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 Gemini (May 21 – June 20)
Mobility, communication, change, and diversity are central motifs for this sign
By YARON LIVNE
The key word for the Gemini is “next,” as in “what’s next?” and “next in line.” They get bored quickly and want to move on. Mobility, communication, change, and diversity are central motifs for this sign.
Geminis can simultaneously talk on the phone (and they are obsessive about it…), yell and wave to friends through the window, breastfeed the baby, get a beer from the fridge, and draft a “to-do” list for tomorrow.
They are great salespeople and can sell ice to Eskimos. Geminis also make outstanding campaigners and excel in marketing, advertising, copywriting, and anything else needed to convince an audience.
Geminis are young characters in terms of both build and behavior. Actor Michael J. Fox, for example, is a typical Gemini always boasting a boyish look, as is the case with Paul McCartney.
Geminis talk a lot but do not always mean what comes out of their mouth. Gemini George H.W. Bush, for example, who invited Americans to read his lips when promising not to raise taxes, forgot his pledge and raised them nonetheless.
John F. Kennedy, who was young, communicative and won the famous 1960 television debate against dull Capricorn Richard Nixon, epitomizes the Don Juan side of Gemini.
Kennedy had an affair with Marilyn Monroe, a beautiful, sexy, and complex woman the way only a Gemini can be. Indeed, the lighthearted, outwardly communicative Gemini often disguises a chaotic, complicated side hiding deep inside.
Work and career
Commerce, marketing, public relations, advertising, teaching, instruction, communication, transportation, care taking, creative arts, and music are all Gemini professions. Vocations related to finance or secrecy also are appropriate.
Geminis go through circles of destruction, construction, and renewal in the framework of their careers, and often feel a sense of solitude, betrayal, or disappointment. Sex and jealously also tend to make an appearance during work.
Finances
Geminis might make money through secretive and manipulative ventures, such as commerce, real estate, and brokerage (beware: this could also lead to financial downfall.)
An inheritance comes later in life, but money can also arrive from insurance and medically related affairs. Geminis have a somewhat fatalistic attitude to resources and money and can be disconnected from reality when it comes to finances.
Home and family
The home is critical and pushes for excellence, intellect, cleanliness and order. The father figure is more strongly related to those traits. The mother, on the other hand, gives off a sense of victimhood and sacrifice.
There is something obsessive about the Gemini attitude to parents. The brothers would tend to be active, dynamic, and extroverted, and relations with them shift from love to competition, and at times, aggression.
Communication and thought process
The Gemini thought process is logical and analytical. Geminis possess excellent language skills and know how to handle information. They are also able to think out of the box and come up with original ideas.
Geminis think ahead and can also be innovative, but are always stronger on words than on deeds.
Love, marriage and sex
Beauty and esthetics are highly important for Geminis and constitute major criteria in partner selection. Relationships often feature duality, which might manifest itself in an open, curious, and adventurous connection (they are easily bored).
Geminis have a tendency to domineer when it comes to sex and are judgmental and critical of their partner in sexual matters. A sexual relationship with an older figure of authority, or career- and work-related intimate situations, are typical.
Sports, travel, and school
Spontaneous trips and sudden rifts and breakups are typical, as is love for team sports or sports related to flying and air. A liberal, futuristic worldview is also common.
Geminis are not overly committed to their friends and maintain open, free relationships. Most of their friends tend to be younger.
Children
Beautiful, creative, talented, but not relaxed, Gemini children tend to be friendly and display innovation and improvisation skills. The possibility for twins is also there.
Gemini children are also characterized by nervousness, mobility, and restlessness.
Self-destruction, emotional flaws, and psychological problems
Financial matters are an area of flawed judgment, sacrifice, and self-destruction. Geminis also lack stability and territory, as a result of the Taurus influence. Although they long to find their place, defining the fundamental basis of their life is difficult.
On the other hand, the tendency for change and transformation is permanent. Moreover, Geminis have no habits, unless they become addicted to bad habits.
Legal matters
Legal matters are connected to romantic relationships, partners and partnerships, finances, authority, and intimate affairs.
Health
The respiratory system, lungs, ears, vocal cords, palms, shoulders, urinary tract, sexual organs, nose, throat, thyroid gland, metabolism, and mercury level are all at risk.
Dress, fashion, and clothes
Geminis wear free spirited, athletic, and young clothes. At times, they dress to stand out.
Attitude to death
Rational and fatalistic – a sense of divine decree.
Attitude to God/religion
A liberal, secular worldview. Outwardly, Geminis hold an open-minded attitude, but vulnerability, fears, and wariness lurk inside, as does a concern that God “sees everything.”
Attitude to past/present
The past is associated with criticism, money, home, and family. Geminis are also greatly attracted to a future perceived as a gamble – an open space of endless possibilities.
Time perception
Geminis view time as a financial resource. At times they find it necessary to “steal” or “manipulate” time. Compulsiveness in time-related matters is typical. A denial of age is possible, along with an attempt to erase time by choosing a certain profession.
Famous Geminis
Aleksandr Pushkin (June 6, 1799), Queen Victoria (May 24, 1819), Walt Whitman (May 31, 1819), Thomas Hardy (June 2, 1840), Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (May 22, 1859), William Butler Yeats (June 13, 1865), Bob Hope (May 29, 1904), John F. Kennedy (May 29, 1917), Judy Garland (June 10, 1922),
Henry Kissinger (May 27, 1923), Marilyn Monroe (June 1, 1926), Clint Eastwood (May 30, 1930), Bob Dylan (May 24, 1941), Angelina Jolie (June 4, 1975), Steffi Graf (June 14, 1969), Nicole Kidman (June 20, 1967), Anna Kournikova (June 7, 1981)
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