Having only the Eastern Hemisphere of your birth chart with placements?
Apparently it is called having a bowl shaped chart. What does the Eastern region specifically tell you?
Maybe this will help:http://astro.cafeastrology.com/cgi-bin/astro/natal?member=&recalc=&name=CD&sex=f&d1day=26&d1month=11&d1year=1991&d1hour=4&d1min=30&citylist=Fenton%2C+MO+%2829%29%2C+United+States&lang=en
The picture of the chart is at the bottom.
Great answer, and thank you I will keep that in mind.
Second person, yes, true, but you must not get caught up on the literals. You get the jist of what I am saying. It is still a bowl shaped chart.
You're actually better off when you offer the data: your date of birth and year, the exact time of birth (or as close to exact as possible), and the city, state, nation where you were born. That way, astrologers can choose the ways in which they view your chart. Cafe Astrology is not consistently accurate in their chart calculations, often because of time variances. (I prefer to do the chart myself rather than using sites.)
When your chart shows Eastern dominance, it tends to say you're highly independent and prefer to make decisions on your own without others giving you their input. Not that you don't care about what others think or feel (you may still care), it's just that you're very much in command of your own life.
In addition, you have a dominance of planets below the horizon. You're introspective and give great thought to events although you may not be as inclined to express what's going on and how you feel about it unless it's very important for you to do so.
Edit -- For both the Asker and the other person: While it's true that the Moon is in the Western hemisphere, it's conjunct the Midheaven (MC) within a 5° orb, placing emphasis still on the MC as part of the Eastern hemisphere, and it is therefore considered part of the 10th house with little influence coming from the 9th. Not that the 9th won't have any play, but you must also consider it as part of the 10th since it has such a prominent positioning.
Hope that helps.