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Your SmartScope for July 2008:

July has the potential to be a particularly sweet month for you, but only if you play your cards right. Near the beginning of the month, you may see the opportunity to advance a plan you've had in the works for awhile, but hold on! There's one more factor you haven't thought of yet, and slowing down and rethinking your strategy will set you up nicely for what's going to happen around the 11th. Enjoy the good times but don't take your luck for granted, or else you're going to find yourself taking two steps backward for every step forward. On the 19th, keep your eyes open for a sign that you're on the right track, and if you see it, just take a deep breath and relax. What you've been waiting for is about to happen, if everything goes according to plan. No matter how it pans out, near the 30th, don't panic. If July doesn't deliver, August certainly will.


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:

Maria Montessori (born August 31, 1870) spent her life educating impoverished and mentally handicapped children in Italy and studying child development, leading her to form her own radical theories about teaching that became known as the Montessori method of education. Her ideas about education included the beliefs that children should be allowed to learn according to their own pace and interests, make as many decisions about their education as possible, and be given a learning environment that encouraged them towards curiosity and academic motivation.

 
   
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