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Biorhythms Legend

Primary rhythms

  • The 23-day physical cycle tracks a persons's strength, endurance, powers and state of health.
  • The 28-day emotional cycle tracks the stability and positive energy of your psyche and outlook on life, as well as your capacity to empathize with and build rapport with other people.
  • The 33-day intellectual cycle is representative of man's intellectual dynamics: verbal, mathematical, symbolic, and creative abilities, as well as your capacity to apply reason and analysis to the world around you.
  • The 38-day intuitive cycle was discovered later and can’t be considered as a primary one. However it may be useful to know when you can trust your "sixth sense". The cycle tracks an unconscious perception and instincts.

    Physical

    This cycle indicates your physical strength, vitality and health.
    When it is high, you are highly active and energetic.
    When it is in the critical phase, you may tire easily. Accidents may occur and you need to exercise caution.
    When this cycle is low, all your strength is drained. You may suffer from depression and exhaustion.

    Emotional

    This cycle tracks the stability and positive energy of your psyche and outlook on life, as well as your emotional capability to relate with and build rapport with other people.
    When the cycle is at a high level, you are more prone to building new relationships and increasing your creativity.
    When it is critical, you may be emotionally unstable and prone to suicidal tendencies.
    When at a low, you may be extremely low on feelings and relaxed.

    Intellectual

    This cycle indicates the verbal, mathematical, symbolic, and creative abilities and skills, as well as your capacity to apply reason and analysis to the world around you.
    At a high in the cycle, your mind is very sharp, analytically, logically and in concentration. Your creative, writing, decision making skills are at their peak.
    At the critical phase, you may avoid making decisions and there may be some mental indecisiveness.
    At the low level in the cycle, you may not be able to judge nor concentrate.

    Intuative

    This cycle indicates your "sixth sense" of your unconscious perception and instincts.
    At a high in the cycle, your mind is very perceptive to knowing the right things to do and trusting your instincts.
    At the critical phase, you may avoid making rash gut feelings.
    At the low level in the cycle, you may not be able to trust your perception and instincts easily.
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    Winning by the
    Stars & Biorhythms

    The Stars

    We are all believers in the STARS in one form or another.
    How many times have you found yourself browsing the paper and looking up your STARS for the day?
    What you may not know is that the day is broken up into 24 favourable time zones (12 day & 12 night) but with a difference to our normal hours.
    These time zones start from sunrise to sunset.
    They are calculated by using the minutes between sunrise and sunset then dividing them by 12 (for the daylight zones) and 12 (for the night zones) giving you "time zone".
    Each "time zone" is represented by a ruling star sign.

    There are seven different star signs, one for each beginning of every day of the week :-
    Saturday - Saturn
    Sunday - Sun
    Monday - Moon
    Tuesday - Mercury
    Wednesday - Mars
    Thursday - Jupiter
    Friday - Venus

    The activity belonging to the favourable minutes during the time zone would be at its best in performance and have the "luck" with it.

    E.G.
    Lets say the Melbourne Cup was run during a Jupiter "time zone" then you would select runners referring to :- cathedrals, saints, luck, large animals, far way places, etc..
    Or
    If you wanted to plant a garden the best time to start would be in a "moon time zone" (relating to water, gardens, growth, food) for the best results.


    Biorhythms

    Some biorhythm history

    In the nineteenth century, studies first began on certain life rhythms or cycles that were later termed "biorhythms". The word biorhythm is a compound of two Greek words, bios and rhythmos, which mean life and a constant or periodic beat. The theory of biorhythms defines and measures three basic and important life cycles in man: the physical, emotional, and intellectual.

    Wilhelm Fliess, a highly respected and prominent doctor in Berlin, did pioneer work on biorhythms in the 1890s. Fliess, who had observed 23- and 28-day rhythms in many of his patients, began to collect statistics on the periodic occurrence of fevers, childhood disease, and the susceptibility to disease and death. With these statistics in hand, Fliess believed he had detected rhythms which were fundamental to man's life.

    Dr. Fliess later developed two major biorhythm theories: first, that Nature bestows on man "master internal clocks" which begin counting time at birth and continue throughout life; and second, that one of these clocks regulates a 9-3-day cycle influencing man's physical condition and another regulates a 28-day cycle influencing emotions or degree of sensitivity.

    A widely read man, Fliess speculated on why these two rhythms should prevail. He believed, much as we do today, that man is essentially bisexual in nature, composed of both male and female elements. Fliess called the 23-day physical cycle the male cycle, since it influenced strength, endurance, and vitality. He considered the 28-day cycle to be representative of the female element in all human beings; it governed sensitivity, intuition, love, and creativity-the entire emotional spectrum.

    Subsequent research has reinforced the idea of the 23-day physical and 28-day emotional cycles. Of course, today few would agree with the premise that all physical components are male and all emotional matters female. Instead, both are now considered to be essential characteristics of each sex.

    Wilhelm Fliess wrote extensively about the biorhythm theory, but the mathematics and statistics he used to support it were so massive and confusing that few people bothered to closely examine or to understand them. Still, the basic premise of the theory caught on. The idea of periodic rhythms in man created a considerable controversy among his colleagues, one which still exists today. Most scientists have accepted the fact that man's physical and emotional states are in constant flux, but many do not agree that these changes are influenced by regular biological cycles that start at birth.

    One of Fliess' contemporaries who kept an open mind to his ideas was Sigmund Freud, a man with extremely revolutionary ideas of his own at the time. Early in his career, Freud showed extreme interest in and admiration for Fliess' theories, and they soon became very close friends. One hundred and eighty-four letters from Freud to Fliess have been published; unfortunately, the replies from Fliess have been lost.

    Important ideas tend to spread rapidly in the scientific community. Dr. Hermann Swoboda, Professor of psychology at the University of Vienna, read Fliess' work while still a young man, and by the turn of the century was himself researching, lecturing, and writing on biorhythms. Swoboda, who detected a periodicity in the occurrence of dreams and thinking processes, and in fevers, asthma, heart attacks, and the outbreak of illness, believed his own investigations confirmed Fliess' observations on the 23-day and 28-day cycles. Swoboda contributed to the theory the notion of the "critical" day, when the cycle shifts from high to low or low to high; a day of instability and usually of some stress for most people.

    when we seem to have more energy, vitality, and emotional control. There are days when these same feelings are at low ebb. And there are also those days when we react to situations in a totally unexpected way.

    There are many people who support the biorhythm theory. Bertram Brown, Director of the National Institute of Mental Health, has said, "These biorhythms have a lot of validity. They help explain in part everything from having a bad week to exciting scientific things like the varied effects medications have when administered at different times."

    Douglas Kelley, a statistician with the National Safety Council, is quoted as saying: "When chemistry was at the state where biorhythm is today, it was called alchemy. But alchemy became chemistry, and within fifty years research may do the same for biorhythm."

    On the other side is Colin Pittendrigh, an expert on biological rhythms at Stanford University. The Washington Post quoted him as saying, "I consider this stuff an utter, total, unadulterated fraud. I really know nothing about it because we've been unable to track it down. But I consider anyone who offers to explain my life in terms of 23-day rhythms a numerological nut, just like somebody who wants to explore the rhythms of pig iron price to 11 decimal places."

    Against these pros and cons and lacking sufficient clinical methods to prove the theory, an alternative procedure is to apply it to numerous situations and to carefully note the results, rather than to constantly criticize its assumptions. This alternative is recommended to the reader. Numerous opportunities are provided throughout this book for the reader to test the theory. Actually, the situation is similar to accepting or rejecting the daily weather forecast. The forecast can't be proved. But it is too useful and important in the life of an individual to neglect or refuse to accept. Nor is one too concerned if the weather forecast is not completely reliable. I may carry my raincoat tomorrow when, in fact, the sun will shine brightly. However, I still feel rewarded in that I was prepared for the event of rain. I also know the next forecast is quite likely to be valid.

    These are not unique circumstances for man. He has always had to choose between the objective and the subjective, that which he can feel versus that which he can sense, fact versus fancy if one pleases. Economic and social men are perfect examples. They cannot act through certainty because proof does not exist for the many actions they follow. Economic man - like biorhythmic man - must be completely informed. Being completely informed is to know all courses of action that are open to him. Against this criteria it is foolhardy, indeed, to completely ignore or refuse to examine the biorhythm theory. "Too stupid to come in out of the rain" is often a result of refusing to observe the forecast of rain. A hasty decision, made now, without regard to another time when mental capabilities may be supposedly keener, is the mark of insensitivity; and irrationality is often the inability or reluctance to observe all factors and possible courses of action available.



    Dr. Hermann Swoboda, Psychologist 

    Everyone experiences days when everything he does seems to be right and, on the other hand, days when nothing he does seems to make any sense. This state of affairs is not new; man has long puzzled over the range of his own actions and feelings. Even Hippocrates, the traditional physician's physician, advised his students and associates some 2,400 years ago to observe the "good" and "bad" days among the healthy and the ill, and to take these fluctuations into consideration in the treatment of patients.

    Although man understood that he acted, felt, and thought differently at different times, for centuries a fundamental question went unanswered, even unasked. At the end of the nineteenth century, Dr. Hermann Swoboda, professor of psychology at the University of Vienna, was prompted by his research findings to wonder whether there might not be some regularity or rhythm to these fundamental changes in man's disposition. Swoboda apparently was impressed by John S. Beard's report of 1897 on the span of gestation and the cycle of birth, and by the publication of a scientific paper on bisexuality in man by Wilhelm Fliess... ...Swoboda, in his first report, presented at the University ] of Vienna at the turn of the century, noted:
    One does not need to have lived a long span of life before one comes to realize that life is subject to Consistent Changes. This realization is not a reflection on the changes in our fate or the changes which take place during various stages of life. Even if someone could live a life completely devoid of outside influences, a life during which Nothing whatever disturbs the mental or physical aspect, life would nevertheless not be the same day after day. The best of health does not prevent man from feeling unwell at times, or less cheerful than he is normally.

    During his initial research between 1897 and 1902, Swoboda recorded the recurrence of pain and the swelling of tissues such as is experienced in insect bites. He discovered a periodicity in fevers, in the outbreak of an illness, and in heart attacks, a phenomenon Fliess had reported in a medical review, which led to the discovery of certain basic rhythms in man one a 23-day cycle and the other a 28-day cycle.

    However, Swoboda, as a psychologist, was mainly interested in finding out whether man's feelings and actions were influenced by rhythmical fluctuations and whether these rhythms Could be precalculated. The results of his persistent research Can be summed up in his own words:
    We will no longer ask why man acts one way or another, because we have learned to recognize that his action is influenced by periodic changes and that man's reaction to an impression can be foreseen, or predicted, to use a stronger term. Such a psychoanalysis could be called bionomy because, as in chemistry where the researcher Can anticipate the outcome of a formula, through bionomy the psychologist can anticipate, or predict, so to speak, the periodic changes in man.

    Swoboda was an analytical thinker and a systematic recorder. His painstaking research in psychology and periodicity produced convincing evidence of rhythms in life. He showed a deep interest in the study of dreams and their origin, and noted that melodies and ideas would often repeat in one's mind after periodic intervals, generally based on a 23-day or a 28-day rhythm. In searching for the origin of these rhythms, Swoboda carefully noted the birth of infants among his patients and found that young mothers would often have anxious hours about the health of their babies during periodic days after birth. He reasoned that this phenomenon, which was often accompanied by the infant's refusal to take nourishment, was a sign of rhythmical development; on these days the tempo of digestion and absorption was apparently slower. He advised the mothers not to worry, since these periodic crises could be considered part of natural development and growth. Similar rhythmical turning points were reported in asthma attacks.

    Swoboda's first book was Die Perioden des Menschlichen Lebens (The Periodicity in Man's Life). This book was followed by his Studien zur Grundlegung der Psychologie (Studies of the Basis of Psychology). In order to facilitate his research and also to encourage other scientists and medical doctors in the recording of the mathematical rhythms, Swoboda designed a slide rule with which it was fairly simple to find the "critical" days in the life of any person whose birth date was known. The instruction booklet was entitled Die Kritischen Tage des Menschen (The Critical Days of Man).

    His most profound work was a 576-page volume entitled Das Siebenjahr (The Year of Seven), which contains the 23-day and 28-day mathematical analysis of the rhythmical repetition of births through generations. With documentation covering hundreds of family trees, he endeavored to verify that most major events in life, such as birth, the onset of an illness, heart attacks, and death, fall on periodic days and involve family relationships.



    The Second Life Rhythm 

    The second long-term rhythm, this one of 98-day duration, was ascribed by Fliess to the rhythmical changes of the feminine inheritance. Originating in the nervous system or fibers, it influences the emotions and one's degree of sensitivity. Fliess, a thorough researcher, explained his theories with firm conviction and documented them with an impressive collection of statistical data, tracing the origin of the rhythms back to birth. His revelations, to say the least, caused a good deal of Controversy among his colleagues. They accepted the fact that man's physical makeup and his emotions are continually changing; but it was, understandably, difficult for them to take the next step and agree that these changes were influenced not only by what man experienced in his everyday living, but quite fundamentally by his very biological constitution. To Fliess, it seemed as if nature had given man a master clock in addition to the more obvious rhythms that pulse throughout the animal and plant kingdom. There are, of course, innumerable examples of precise rhythms in all forms of life, from the simplest virus to the most complicated creatures.

    In a book published in 1942, George Riebold, a gynecologist, reviewed the fundamental ideas developed by Fliess between 1908 and 1928. Riebold said that "some truth lurks in the idea that life follows a periodic rhythm . . . and that the periods of 23 days and 28 days which Fliess discovered are of frequent occurrence." Some of the discoveries, he reported, had been adopted into modern concepts of gynecology and otolaryngology.

    The word rhythm is also used in reference to the menstrual cycle in woman, for which a 28-day periodicity is the apparent average. Two questions were foremost in the mind of the original researchers: First, why does this supposedly regular menstrual rhythm vary in length in different women (and even in the same woman) from about 26 to 35 days? Secondly, why should woman alone be subject to rhythmical development? Is not man also, the researchers reasoned, the combination and offspring of both male and female cell development? After Fliess had reported on bisexuality in man, he observed a 23-day rhythmical repetition in fevers and recurrent illness in some of his patients. This led him to believe that both a 23-day and 28-day rhythm affected the regularity of the menstrual rhythm and that all life is influenced by these two long-term rhythms. ...There is a lesson to be learned from the lifetime efforts of the pioneers in biorhythm, Swoboda and Fliess. It is included in these pages because it is important to an understanding of the history of biorhythm, or, for that matter, of just about any new idea that stretches the imagination of man beyond his common experience. Fliess was primarily a researcher in the field of life rhythms. In their questioning however, both Swoboda and Fliess felt that the problem of rhythms in nature could best be solved by examining as many facets of her manifestations as possible. Independently, both studied family trees, hoping to find out why births often followed a rhythmic family pattern. Curiosity led them to attempt to establish a biological pattern between siblings, and between the child and his parents and grandparents....

    Their awe of nature led these pioneers to experiment with numbers as a tool in deciphering her wondrous accomplishments. The irony of their quest was that this very use of mathematics helped largely to defeat their attempts to gain wide acceptance for the very conclusions that mathematics helped them to reach. By applying numbers to the realm of man and medicine, Fliess had come up with concepts that were daring, original, and most important seemingly quite valid. Yet by burdening his published works with these encumbrances pages and pages of numerical tables, Charts, calculations, and proofs he frightened the medical profession as well as the public he sought to convince.

    His critics said his presentation was too complex. His readers were either unable or unwilling to wade through the multitude of statistics, and although no one could disprove his mathematical calculations, it might have appeared that they almost discouraged analysis.



    The Rhythm of the Mind 

    What has made the study of biorhythm such a fascinating experience is the fact that pieces of supporting evidence were discovered by researchers who not only did not know each other but were not even aware of the work previously done in the science. Yet results have been remarkably Consistent and encouraging , and new directions and dimensions have continued to be added to the established principles. So, in a very real way, it was with biorhythm's third major precept: the cycle of the mind.

    During the 1920's Alfred Teltseher, a doctor of engineering and a teacher, reportedly Collected a large number of performance reports of high school and college students at Innsbruck. Himself a student of nature as well as of mathematics, Teltseher wondered why the intellectual Capability of students seemed to vary from time to time, and whether any exact pattern could be established. Unfortunately, my own search abroad brought to light no original documentation, scientific paper, or book of his, and so my knowledge of Teltscher's work is based on secondhand reports and on articles that discussed his findings.

    Apparently, even the comparatively limited basis of his statistical sampling disclosed that an exact pattern could be established. The paper Teltscher supposedly prepared concluded that the students' high and low peaks of performance fluctuated in a definite 33 day cycle. He stated, in effect, that there were periods during which a student could readily grasp and absorb new subjects, and, on the other hand, there were comparable periods during which the capacity to think quickly and clearly was diminished. His associates and medical contemporaries ascribed this rhythm to periodic secretions of glands affecting the brain cells, possibly of the thyroid gland.

    On the other side of the Atlantic Ocean, meanwhile, Dr. Rexford Hersey at the University of Pennsylvania, assisted by Dr. Michael John Bennett, conducted a similar research between 1928 and 1932. Hersey reported the accidental discovery of a 33-day to 35 day rhythm, revealed by checking the emotions of workers in railroad shops over periods of many months. His findings were published in his book Workers' Emotions in Shop and Home. Donald A. Laird, director of the psychological laboratory at Colgate University, reviewed Hersey's discovery in an article that appeared in Review of Reviews, April 1935, entitled "The Secrets of Our Ups and Downs," and was reprinted in Reader's digest, August, 1935. At the conclusion Laird declared:

    To most people moods are an eternal puzzle, no one knows whence they come or where they go. Science has recently discovered moods are by no means matters of chance. They are not, as we have long supposed, simply reactions to the success or failure of our plans. On the Contrary, they grow within us as a direct result of the rise and fall of our emotional energy. It has been proved that our bodies and minds produce, store up and spend our emotional energy in regular cycles.

    Laird's comments, although widely read, failed to capture the imagination of the public or the medical profession.

    A similar attempt was made a decade later by Myron Sterns, who, writing for Redbook in November, 1945, under the title "Do You Know Your Emotional Cycles?" tried to stir up some attention for the science. A month later, Reader's Digest picked up the Redbook article. Stearns quoted Hersey as having said: "Few people paid any attention to my book, except some far-sighted officials of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, who supported my work from the beginning." Hersey was also quoted as remarking that "everybody knows we have ups and downs, but we don't know what causes them."


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    Win By The Stars

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    This app was created to give users the best chance to take on what ever task they want be it planting a new lawn or garden to winning at anything they take on.

    Keywords



    ARIES - I AM
    March 21st - April 20th
    Aries - I Am

    Aries is known as the forerunner of the zodiac. If ever there was a natural entrepreneur, it is an Aries. General Characteristics may include a person that is adventurous, aggressive, a leader, eager, bossy, argumentative, brave, spontaneous, confident, courageous, direct, dynamic, energetic, enterprising, enthusiastic, exasperating, excitable, explosive, forceful, forthright, determined, freedom-loving, impatient, impulsive, independent, insensitive, a leader, passionate, pioneering, powerful, quarrelsome, quick-tempered, quick-witted, selfish and unstoppable.

    Mars is the ruler of Aries.

    Aries rules the 1st house in the natural zodiac.

    Aries ruled body parts are the head, brain, eyes, face and muscles.

    TAURUS - I HAVE
    April 21st - May 21st
    Taurus - I Have

    If your sun is in Taurus, you love life's comforts. Good food, a nice home, fine furnishings and a stable foundation are important to you. Those born under the sign of Taurus may be acquisitive, adamant, affectionate, artistic, constant, determined, domestic, dull, dependable, generous, greedy, grumpy, guarded, materialistic, indulgent, industrious, inflexible, insensitive, lazy, loving, obstinate, patient, permanent, persistent, physical, placid, possessive, practical, radiant, reliable, robust, security-loving, steady, strong-willed, stubborn, tenacious, trustworthy and warm-hearted.

    Venus is the Ruler of Taurus.

    Taurus rules the 2nd house in the natural zodiac.

    Body parts ruled by Taurus are the neck, throat, thyroid gland, larynx, chin, lower jaw, ears, tongue, vocal chords, jugular vein and tonsils.


    GEMINI - I THINK
    May 22nd - June 21st
    Gemini - I Think


    Whether they are typing at lighting speed on instant messenger, or talking on the phone until dawn, sometimes simultaneously, Gemini's love to communicate! Characteristics of a Gemini may include being adaptable, amusing, articulate, busy, changeable, charming, chatty, curious, cunning, dexterous, energetic, fickle, fidgety, friendly, flighty, gossipy, inconsiderate, indecisive, inconsistent, intellectual, intelligent, lively, logical, nervous, non-committal, restless, open minded, sociable, spontaneous, superficial, transparent, two-faced, versatile, witty, youthful and mentally oriented. Some Gemini's tend to dress very provocative.

    Mercury is the ruler of Gemini.

    Gemini rules the 3rd house in the natural zodiac.

    Gemini ruled body parts are hands, fingers, arms, shoulders, upper ribs, lungs, bronchial tracts, trachea, thymus gland, nerves and nervous system.


    CANCER - I FEEL
    June 22nd - July 22nd
    Cancer - I Feel


    Cancers are most happy with a secure home life, a well stocked pantry and a large family. Your favorite family restaurant is probably being run by a Cancer. Security is important for Cancers feel comfortable in any environment. Whatever it is that defines security for them is essential for their happiness. Cancer characteristics may include someone who is careful, caring, reactive, cautious, dependant, changeable, romantic, empathetic, clingy, emotional, affectionate, nurturing, helpful, home-loving, imaginative, intuitive, kind, loving, maternal, moody, over-sensitive, panic-stricken, patriotic, possessive, protective, resourceful, shrewd, have strong attachments, sympathetic, tenacious, thrifty, touchy, vulnerable, worrisome, tied to the past and psychic.

    The Moon is the ruler of Cancer.

    Cancer rules the 4th house in the natural zodiac.

    Cancer ruled body parts are breasts, breastbone, stomach, digestive system, lower ribs, womb and pancreas.


    LEO - I WILL
    July 23rd - August 23rd
    Leo - I Will


    Like the Lion who wants to rule the jungle, Leo is proud and loves to show it. Your Leo needs a great deal of attention and a starring role in a Broadway Play may suit your Leo just fine. Leo characteristics may include someone that is artistic, dignified, bossy, arrogant, conceited, self confident, creative, determined, domineering, dramatic, warm, direct, dynamic, egotistical, elegant , enthusiastic, extravagant, fun loving, generous, hot tempered, interfering, intolerant, jovial, loving, passionate, playful, personable, popular, powerful, proud, steady, stubborn, vibrant, vivacious, warm-hearted and talented.

    The Sun is the ruler of Leo.

    Leo rules the 5th house in the natural zodiac.

    Leo ruled body parts are the heart, upper back, spine, spleen and the aorta.


    VIRGO - I ANALYZE
    August 24th - Sept. 22nd
    Virgo - I Analyze


    Everything has its place, just ask a Virgo and they will know where that is. Virgos tend to be very organized in everything they do, sometimes to a fault! This sign rules the house of health and service and often Virgos do very well in medicine and healthcare. Virgo characteristics may include someone that is analytical, careful, conservative, critical, cynical, dependable, diligent, discriminating, finicky, harsh, intelligent, logical, methodical, meticulous, modest, perceptive, perfectionist, practical, precise, reliable, self-conscious, self-critical, sensitive, sharp, shy, subtle, understanding, witty, wise, thrifty, health and hygiene conscious.

    Mercury is the ruler of Virgo.

    Virgo rules the 6th house in the natural zodiac.

    Virgo ruled body parts are the sympathetic nervous system and the lower digestive tract.


    LIBRA - I BALANCE
    Sept. 23rd - Oct. 23rd
    Libra - I Balance


    If you have a problem, your Libra friend may help you weigh the consequences. It's nice to have someone to help you see both sides of the issue at hand. Libra characteristics may include a person that is agreeable, airy, artistic, balanced, appreciative of the arts, flirtatious, charming, cheerful, courteous, compromising, diplomatic, easygoing, evasive, far-sighted, idealistic in relationships, frivolous, gullible, indecisive, self-absorbed, poetic, refined, resentful, romantic, self-indulgent, sociable, sympathetic, sophisticated, idle, indecisive, vague, but also fair.

    Venus is the ruler of Libra.

    Libra rules the 7th house in the natural zodiac.

    Libra ruled body parts include the lower back (lumbar region), kidneys and adrenal glands.


    SCORPIO - I DESIRE
    Oct. 24th - Nov. 22nd
    Scorpio - I Desire


    Scorpio's are often quite good in business, when given the opportunity. Many Scorpios work in the field of medicine as Scorpio rules the house of rebirth and regeneration. Scorpios may have characteristics of being mysterious, aggressiveness, agitated, angry, committed, compulsive, deep, skeptical, determined, discerning, emotional, fearful, forceful, imaginative, inflexible, intense, intuitive, jealous, loyal, magnetic, obsessive, passionate, having a preoccupation with sex, sarcastic, persistent, powerful, resentful, secretive, seductive, sensitive, sexy, judgmental, suspicious, uncertain, self mastery, unforgiving, unpredictable, vindictive and willful.

    Pluto is the ruler of Scorpio.

    Scorpio rules the 8th house in the natural zodiac.

    Scorpio ruled body parts are the genitals, bladder, cervix, urinary tract and prostate gland.


    SAGITTARIUS - I AIM
    Nov. 23rd - Dec. 21st
    Sagittarius - I Aim


    Your favorite teacher just might be a Sagittarius, for teaching and education in all areas are their forte. When their not caught up in a book, their off to the four corners of the world exploring and learning about other cultures. Some general Sagittarian characterizes may include someone who is adventurous, boastful, careless, energetic, enterprising, impatient, enthusiastic, exaggerating, excitable, expansive, explorative, frank, freedom loving, good-humored, honest, idealistic, intellectual, irresponsible, jovial, lazy, naive, open-minded, optimistic, outgoing, outlandish, outspoken, philosophical, reckless, restless, sincere, undisciplined, versatile, athletic, a visionary, wasteful and independent.

    Jupiter is the ruler of Sagittarius.

    Sagittarius rules the 9th house in the natural zodiac.

    Sagittarius ruled body parts consist of the liver, hips, thighs, pelvis and the femur.


    CAPRICORN - I USE
    Dec. 22nd - Jan. 20th
    Capricorn - I Use


    Do you need a good bookkeeper? Capricorns are disciplined, hard working and often mature before their time. Life can get too serious at times, just ask a Capricorn. Some general Capricorn characteristics would be someone who is ambitious, aspiring, calculating, careful, cold, respectful, considerate, determined, diligent, objective, dutiful, enduring, exacting, far-sighted, fatalistic, grouchy, industrious, harsh, humorous, loyal, patient, penny pinching, persevering, conservative, pessimistic, practical, reliable, brooding, reserved, rigid, ruthless, selfish, sensible, cautious, serious, strong and traditional.

    Saturn is the ruler of Capricorn.

    Capricorn rules the 10th house in the natural zodiac.

    Capricorn ruled body parts include bones (skeletal structure), joints, knees and teeth.


    AQUARIUS - I KNOW
    Jan. 21st - Feb. 18th
    Aquarius - I Know


    If you have something interesting to say, you'll get the attention of an Aquarius, but keeping their attention is another story! Think of an Aquarian as the Einstein of the zodiac, open to discovering areas that have not yet been developed. Anything new and unusual seems to capture the attention of those born under this sign. Some Aquarian characteristics would be aloofness, selflessness, analytical, contrary, cranky, detached, distant, eccentric, fanatical, fearless, friendly, humanitarian, idealistic, independent, individualistic, intellectual, inventive, lofty, loyal, oblivious, odd, original, outrageous, progressive, quick, quirky, perverse, rebellious, sociable, stubborn, tactless, tireless, trustworthy, unconventional, unemotional, unpredictable and innovative.

    Uranus is the ruler of Aquarius.

    Aquarius rules the 11th house in the natural zodiac.

    Aquarius ruled body parts are the circulatory system, ankles, Achilles heal, calves and shins.


    PISCES - I BELIEVE
    Feb. 19th - March 20th
    Pisces - I Believe


    If you know a Pisces, you're probably aware of their deep sensitivity. The most watery of the water signs, say the wrong thing and you'll have a weepy Pisces on you're your hands. That's okay too because it balances those signs that tend to be a bit emotionally dry. Pisces may exhibit characteristics of being dreamy, artistic, careless, compassionate, confused, deceitful, deep, easily-led, escapism, greedy, happy, hopeless, humorous, shy, hypersensitive, withdrawn, idealistic, imaginative, plays the victim, impractical, impressionable, indecisive, intuitive, inventive, kind, misdirected, misunderstood, mysterious, prophetic, receptive, secretive, self-sacrificing, spiritual, spiteful, sympathetic, unworldly, vague, understanding and empathetic.

    Neptune is the ruler of Pisces.

    Pisces rules the 12th house in the natural zodiac.

    Pisces rules the feet and the immune system.




    12 Zodiac Signs

    There has been a relationship between human and the 12 zodiacal animals. It is believed that the years represented by the animals affect the characters of people in the same way like the western astrology signs. Click the following signs to know the personalities of persons under different signs. Facts like years, strengths, weaknesses, best matches and fortune of 2017 of each sign are introduced.

    Origin of Chinese Zodiac

    Similar to the ten heavenly stems and twelve earthly branches, animals in Chinese zodiac were also created for counting years as the system that is now universally accepted based on the Gregorian calendar. The selection and order of the animals that influence people's lives very much was originated in the Han Dynasty (202BC - 220AD) and based upon each animal's character and living habits. The old-time division was mostly related to number 12: one ji equals 12 years, one year has 12 months, one day has 12 time periods called shi chen. Ancient people observe that there are 12 full moons within one year. So, its origin is associated with astrology. Each animal sign is usually related with an earthly branch, so the animal years were called Zi Rat, Chou Ox, Yin Tiger, Mao Rabbit, Chen Dragon, Si Snake, Wu Horse, Wei Sheep, Shen Monkey, You Rooster, Xu Dog and Hai Pig.

    Ben Ming Nian
    (Zodiac Year of Birth)

    The animal year when a person was born is called his / her Ben Ming Nian (Zodiac Year of Birth). The distinctive zodiacal way of calculating years based on the lunar calendar decides that every once in every twelve-year cycle people will meet their birth signs.
    Although it sounds a bit superstitious, Chinese people take their year of birth seriously. According to the soothsaying, people in their own Ben Ming Nian may offend 'Taisui', also called the God of Age, so they would suffer a lot of misfortunes, such as sickness, economic loss, physical injuries and obstacles in career. However, there are effective ways to diminish the unlucky impacts. The most popular solution is wearing red underwear, socks or waist belts given by elders, for red is believed to bring them good luck. Some jewelry accessories may also help, such as pendants and bracelets with auspicious images.

    12 Zodiac Signs and Time

    ZodiacHoursDescription
    RatZi Shi:
    11 p.m. to 1 a.m.
    This is the time rats actively seek food.
    OxChou Shi:
    1 to 3 a.m.
    This is the time that oxen ruminate.
    TigerYin Shi:
    3 to 5 a.m.
    Tigers hunt prey and display fiercest nature.
    RabbitMao Shi:
    5 to 7 a.m.
    The Jade Rabbit on the moon is busy pounding medicinal herb with a pestle.
    DragonChen Shi:
    7 to 9 a.m.
    Dragons hovered in the sky at that time to give people rainfall.
    SnakeSi Shi:
    9 to 11 a.m.
    Snakes start to leave their burrows.
    HorseWu Shi:
    11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
    With the sun high above, other animals are lying down for a noon break while the unconstrained horse is still vigorous.
    SheepWei Shi:
    1 to 3 p.m.
    It is said that if sheep ate grass at this time, they would grow stronger.
    MonkeyShen Shi:
    3 to 5 p.m.
    Monkeys become lively.
    RoosterYou Shi:
    5 to 7 p.m.
    Roosters return to their roost as it is dark.
    DogXu Shi:
    7 to 9 p.m.
    Dogs begin to carry out their duty to guard entrances.
    PigHai Shi:
    9 to 11 p.m.
    All is quiet and pigs are sleeping soundly.

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    Star Zones

    How to use          

    We are all believers in the STARS in one form or another.
    How many times have you found yourself browsing the paper and looking up your STARS for the day?
    What you may not know is that the day is broken up into 24 favourable time zones (12 day & 12 night) but with a difference to our normal hours.
    These time zones start from sunrise to sunset.
    They are calculated by using the minutes between sunrise and sunset then dividing them by 12 (for the daylight zones) and 12 (for the night zones) giving you "time zone".
    Each "time zone" is represented by a ruling star sign.

    There are seven different star signs, one for each beginning of every day of the week :-
    Saturday - Saturn
    Sunday - Sun
    Monday - Moon
    Tuesday - Mercury
    Wednesday - Mars
    Thursday - Jupiter
    Friday - Venus

    The activity belonging to the favourable minutes during the time zone would be at its best in performance and have the "luck" with it.

    E.G.
    Lets say the Melbourne Cup was run during a Jupiter "time zone" then you would select runners referring to :- cathedrals, saints, luck, large animals, far way places, etc..
    Or
    If you wanted to plant a garden the best time to start would be in a "moon time zone" (relating to water, gardens, growth, food) for the best results.

    and so on....

    Good luck!!!          

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