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Jupiter in Capricorn

anonymoushermit
Posts: 280
(@anonymoushermit)
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Joined: 9 years ago

I'll gain 50 pounds if I'm not careful, oh no! angel

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(@Anonymous)
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My Capricorn co-worker/friend just said that she wants to try her hand at stand-up comedy. How perfect is that! I encouraged her, I think she'd be great at it.

I like the energy too. It meshes well with Saturn and Pluto being in the same sign and feels easier for me to manage than Jupiter in Sagittarius. Don't get me wrong, I got a lot of benefit from Jupiter in Sadge but my chart is definitely more Capricornian than Sagittarian.

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Posts: 192
(@osiris-wife)
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Joined: 5 years ago

So much for saying I’m indifferent to Jupiter in Capricorn, as it turned out that I had a Jupiter moment in my career today. It was so subtle, I almost missed it. That’s because Jupiter is making an aspect to my progressed chart.

It left me with this nagging feeling that I wrote about in Random Thread. If not for this inner feeling I wouldn’t have made the connection to Jupiter. 

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Posts: 192
(@osiris-wife)
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Joined: 5 years ago

Jupiter-Saturn-Pluto have not met up in Capricorn since 1285.

~735 years!!

Just that, makes 2020 a significant year to me!

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Opalina
Posts: 78
(@opalina)
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Joined: 8 years ago

Its trining my natal Jupiter in Virgo. I am starting to feel the fog lift. I am feeling more grounded.

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NotMyCircus
Posts: 167
(@notmycircus)
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Joined: 13 years ago

I'm busy looking at degree programs for counseling, nursing and physical therapy. At the moment I'm rather iffy about nursing due to the high levels of stress and burnout (physical therapists have a burnout problem, too). I keep reading about nursing students crying through school, crying through their first and maybe second years as new nurses--if they don't get fired or quit first! I believe it, too--during my CNA classes in 2016 my instructor yelled at me in front of the entire class more than once. You learn to put on a thicker skin and deal with it like a woman, but still....

At my age I have to think hard about what I'm physically, mentally, and emotionally capable of taking on 5-10 years down the road. That would put me at 47-52 years old. 15-20 years from retirement assuming my chronic health issues don't force me to retire early.

Will the debt load I take on pay off? Will my health issues block me from pursuing certain paths or being able to use my degree long enough for all that work to be worth anything? These are questions I'm thinking about. But I'm not allowing them to hold me back from at least exploring my options. 

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