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| relationship between Leo C and Aries-Tauras Cusp |
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Dishing It Out
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| Best at : Business Partnership |
Worst at : Family |
This relationship is likely to appear and feel immense to its partners—probably too much so for them to be comfortable in it. As a result, each person will erect defenses that will actually only contribute to the relationships perceived magnitude. Interactions will be intense, with clashes the standard mode. Each partner is quite capable of dishing it out. One way of managing the scale of the relationship is to broaden its area of influence, giving it a wider theater; limiting it to a small domestic sphere is bound to result in a clash of titans.
Leo Ill's are tough to get close to emotionally, and Aries-Taruses may have to win their hearts slowly, first gaining their trust and admiration. Their hot passions will flare often, but although they tend to discard old lovers as easily as banana peels, they may find it harder to get rid of an Aries-Taurus— a tough cookie who usually refuses to lie treated badly or talked down to without a fight. In combat these two are a match for each other, each giving as good as they get. Fortunately, they will also give back what they get in the more positive aspect of mutual nurturing.
A powerful business or marital partnership between these two can be worked out in which there is a coalescence between the Leo III ability to further the action and the Aries-Taurus knack for handling the home base. When Leo III, the irresistible force, and Aries-Taurus, the immovable object, combine synergetically, the matchup may prove nearly invincible—unless it is rocked by internal dissention. Sexual, emotional and territorial considerations heighten the chances of such conflict arising in marriage. Business partnerships have a better chance of success.
Parent-child and sibling relationships in this combination, particularly between members of the same sex, are likely to be fraught with conflict and disagreement. These two will vie for nothing less than supremacy in the family unit.
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| Advice |
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Take the easier way sometimes. Compromise and diplomacy can be a great relief. Surrender is often more pleasurable than battering.
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In Association with :
The secret language of relationships
by
Gary Goldscneider and Joost Elffers
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