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Poverty's most insidious damage is to a child's brain



Andromeda being saved from Cetus



An alarming 22 percent of U.S. children live in poverty, which can have long-lasting negative consequences on brain development, emotional health and academic achievement. A new study, published July 20 in JAMA Pediatrics, provides even more compelling evidence that growing up in poverty has detrimental effects on the brain.  July 20 http://goo.gl/sH8MoK







To understand this news we will go back to the October 8, 2014 lunar eclipse drawn for St. Louis, Washington from where the report originates. Notice that the eclipse luminaries are angular and, therefore, significant for the place. The Moon [15ar] is conjunct the star Alpheratz [14ar], alpha Andromeda – in the head (brain?) of the Princess who is being saved from Cetus, the Sea Monster (see image). Cetus  represents all manner of  inherited troubles and here that would include poverty.

If now we add the asteroids, the picture starts becoming clearer. On the Ascendant are the asteroids Child, Askalaphus and Atlantis. On the meridian axis is the centaur Hylonome and TNP Hades. Askalaphus is a medical asteroid linked to health issues while Atlantis  reveals some “depletion” of resources, physical energy and motivation.  The centaur Hylonome has been linked to grief and depression while the TNP Hades is about poverty or the underprivileged class so that all the pieces of the jigsaw puzzle are in place in the eclipse chart.








All that is now required is to progress the chart to July 20, to see if it is relevant for that date. And sure enough the progressed meridian aligns with the eclipse luminaries on that date triggering an event which gets to the heart of what the eclipse stands for.

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