Bradley Wilcox is a serious, steadfast individual who tries to stay grounded. His ambitions are strong, and he will always be seeking a higher social position. Sometimes, he adopts a strategy of solitude and introversion.
You are sober and reserved and may even strike people as rigid and austere at times. Perhaps you were raised in an atmosphere of rigor and sobriety as a child, and, as a result, became an adult a little too fast. In any case, you quickly acquired a spirit of self-sufficiency and a strong sense of your personal dignity and worth. At work, you are skillful, meticulous, conscientious, and efficient, but your lack of self confidence and personal assurance hinder your decision-making skills. Although you would deserve a prominent executive position, you might refuse any that are offered due to your fear of being in the limelight. You are aware that early success is often short-lived and fragile and that time rewards those who are patient, which, in your case, is true. The psychological mechanisms described above are probably the result of a paternal complex. In childhood, your identity may have been too strongly attached to that of your father or a father figure, for one of the following reasons:- the bond with your father was too close,- your father was absent and/or idealized,- your father was too strict, etc.
In any case, this psychological particularity can act either as a handicap or as an opportunity for the individual to overcome yourself. It will result in two groups of opposite but complementary reactions which will rule your behavior all your life:- hypersensitivity or insensitivity- intense life wish or discomfort with life- obsession or renunciation- skepticism or fanaticism- asceticism or lust- jealousy or indifference- effort or laziness
The so-called “Saturnian” phases (at age 7, 14, 21, 28 or 29, and 35 years) will be transitional periods that give you an opportunity to resolve this complex in real life.
Bradley Wilcox tried to justify himself to others and gain their approval by showing that he was worthy of their affection. Nevertheless, his pessimism remained, and the severe taboos he unconsciously placed on himself sometimes kept him from developing quickly.
Bradley Wilcox generally tends to be motivated by activities which apply to social needs. He tends to give the best of himself in difficult situations which require crucial choices. His ability to concentrate and his gift for solving problems by deductive reasoning are his chief resources in crisis situations or at turning points in his life.
Bradley Wilcox is winning and attractive. He has an appetite for intense emotional experiences, especially in terms of his relationships. Enjoying the power of his personal appeal, he easily controls his emotions and only rarely reveals the true depth of his feelings. Because his instincts take precedence over his sensitivity, he is capable of becoming jealous, possessive, and even rather harsh, without meaning to. More of a flirt than a voluptuary, he is attentive to desire. As a result, his love life will sometimes be casual and complicated.
Bradley Wilcox hides his sensitivity behind a fairly cool exterior. He is conservative, respectful of tradition and convention, and likes to follow the rules. Because he needs stability to alleviate his feelings of frustration and sometimes emotional dependency, he has great faith in contracts which seal relationships. His ties to his past are fairly strong. They are a source of reassurance and safety, because his parents likely gave a lot to him.
Bradley Wilcox had always been a sensitive person. His sensitive nature, however, did not always make it easy for him to distinguish between dreams and reality. Although his fertile imagination provided him with an abundance of inspiration for creative and spiritual evolution, it could be less helpful and positive when it came to matters that concerned his self-assertion as a responsible and self-sufficient individual. Although his psychic abilities drove him to fulfill himself through artistic endeavors like painting, drawing, music, or poetry, it was often difficult for Bradley to market his talents in terms of a career. In a relationship, Bradley was extremely romantic and tended to see people in a way that was much more idealistic than realistic. This could sometimes lead to him being disappointed when their true natures were eventually revealed.
Bradley Wilcox has a propensity for intense emotions and sexuality. His relationships are typically passionate and motivated by his desires. He would find a career which placed him in contact with troubled people rewarding.
Bradley Wilcox’s attractions are usually immediate and intense. They rise quickly to fever pitch. The story of these passions is often dramatic to excess, combining all the plot elements of a classic love tragedy: jealousy, possessiveness, agony as an erotic stimulant, etc.
Bradley Wilcox was born with an emotional function which is expressed in a direct and fairly impulsive way. He enjoys reaching out to other people and making discoveries. An eternal teenager with his gaze riveted on the future, he is imbued with an eminently subjective and personal idealism.
Bradley Wilcox, outwardly inhibited, is subject to powerful and upsetting inner passions. Usually, his emotional life is rough sailing. He is more comfortable with his career, where his desire to progress and his taste for power give him wings, but he scares away most men with his demands and harshness. He will have to admit that his emotions cannot be repressed indefinitely.
Bradley Wilcox was naive and sincere when it came to love. His whirlwind romances often took him far, but they could also leave him badly bruised. And then he might live out the phrase, “Hurt people hurt people.” He was attracted to someone from another country or found love while traveling. He may have tired of this turbulent love life and channeled his instinctive powers into a belief or religion.
You are a passionate and ardent person, and your relationships are enriched by intensity and passion. A charmer perpetually engaged in a search for the ideal love, you are often more in love with the idea of love than with a partner. As a result, your love life may be subject to some instability. You are generally attracted to original people who defy norms, standards, and classifications, and expect them to amaze and fascinate you. Your greatest contradictions surface when an intimate relationship is established. Although you merge your ego entirely into the couple, you are likely to demand a total autonomy and liberty which are inimical to intimacy. If your partner charms and captivates you long enough, there is some possibility that they will form a more solid bond with you; otherwise, you are likely to yield to your need for novelty and fall under the spell of an entirely different person who exerts a new kind of charm for you.
Midlife may be a turning point for you from this point of view. Your contradictory attitude may in some ways hide a compulsion to reject and deny the bonds of dependency inherent to a love relationship. Your behavior enables you to remain aloof, to commit yourself only halfway without consciously admitting it to yourself, and to avoid feeling guilty if and when you lose interest. An insatiable appetite for novelty and exaltation sometimes keeps you from forming stable relationships. Indeed, you are tormented by the struggle between your undeniable need for affection and an equally imperious desire for personal progress and emancipation. As a result of this inner turmoil, your romantic aspirations are usually sabotaged sooner or later by your conviction that your partner has become an obstacle to your individual progress. Because you think of love as a restraint, you may even eventually consciously refuse any emotional approach to love interests. As an ascetic, you will try to deflect the love function from its natural target and use the energy and bliss it generates for other purposes, the process psychologists call sublimation. However, you are also likely to meet “the one” who inspires you to initiate a change in your behavior.
Bradley Wilcox is more theoretical than logical and more intuitive than rational when it comes to vast subjects such as philosophy or law. He is attracted to wide open spaces and distant horizons, but also foreign languages or contacts abroad.
Bradley Wilcox expresses his thoughts and ideas in direct, spontaneous outbursts. He is fairly extroverted and eager to discover and understand the outer world. An idealist, Bradley looks forward to a bright future but is sometimes subjective and reckless.
Bradley Wilcox has a lively and agile spirit. He is curious and open-minded, approaching various life experiences without either dogmatism or prejudice. As a result of the liveliness of his mind, Bradley tends to have an opinion on every subject, but he does not always have the patience or perspective necessary to examine a subject and gain in-depth knowledge of it. Bradley enjoys manipulating expressions and concepts and amuses himself with witty remarks, satire, and controversy. If Bradley learned to control his flow of words better and elaborate his thoughts more, he might make a talented communicator. Because Bradley is often too hasty to formulate and construct the arguments which would back up and inform his ideas, he is sometimes misunderstood. Bradley is often blind to the rashness of his judgments and convinced they are well-founded and objective, which sometimes irritates the people around him. If Bradley were to succeed in disciplining his mind somewhat, he would have innumerable opportunities to apply his communications skills to a great career. However, he would do well to be careful of his nerves.
Bradley Wilcox has a mind with an insatiable appetite for knowledge and an exceptional ability to learn. Without trying too hard, he could probably accumulate encyclopedic erudition. His intellectual curiosity is such that it is sometimes a drawback. He sometimes has trouble limiting himself to a single subject without being distracted by a multitude of others. Discipline and a conscious effort at organization will be of great help to him if he wants to deepen his learning and judgment. Once his intellectual faculties are disciplined, he is likely to succeed in any of the following fields: teaching, historical scholarship, advertising, writing (journalistic or literary), travel, etc. – in fact, communication in any form.
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