usually the horoscope doesn’t really activate until age 20-21, you can certainly feel the change of the sun ‘waking up’ inside the solar life of the person, it’s interesting because esoteric writers say that the soul does not truly enter the physical body until around this age. this is around the age transit uranus makes it’s first big planetary contact, making a square to natal uranus. uranus is the planet of individuality and originality and independence and shaking up the world, the individual and expressive self is beginning to emerge. the change can be quick and unexpected
The worst trick a childhood anxiety disorder pulls is, you spend your early years being applauded for being so much more mature than your peers, because you aren’t disruptive, you don’t want any kind of attention, you don’t express yourself, you keep yourself to yourself – this makes you a pleasure to have in class, etc etc – and you start to believe it’s virtue. But you’re actually way behind your peers in normal social development, and who knows if you can ever catch up.
hey! ducks are adorable and everybody likes feeding them, but bread causes a number of environmental and health problems that could easily be avoided. instead of bread, consider feeding duckies:
frozen peas or corn that’s been defrosted!
romaine lettuce (torn into small pieces)
bird feed of any kind
rice (cooked or uncooked!)
uncooked oats
grapes cut in half
earthworms
Re-blogged at the speed of light, phone obliterated.
Yacouba Sawadogo is an exceptional man – he single-handedly managed to solve a crisis that many scientists and development organizations
could not. The simple old farmer’s re-forestation and soil conservation
techniques are so effective they’ve helped turn the tide in the fight
against the desertification of the harsh lands in northern Burkina Faso.
Over-farming, over-grazing and over population have, over the years,
resulted in heavy soil erosion and drying in this landlocked West
African nation. Although national and international researchers tried to
fix the grave situation, it really didn’t really make much of a
difference. Until Yacouba decided to take matters into his own hands in
1980.
Yacouba’s methods were so odd that his fellow farmers ridiculed him.
But when his techniques successfully regenerated the forest, they were
forced to sit up and take notice. Yacouba revived an ancient African
farming practice called ‘zai’, which led to forest growth and increased
soil quality.