Theory of Eight Profile

Winona Ryder

b. 29 October 1971

TO8 Day 41 6:1

    Observations

Day 41 6:1 While film and theatre may fulfill many of the Winona's needs to belong to fresh pathways of communication, she may find it difficult to cope with the power structures constraining them. She is likely to find more excitement in experimental work where she is the manager of her role. She wants applause but is aware that wandering too far from the othodoxy is going to put her too much out of sight. She is likely to feel that her background, while seeming to provide illumination and even providing models of thought, is something she did not chose and is as much a burden as a blessing. She is unlikely to ever be completely satisfied her her own work and is restlessly looking for ways in which she can command the stage.

Winona's Essential Year

Winona is 30 - at a classic milestone in life. She will enter the period 6:1 in the middle of July 2002, when her personality will become more emphatic, with a sense of unity and purpose to her life. But currently she has the feeling of being at odds both with money and with social traditions. She may be feeling rebellious and unlikely to take advice from anyone especially if it is advice from the middle of the road or from the community in which she lives.

6 Feb 2002


Major 6: Minor 1

Day Forty-ones are independent thinkers who can readily break new intellectual ground but who best express their individuality within the confines of small exploratory team. They would like to form relationships with similarly active people, based on joint projects or explorations. They have a physical and game-playing side to them and can marshal their physical and mental resources for whatever tasks they have in hand.  They tend to move well away from their early upbringing and stand apart from the crowd, while wanting a group of peers with whom to dedicate their energy. They can articulate the goals for their peer group of explorers, and bring a single-mindedness to the team effort.  Their authority can easily alienate the self-satisfied and they dislike the common ground, common sense, and find little satisfaction with compromise. They are always afraid that the established consensus will conspire against them, and they tend to ally with the younger generations, who defer to them because of their experience. They believe in strength of character, and think that moral force is inherent in action. They believe in their children, and their parental instincts are strong. They can be oppressed, however, by the weight of family or social tradition, and think that by stimulating their restless minds they will get rid of all static obligations.  They have an easy natural ability with machines and tools, but may have difficulty teaching what they know.  They tend to get on with their task without asking for any assistance, and they may find it difficult to communicate clearly how exactly they achieved their results. What they know and their abilities to act are a source of  pride, and their feelings of innocence and inexperience in the ways of the world, a source of anxiety.  They may think that they will find themselves if they keep moving, and it may be hard for them to accept that while their independence may make them identifiable is does not make their identity. They are antagonised by social divisions, and think that are two classes - warriors and the rest.


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