When a name begins with the vital, voluptuous and vivacious letter V, it suggests a personality rife with sexual energy. And because the letter R is the emblem of raw carnal passion (racy, randy, romantic, ruddy, and ribald), words dominated by both the V and R resonate with the unrestrained vigor found in: virile, virtue, voyeur, vibrant, verve and victory. But notice how VR words that feature the negative letter N (no, not, never, nix, nada, nyet, naught, and nowhere) take on the pessimistic qualities found in: vagrant, vermin, verboten, virginal, vulgarian, and virulence. These complex people are fully involved in life but struggle with emotional fluctuations that often prevent them from achieving their goals.
VRs love to talk (and have the verbal skill to back it up) but unlike other articulate people, aren’t doing so because they’re in love with the sound of their own voices. They talk because they have a powerful drive to communicate. While you might have to listen to a detailed account of their Aunt Edna’s problems with her spastic colon, the story is likely to be peppered with colorful and witty observations. Like most skillful communicators, VRs are also good listeners who won’t just wait for a gap in your story to insert their own remarks.
For as much time as their heads spend in the clouds, their feet are firmly anchored in solid bedrock where their work is concerned and even close friends are surprised at how steely spines their spines. These spunky self-starters excel in arenas that reward finesse and toughness, and as legal professionals, salespeople or business executives, have few equals. VRs have a taste for art, but as consumers – not producers. They’d rather make a lot of money and buy the best, than putz around with their own handicrafts.
VRs will be tripping through life without a care in the world when love broadsides them out of nowhere. When this happens, marriage is in most cases, inevitable. Their emotions, like their exceptional talking skills, are direct, well communicated, and never held back. The flipside to being so candid and upfront is that VRs tend to take people literally and get lost with sub-texts and nuances. So if you want to keep your VR mate happy you’ll have to choose your words wisely.
VRs have high expectations for marriage and don’t like to think of it as “settling down”. The problem is, with so much energy to spare VRs can be quite high maintenance as mates. So don’t expect them to just be happy homemakers. If you do, your marriage will be as unstable as Microsoft Windows.
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