My horoscope for this week, and what did I do with it? Let me ask you: what do you do with your horoscope?

My horoscope for this week, and what did I do with it? Let me ask you: what do you do with your horoscope?

It’s Wednesday, and I headed off to Free Will Astrology for my weekly horoscope.

Virgo Horoscope for week of January 19, 2012

Virgo (August 23-September 22)
Three famous actresses formed the British Anti-Cosmetic Surgery League last year. Rachel Wiesz, Kate Winslet, and Emma Thompson say they believe people should be happy with the physical appearance that nature gave them.

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Love. Loving. Can you love more? Less? Can anyone?

Loving is like being pregnant. You can’t be more pregnant than pregnant. Even pregnant with two babies is just that, pregnant.

And, by the same token, you can’t love someone more. You either love them or you don’t.

Pregnant, love, respect, are intrinsic in nature. They also have no opposites, like values on the systemic level of value. An they don’t have a scale…

Life is easiest to navigate, easiest to understand, and easiest to ‘dance with’ if you know that values have three tiers. Each tier with its own rules of engagement.
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side effects

Any activation, any energy download will cause an energetic shift in the recipient. Depending on the size of the shift, there will be by-products that may cause discomfort, and such.

These are to be welcomed. They are signs that the activation or the energy is doing its work. At the end the recipient will be clearer, happier, healthier, and more vital.

Just like you don’t worry about the dirt the water washes off your skin, you should not worry about the stuff these energies wash out of your psyche, your mind, your body. It is all good, it has to go for you to be happy.
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muscle-tested

Used kinesiology while connected to Source… asked a question and got a yes or a no answer.

Muscle test:

Quoting from Wikipedia, where I make regular monetary contributions. You should too… you will feel much better afterwards using it… I do

In 1964, George J. Goodheart made up Applied Kinesiology through his unique interpretation and application of Muscles: Testing and Function written by two physical therapists Kendall and Kendall.

Basics
Applied kinesiologist (right) practising

Applied kinesiology is presented as a system that evaluates structural, chemical, and mental aspects of health by using a method referred to as manual muscle testing alongside conventional diagnostic methods. The essential premise of applied kinesiology that is not shared by mainstream medical theory is that every organ dysfunction is accompanied by a weakness in a specific corresponding muscle, the viscerosomatic relationship.[16][17] Treatment modalities relied upon by practitioners include joint manipulation and mobilization, myofascial, cranial and meridian therapies, clinical nutrition, and dietary counseling.[18]

A manual muscletest in AK is conducted by having the patient resist using the target muscle or muscle group while the practitioner applies a force. A smooth response is sometimes referred to as a “strong muscle” and a response that was not appropriate is sometimes called a “weak response”. This is not a raw test of strength, but rather a subjective evaluation of tension in the muscle and smoothness of response, taken to be indicative of a difference in spindle cell response during contraction. These differences in muscle response can be indicative of various stresses and imbalances in the body.[19] A weak muscle test is equated to dysfunction and chemical or structural imbalance or mental stress, indicative of suboptimal functioning.[20] It may be suboptimal functioning of the tested target muscle, or a normally optimally functioning muscle can be used as an indicator muscle for other physiological testing. A commonly known and very basic test is the arm-pull-down test, or “Delta test,” where the patient resists as the practitioner exerts a downward force on an extended arm.[9] Proper positioning is paramount to ensure that the muscle in question is isolated or positioned as the prime mover, minimizing interference from adjacent muscle groups.[17]

“Nutrient testing” is used to examine the response of various of a patient’s muscles to assorted chemicals. Gustatory and olfactory stimulation are said to alter the outcome of a manual muscle test, with previously weak muscles being strengthened by application of the correct nutritional supplement, and previously strong muscles being weakened by exposure to harmful or imbalancing substances or allergens.[17][19][21] Though its use is deprecated by the ICAK,[22] stimulation to test muscle response to a certain chemical is also done by contact or proximity (for instance,
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