Texas é um Capricórnio

Capricórnio
December 29, 1845
This date marks the day in 1845 when Texas was admitted to the Union as the 28th U.S. state, following its tenure as an independent republic.
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Expect peak Capricorn energy. Texas wants structure. Order. Results. If you wander in with messy plans, the state will side-eye you so hard you will feel it in your soul. But bring a solid agenda and Texas will open doors like a VIP host who secretly likes you.
This week kicks off with a serious glow. Productivity is high. The vibe says get your act together or get out of the way. Texas is in planner mode and the checklist is long. Bills. Budgets. That weird to-do list you wrote at 2 a.m. Time to handle it.
Midweek comes with a rare soft moment. Capricorn Texas might crack a smile. Maybe even let itself enjoy something fun. Think brisket, sunsets and that strange urge to buy something you do not need but deeply want. A tiny cosmic treat.
By the weekend, the energy spikes again. Texas gets stubborn. Determined. A little bossy. Do not fight it. Channel it. This is prime time to commit to a goal and chase it like a rodeo bull aiming for freedom.
Bottom line: Texas is the responsible friend this week. The one who drags you toward success. Follow its lead. The results will be worth every tough-love moment.
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Texas is not just another state; it is a former nation, and it never lets you forget it. Its entire character is forged in this singular fact: it was an independent republic before it chose to join the Union. This nation-sized geography-stretching from the piney woods of the east to the high deserts of the west, from the coastal plains to the Panhandle-created a frontier mentality that simply never ended.
Its creation myth is not one of consensus, but of defiance. The Alamo is not a story of victory, but of a suicidal, glorious last stand. This is the romantic, violent bedrock of the Texan identity. The nine-year period as the Republic of Texas (1836-1845) was a raw, chaotic, and bankrupt experiment in self-reliance.
Its decision to join the Union on December 29, 1845, was not an act of submission. It was a pragmatic merger. Texas was a republic with a famous name and deep debts; America was an expanding power that offered security. Texas joined as a partner, retaining its public lands and, according to legend, the right to secede (a myth it refuses to let die).
This legacy is why Texas sees itself as the exception. It's the "Lone Star State" for a reason. Its modern character is a blend of this frontier pride and the staggering wealth of the oil boom. It is a state of brash self-made myths, where wildcatters, cowboys, and now, tech barons, are all part of the same story of relentless, stubborn ambition.
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A Alma Mística
Archetype: The Lone Star. The Self-Made Myth. The Unbridled Will.
Born December 29, Texas is a Capricorn, and it is the most ambitious, status-obsessed, and relentlessly pragmatic sign in the zodiac. This is no accident. Capricorn, the sea-goat, is the sign of building empires from the ground up.
This isn't a dreamy Pisces or a hot-headed Aries. A Capricorn builds. Texas wasn't a colony; it fought a revolution to become its own nation, then built its own Republic from scratch. A Capricorn is all about strategy and legacy, which is why Texas's 1845 entry into the Union wasn't a birth, it was a climb. It was a strategic move to secure its legacy and wealth.
The state's entire identity is pure, earthy Capricorn:
1. Resource-Driven: Capricorn rules the earth and its treasures. Texas's power comes from cattle (land) and oil (buried treasure).
2. Obsessed with Status: It's the only state that can fly its flag at the same height as the U.S. flag. It must be the biggest and the best.
3. Relentless Ambition: The state's motto isn't "Hope," it's "Friendship," but its energy is "Don't Mess With Me."
If Texas were a person, he’d be the guy who drills for oil while wearing a custom-tailored suit and ostrich-skin boots. He drives a truck that costs more than your college degree, not to be flashy, but because it's the best. He’s obsessed with his family history and will tell you about his great-great-granddaddy at the Alamo as if he'd been there himself. He's the guy who thinks he's the underdog, even though he owns the entire block, the oil under it, and the bank that holds your mortgage. He's insufferably proud, but the most annoying part is, he usually has the receipts to back it up.