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Your SmartScope for July 2009:

July is a powerful month for you. You have a lot of control, and you're really enjoying flexing your strength! It's intoxicating and addicting. But, you know what they say: power corrupts. Don't forget that your power came from good things, like sense and good intentions. You were given power because you earned trust and gave others something to believe in. Don't squander what you've earned by forgetting that power acts through you, and you can never create it on your own. Keep your power alive by staying on task and getting things done, like you planned. It's easy to sit and be overwhelmed by all the options that come your way in your new position, but daydreaming about each one becomes simple laziness when you spend too long thinking. Possibilities come, and possibilities go when they aren't taken advantage of. What you need to do is use your mind, act ethically, keep trying, and reexamine our beliefs. Are you really doing what you set out to do, or have you gotten sidetracked by the shiny things? Be steadfast, Pisces!


About You, Pisces:

The Myth: Pisces' myth begins with Aphrodite (the Greek Goddess of Love) and her son, Eros. To escape the evil monster Typhon, a serpent with 100 heads, Aphrodite and Eros turned themselves into fish and hid underwater. So that they wouldn't lose each other in the darkness of the deep water, they tied their tails together with a cord. Zeus, impressed by their strategy, placed the fish among the stars, and those fish are the constellation Pisces.
Cool Fact: As a constellation, Pisces has almost always represented only female deities (that is, only goddesses, not gods).
As a Pisces, you might be... gentle, compassionate, easy-going and imaginative
Careers a Pisces might like: Doctor, veterinarian, physicist, chef, pharmacist, actor

Famous Female Pisces:

Marian Anderson (February 27, 1897 - April 8, 1993) was an African American singer. The Daughters of the American Revolution refused to let her perform for them because of her race, and First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt quit the organization in protest. In response, she invited Anderson to perform for President and First Lady Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt, head members of the NAACP, and cabinet officials on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial to a massive Easter Sunday crowd. She was the first African American to sing with the New York Metropolitan Opera as well as the first African American member of the Metropolitan Opera Company. In 1963 she was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

 
   
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