Tuesday, January 10, 2006

Your Daily Forecast


Dear HARTLEY,

Here is today's forecast for Cancer - Wednesday, January 11, 2006

What if someone were to blow a whistle? What if loudspeakers, all over
the world, were to blare out the same message at the same time? 'Okay
everyone, the rehearsal is over. Now, we are going to start living
life for real?' What would you change, if, suddenly, you could? If you
felt your future was more fluid, where would you like it to run to?
These are not idle questions. The coming Full Moon in your sign has
real power behind it. It heralds the possibility of a true
transformation very soon.<end/> <followontag>To hear how 2006 could
yet turn out to be the best year of your whole life so far <a
href='http://orders.bubble.com/ra/signup.cfm?ref=c-dailytag'
target='_parent'>click here</a> and find out how to listen <i>FREE</i>
for a month!</followontag></font><font face='arial,helvetica'
size='-1'><b><extratag><p>For a complete set of totally personal
predictions have 'Your Guide to the Future' emailed direct to you <a
href='http://charts.bubble.com/w/intro3.cfm?ref=c-dailytag'
target='_parent'>click here</a>. </extratag></b>

Jonathan's Thought for the Day.

<end/><thought>The 2006 Year Ahead series - Part One<br>Have you
noticed how high the Moon has been at times lately? Have you also
noticed how it has recently clung to the treetops for ages? Soon, it
is going to reach even more impressive extremes of elevation.<p>Lunar
standstills are, to the Moon, what Solstices are to the Sun. They are
moments when a powerful light in the sky reaches the most extreme
point in its relationship to the horizon... hovers briefly... and then
begins retracing its steps.<p>The Sun does this twice a year. Though
it always rises in the East and sets in the West, it doesn't pop up at
exactly the same point each morning. It slowly creeps along the
horizon, heading a tiny bit further south or north each day. At one of
its solstices, it rises as far in the South-East as it can ever get...
and at the other, in reaches its North-West limit. The Moon's turning
point involves height rather than width or, to be more technical,
latitude rather than longtitude.<p>Once every eighteen and a half
years, it hugs the hills and then soars like a kite. In doing so, it
creates a compelling optical illusion.<p> Objects that lie close to
the horizon always appear bigger and nearer, partly because the
atmosphere appears to magnify them and partly because our sense of
distance is deceived. Objects that are higher look smaller and further
away. So we see, over the course of a few short months, Moons that are
increasingly cold and remote followed by Moons so close that it seems
as if we could reach out and touch them.<p>To find out what difference
the Lunar Standstill could make to your life in 2006... <a
href="2006/index.html" target="main">click here for Part One</a> of
the 2006 Year Ahead predictions for each sign.</thought><p><b><font
'arial,helvetica' size='-1'><font color=red>New! Your 2006
forecast.</font> Want to hear the 2006 predictions in full? Click <a
href="http://orders.bubble.com/ra/signup.cfm?ref=c-frontpage"
target="_new">HERE</a> for a month's free trial of our Five Star Audio
Service.</b></font>

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