatments for her cancer at John Hopkins Hospital. A sample of her cancer cells retrieved during a biopsy were sent to the lab of one Dr George Gey. According to the John Hopkins website, Gey had been collecting cells from all patients who came to Johns Hopkins with cervical cancer, but each sample quickly died in his lab. Henrietta’s cells however, were unlike any of the others he had ever seen: Where other cells would die, her cells doubled every 20 to 24 hours. While clearly unrepresentative of typical human cells, the durability of the HeLa line made it a favorite with researchers.* This was the cell line Nakai and Imagawa used to propagate the Edmonston strain of measles ‘virus’ for the experiments described in this 1969 paper. Let’s stop, for a moment, to digest what we’ve just read. The Edmonston strain was not an isolate – it was the outcome of a cell cultured sample from one of the child cases in the Enders and Peebles 1954 paper. This ‘strain,’ obtained not via isolation but by the anti-isolation cell culture/cytopathic effect ruse, was then subjected by Nakai and Imagawa to another bout of the cell culture ruse, this time using the highly atypical HeLa cell line. The researchers note they bathed the final cell suspension in a mixture containing 1% osmium tetroxide, a highly poisonous substance. The researchers further reveal that the preparations were stained with a solution of uranyl acetate in ethyl alcohol for 60 minutes and stained further with lead hydroxide for 15 minutes. So they produced a preparation in which cells were exposed to an array of toxic substances: Osmium tetroxide, ethyl alcohol, lead and uranyl acetate (which contains the isotope 238U of uranium). Importantly, the researchers also write: “Control preparations of uninoculated HeLa cells were examined in a similar manner.” They give no further details about these ‘uninoculated’ preparations. Based on what I’ve seen from other studies involving the ‘isolation’ sham, I’m guessing ‘uninoculated’ means a preparation not only void of a sample from a sick patient, but also void of a sample from a healthy patient. In which case it’s not really a control. The authors then took lots of electron microscopy images of the preparations. We are presented with photos of what could easily pass for cellular vesicles, which we are told are measles virions. There are also multiple photos of long thin strands which we are told are “the helical nucleocapsid released from measles virion.” They claimed the ‘virions’ were pleomorphic (able to change shape and form) with sizes ranging from 180 to 600 nm. That’s all well and good, but there’s a problem. A big problem. Remember how the researchers claimed they created control preparations with “uninoculated” HeLa cells? That’s a critical detail, yet they inexplicably make no further mention about these alleged control preparations. You can’t expose an atypical cell line to a bunch of poisonous substances, then claim the vesicles that subsequently show up in electron microscopy images are ‘measles virions’ without confirming the same thing didn’t happen to a control preparation.Yet that’s exactly what Nakai and Imagawa did.Once again, if you consider ‘proof’ to be conclusive evidence of something, as opposed to shady leaps of faith, then Nakai and Imagawa did not prove the existence of a measles virus. Lund et al 1984In the experiment reported in this paper, Lund et al do the Cytopathic Boogaloo with Vero (African green monkey kidney) cells.In other words, they don’t isolate anything, and don’t prove the existence of a measles virus. They conduct no control procedures, so they cannot confirm that the vesicle-like structures and strands captured by electron microscopy would not have similarly been visible in control samples. Not to be deterred, they measure the size of the vesicle-like structures and strands. “Purified virions,” they claim, “examined by negative staining in the electron microscope exhibited a pleomorphic range of particle sizes varying in diameter between 300 nm and 1000 nm.” Their paper thus added to the already long list of publications claiming disparate sizes for the alleged measles ‘virus’ (Waterson et al 1961; Waterson 1965; Norrby & Magnusson 1965; Nakai et al 1969; Waters et al 1972; Hall & Martin 1973; Waters & Bussell 1974). Once again, this paper doesn’t even begin to prove the existence of a measles virus. Horikami & Moyer 1995I’m not sure why Bardens included this paper, because it’s not an experimental report like the aforementioned. It’s simply a review paper that takes the existence of the measles virus as a given, and discusses its alleged structure, transcription and replication.It does mention “Negatively stained preparations of virus particles appear roughly spherical but pleomorphic by electron microscopy, with the diameters of the particles ranging from 300 um to 1000 um.” In support of this statement, it references the Lund et al 1984 paper we just discussed above. Lund et al did not even begin to prove the measles virus exists, and neither does this review. Daikoku et al 2007Five down, one more to go. Will this 2007 paper by Daikoku and colleagues save the day for the anti-Lanka crowd?Unfortunately for them, no. Everything you need to know about this study is contained in the following passage: “[Measles viurus], the Edmonston strain, was inoculated into African green monkey kidney cells, Vero cell line, and cultured in a minimum essential medium containing 1% fetal bovine serum.” Zzzz … zzz … zzzz … Huh? … what? … Sorry folks. After a while, this cytopathic effect charade gets so predictable and boring it becomes downright narcoleptic. After doing the cytopathic effect wank, “particles with a nucleocapsid-like structure inside or a projection-like structure on the surface were determined to be MeV-like particles.” These ‘measles virus-like particles’ ranged between 50 nm and 1000 nm in diameter. That’s great, but because these particles were obtained via the uncontrolled cell culture/cytopathic effect caper, there is no proof they were measles virions. Another Massive Fail for the Voodoo Virus CrowdThat, ladies and gentlemen, is The Bardens Six:
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2024.04.16 13:39 Parking_Customer_642 Parents are not speaking to me because I have a GF outside of my culture which they don’t approve of.
2024.04.02 15:32 BobbyFan54 Stagnant in Career and Life, Basically
Seems like no matter what I do, I feel stuck in my career and that I’m not better off than I was in my 20s, when I was wide eyed and bushy tailed starting out in the world. For context, I work as a pet caretaker and manage an agency, get paid very little for back breaking work. I had a job in finance before the economic collapse in 2008, and I’m now paid less than I was in 2000. I have two degrees and have essentially been called “overqualified.” Maybe my astrological position can provide clarity? submitted by BobbyFan54 to astrologyreadings [link] [comments] I’ve also been dealing with some severe depression lately, and despite my work in therapy seems to also be stagnant. Thoughts? |
2024.04.01 07:57 baby_moon_light Can someone read my chart?
I've always been very interested in what my chart means but have no clue how to read it submitted by baby_moon_light to astrologyreadings [link] [comments] |
2024.03.26 19:56 Most-Strategy-2777 Job loss - when will I get another one?
Got terminated on Jan 8 and am still unemployed. At the tail end of Rahu MD (dates represent beginning of each dasha). Have no money left and going thru so much anxiety and depression. When will I find another job? submitted by Most-Strategy-2777 to IndianVedicAstrology [link] [comments] |
2024.03.17 21:10 johngotti I am graduating with my Master's in May while working full-time. Where does my future lead? Right now, I am so stressed that I feel like I am collapsing.
submitted by johngotti to astrologyreadings [link] [comments] |
2024.03.12 18:46 Due_Control690 Will this Mercury square screw us over?
Is this a good day to marry for earth dominate signs? submitted by Due_Control690 to AstrologyChartShare [link] [comments] Hello all, March 18th 2024 at9:30am I figured would be a good day to marry legally at the city clerk. The moon has such good aspects with Venus and Saturn and Jupiter! And it’s a 11 house stellium so I figure it’ll be a union that perceived as a power couple so that’s neat. It’s very water and Venus dominate so I’m thinking how will this effect our lives since my fiancé and I have strong earth placements What I’m most concerned about is the Mercury square moon. Would this hard aspect trample the other good aspects on this chart for us?? I’m also worried about the 5 house being kind of empty since we really do want children. Me (Venus in 5H) and him (mars in 5H) consider that to be very important to us in the future. No chart will be completely perfect but I feel this is the best I’m gonna get for a while. |
2024.03.12 18:35 Due_Control690 Is this Mercury square going to screw us over?
Hello all, submitted by Due_Control690 to AstrologyCharts [link] [comments] March 18th 2024 at9:30am I figured would be a good day to marry legally at the city clerk. The moon has such good aspects with Venus and Saturn and Jupiter! And it’s a 11 house stellium so I figure it’ll be a union that perceived as a power couple so that’s neat. It’s very water and Venus dominate so I’m thinking how will this effect our lives since my fiancé and I have strong earth placements What I’m most concerned about is the Mercury square moon. Would this hard aspect trample the other good aspects on this chart for us?? I’m also worried about the 5 house being kind of empty since we really do want children. Me (Venus in 5H) and him (mars in 5H) consider that to be very important to us in the future. |
2024.03.12 18:23 Due_Control690 Is this a good day to marry for earth dominate signs?
Hello all, submitted by Due_Control690 to AskAstrologers [link] [comments] March 18th 2024 at9:30am I figured would be a good day to marry legally at the city clerk. The moon has such good aspects with Venus and Saturn and Jupiter! And it’s a 11 house stellium so I figure it’ll be a union that perceived as a power couple so that’s neat. It’s very water and Venus dominate so I’m thinking how will this effect our lives since my fiancé and I have strong earth placements What I’m most concerned about is the Mercury square moon. Would this hard aspect trample the other good aspects on this chart for us?? I’m also worried about the 5 house being empty since we really do want children. Me (Venus in 5H) and him (mars in 5H) consider that to be very important to use in the future. |
2024.02.29 21:25 spawnofspace I was so looking forward to this Jupiter conjunct my descendent transit coming up until I saw this chart. It looks really painful but also happy? I'm so confused. What do you guys think? Mostly positive or negative?
I just want happiness and stability in my life already. submitted by spawnofspace to AskAstrologers [link] [comments] |
2024.02.27 03:34 SteveHora Steve Hora, Vedic Astrologer https://stevehora.com/ For Horoscope predictions, I use Vedic (Sidereal) horoscope for Accurate timing and analysis, according to True Ayanamsa, using sidereal solar years of 360, Analysis as per Parasara system and and Vimshottari Dasha system
2024.02.26 07:42 johngotti I am graduating with my Master's in May while working full-time. Where does my future lead? Right now, I am so stressed that I feel like I am collapsing.
submitted by johngotti to astrologyreadings [link] [comments] |
2024.02.25 09:15 Most-Strategy-2777 When will I find a job? Recently lost my job over a month ago. At the end of Rahu MD / Mars AD which is killing me
submitted by Most-Strategy-2777 to IndianVedicAstrology [link] [comments] |
2024.02.21 11:07 smartblonde111 Mars return in Aquarius, 8th House - and more! How might I best embrace this transformation? 💫
My Mars return is approaching—exact on Thursday, 2/22/2024—and I am already feeling a surge of incredible transformative energy. submitted by smartblonde111 to AskAstrologers [link] [comments] Experiencing several other potent and curious transits (e.g. Mars conjunct Venus also exact w/ Pluto close by; approaching my natal Moon too). Recently had my Venus and Mercury returns as well. It’s been a journey! Asking for guidance in how I might work with these energies to have a most positive next few years. Thank you in advance 📿 |
2024.02.17 03:35 Abigmcfatty is nursing a good career path for me?
I just want to learn more about myself. Thank you. submitted by Abigmcfatty to AskAstrologers [link] [comments] |
2024.01.19 02:15 Luv-My-Dog What do you think?
What impression does my chart give you? submitted by Luv-My-Dog to astrologyreadings [link] [comments] |
2024.01.17 16:48 spawnofspace I'm so confused by my Saturn return chart, what am I supposed to learn?
What the heck is going on with that Pluto and Uranus!! This is so chaotic I don't even think that Jupiter Venus conjunction is going to be positive sadly :( submitted by spawnofspace to AskAstrologers [link] [comments] |
2024.01.14 18:06 CatWatt January 14th Special Days - Featuring Kite Freebies!
submitted by CatWatt to FrugalFreebies [link] [comments] January 14th is... International Kite Day/Makar Sankranti -- Every year, Gujarat celebrates more than 200 festivals. The International Kite Festival (Uttarayan) is regarded as one of the biggest festivals celebrated. Months before the festival, homes in Gujarat begin to manufacture kites for the festival. The festival of Uttarayan marks the day when winter begins to turn into summer, according to the Indian calendar. It is a sign for farmers that the sun is back and harvest season is approaching which is called Makara Sankranti. This day is considered to be one of the most important harvest days in India Free Printables, Coloring Pages, Activities, and Crafts:🪁 Math Ideas for a Kite Theme - Fun Learning Printables for Kids🪁 Free Kite Worksheets edHelper.com 🪁 Free Kite Templates Blank Kite Shapes to Print Printable PDF 🪁 kites Archives - The Measured Mom 🪁 Make a Kite - Seussville 🪁 Kite - Pencil Toppers for Kids Mocomi 🪁 Recycled Brown Bag Kites 🪁 25 DIY Kite Activities for Five-Year-Olds 🪁 Kite Homemade Craft Kite Theme 🪁 A Few Simple Kite Plans 🪁 Paper Bag Kites 🪁 FREE Printable Packet for Preschoolers K is for Kite Teaching Mama 🪁 Kite Craft Archives Fun Family Crafts 🪁 Kite Activities Making Learning Fun 🪁 Free Printable Bookmarks Kites 🪁 Directions For Making a Tetrahedron Kite - Mathematics 🪁 Kite coloring pages 🪁 Kite Resources for Teachers Fly a Kite Day-- The first records of kite flying come from China, and many historians believe the tradition originated in that country. Today, kite flying is a significant activity in Asia, including China and Japan. Did you know that kites were used in the American Civil War to deliver letters and newspapers?🪁 10 Kite Crafts for Kids 🪁 Make a kite out of a garbage bag 🪁 DTLK Kite Crafts for Kids 🪁 Paper Bag Kites 🪁 Free Kite Printables and Montessori-Inspired Kite Activities 🪁 Kite Colouring Pages -- More: January 14th Special Days - Featuring Kite Freebies! |
2024.01.11 08:21 svetark Those who do and those who don't.