For better or worse you have inherited the same attitudes to money and self-worth as your family and especially your mother. By the same token, you may have an instinct for money and property.
Income and self-esteem are also subject to fluctuations, as are your moods and the market itself. Many of these needs and feelings apply especially to how you estimate your own worth, or earn an income, and to finances generally. How much money you have or don't have is really only an indicator of what you believe it, and therefore yourself, to be worth.
You could simply translate this into accumulating plenty of money and property, and for as long as you truly regard this as important, then that is what you are able to do.īut at some point it is no longer as simple as that, for the issue becomes one of establishing what YOU are worth, and what it is that you have, know or believe in that you must prove to be of worth in the material world. So anything that you put your vital energies into has to have a very real and material value. Extracts of text taken from Soul Scope Report written by Lyn BirkbeckĪll of this is most likely to focus upon what you regard as being of true worth. The 2nd house stabilises the self-identity acquired in the 1st. This can mean the accumulation of money and material possessions, but on a higher level, it represents innate or acquired skills and gifts which give us a sense of value, worth and personal security. This house represents the area of life concerned with the accumulation of wealth and resources as a secure basis from which to act in the world. After establishing our self-identity in the 1st house, we turn, in the 2nd, to our possessions and what we own. The 2nd house is naturally associated with the sign of Taurus and its ruling planet Venus.