


It's that person who has very good ideas but can't get them off the paper, who isn't able to put them into practice, to materialize their excellent ideas in the real world. Their closed mind prevents them from dealing with multiple pieces of information at the same time. On the other hand, it can also limit the ability to communicate, in the sense that the person becomes less open to discussion, listening to different points of view and summarizing them. The mind gets caught up in the details and loses the ability to see the big picture, to perceive and connect the various aspects of the same issue. The absence of the Air Element in the birth chart can be manifested by the difficulty in understanding the facts at a rational level.
GEMINI ELEMENT HOW TO
In Earth, Air finds a precious help to get out of the abstract, learns how to materialize its ideas, to see the rational and the concrete. For the natives of this Element, the best companions are those of the Earth Signs because they complement each other. The Air natives can be incredibly indecisive and fickle by nature, making it more difficult for them to put their ideas into practice as their desires and opinions are constantly changing. However, this tendency to be interested in too many things at the same time means that you may not have enough willpower to focus on any one of them in particular, dispersing easily. They are wide-ranging personalities, with a broad view of the world, unlike the Earth natives, who tend towards concentration, towards focus, towards the detail. The Air Element brings together the characteristic Wet, which gives it great mental flexibility, flexibility in thinking, and enormous capacity to reflect on ideas and concepts. When the Air Element is balanced, there is a certain facility to rationalize, to socialize, to relate to people and the environment, to look for information, to communicate in general, to study, to think, to see the whole and understand the big picture, to mentally reflect on various themes and subjects. Without this Element the personality is stagnant, introverted and irrational. Balanced air is gentle, objective, sociable and correct. Above all, it values mental affinity - from ideas arise infinities of new possibilities. Indifferent to the material side of life, its motivation is to communicate. However, despite being social, Air does not easily express his feelings and emotions, and he does not always act as he speaks or thinks, although he is usually the first to question something.Īir is the most innovative and intellectual of the Elements. In relationships, the Air personality is sensitive and seductive and emphasizes intelligence. The high ability to connect ideas results in the need to express them, which reinforces your communication skills and the easy way in which you relate to others. It is notorious that people with a predominance of this Element prefer to think more logically than emotionally, and tend to be quite active and sociable, detached from the limits of the material world. You need to understand everything you experience and your response is mostly intellectual. The Air Signs are, above all, mental and intellectual. Together, the four Elements represent the forces of the natural world and, in a way, depend on each other's existence to find their own balance and to create an overall balanced energy flow. As in Nature, Fire is powered by Air but extinguished by Water, which in turn connects better with Earth, nourishing it and providing stability. The element each sign belongs to is also very important to understand the compatibilities of that sign. The natural characteristics of each Element to which each sign belongs influence the personality of the natives of that sign and represent different postures of facing life. In Astrology, the energy of the planets in the astral map is filtered by the four Elements - Fire, Earth, Water, and Air and each one of the Sun Signs belongs to one of these groups. The Astrological Elements and the Zodiac Signs.The Air Signs May Have More Difficulty Connecting to….
