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Your SmartScope for July 2010:

This month, when you look around at your group of friends, you feel safe and comfortable. They are familiar to you. You understand them, and they understand you. You share the same interests and the same way of communicating. You get along so well, and it's really easy to agree with each other!

It's wonderful that you're so comfortable where you are. However, it is also limiting. When you are always with people who agree with you and make you feel easy, you can fall into lazy thinking, close-mindedness, and complacency. You want to do good in this world, right? So make sure you keep on reaching out to people you don't know that well. Put yourself into uncomfortable positions and share what you know with people who have a different perspective than you. After all, you know that you have a group of people to go back to who will support you and care about you. If anyone is in a position to challenge themselves, it's you.

 


About You, Virgo:

The Myth: It is not known for certain who Virgo represents, but historically, the constellation and sign have been linked to many goddesses, including Athena (the Greek Goddess of Wisdom), Ishtar (the Assyro-Babylonian Goddess of Love and War), and Cybele (a Hittite and Phrygian goddess who represented the Earth Mother). In one popular interpretation, Virgo represents Astraea, the daughter of the Greek god Zeus and the Greek goddess Themis. Astraea, the Goddess of Justice, was said to rule the world fairly and justly until, disgusted by humanity, she returned to the skies.
Cool Fact: Virgo is the only zodiac sign represented by a female.
As a Virgo, you might be... intelligent, practical, very polite and neat
Careers a Virgo might like: Doctor, teacher, psychologist, nurse, scientist, accountant

Famous Female Virgo:

Marguerite Higgins (September 3, 1920 - January 3, 1966) was an American journalist who was one of the first women to report as a war correspondent. Braving the battlefield during WWII for the New York Herald Tribune, she was at the liberation of the Dachau concentration camp. She did not simply stand by and observe, however, earning an award from the U.S. Army for helping while the SS guards surrendered. She was the first woman to win a Pulitzer Prize for her coverage of international politics. She continued covering international relations, events, and interviews with world leaders such as Francisco Franco and Nikita Khrushchev until her death.

 
   
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