hakim wrote: Fri Aug 11, 2017 10:06 pm
... its been raining constantly and my house is flooded. Been spending majority of the time at a friends house. Got a net connection and laptop now.
Life is great
I'm sorry about the flooding you went through, but glad to have you back with us.
Some thoughts abort your chart: you really need to consider sextiles and trines in a nativity (using dynamic aspects only is great for transits and lunar returns, for example). In your chart, the Sun's trine to your extremely tight Uranus-Neptune conjuction is of particular importance, making what would be a genereational influence more personal to you.
Moon sextile Venus further highlight the "feminine" theme. When we speak of "masculine" and "feminine" in astrology, we are using stereotypes. After all, a man can have strong Moon/Venus traits and a woman can have Sun/Mars traits as easily as the other way round. It's just that most cultures are less accepting of "feminine" men and "masculine" women.
In any case, both influences are strong in your chart, but the "feminine" is more easily expressed (more angular). So you may be perceived as a better friend or lover than a comrade-in-arms. Worse could happen. The challenge for your life (to the degree there is one) is finding the right dynamic balance between the energies, including learning which energy is more appropriate for you in which circumstance.
The single most striking aspect in your chart is your foreground Saturn square Pluto. Jim E.'s delineation of this is quite good, especially the "atlas complex". This is also Saturn's only major aspect within a 7.5 degree orb.
I also ran an astrolocality map (I used Janus, Solar Fire can do this also, I believe). This has your Saturn-MC line very near Tehran and your Pluto-Desc line running right through Baghdad. I would guess events in the Middle East have affected you more than average for someone born in Dubai. Just a guess, apologies if this touches anything painful for you.
I am a USA citizen who many times doesn't agree with my own government's Middle East policy. But regardless of who is more at fault for a particular tragedy, I think we can all agree there have been been too many tragedies in this part of the world.