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Each Guide consists of eight A4 pages that fold into each other. The Guides are quality printed in full colour and protection coated on both sides. The material is a sturdy board.
Palmistry Made Easy
Palmistry can trace its roots back to Indian Astrology and Romani (gypsy) fortune tellers. The Hindu sage Valmiki is thought to have written a book, comprising 567 stanzas, whose title translates in English as "The Teachings of Valmiki Maharshi on Male Palmistry", more than 5,000 years ago. From India, the art of palmistry spread to China, Tibet, Egypt, Persia and to various countries in Europe. Physical features observed in palmistry have psychic or occult predictive meanings. Hands show evidence of the person's health, cleanliness and occupational and nervous habits, they are routinely examined in medical diagnosis and provide clues which are often astonishingly accurate. The Palmistry section of this guide provides an enjoyable introduction and enables immediate participation.
Numerology Made Easy
Numerology is the use of numbers to interpret a person's character or to divine the future. The theory behind numerology is based on the Pythagorean idea that all things can be expressed in numerical terms because they are ultimately reducible to numbers. Using a method analogous to that of the Greek and Hebrew alphabets (in which each letter also represents a number), modern numerology attaches a series of digits to an inquirer's name and date of birth, and from these seeks to divine the person's true nature and prospects. Use the Numerology section of this guide to explore this ancient subject.
Tarot Major & Minor Arcana
The adaptation of Tarot to occult and fortune-telling purposes first occurred in France about 1780. For fortune-telling, each tarot card is ascribed a meaning. The cards of the major arcana refer to spiritual matters and important trends in the questioner's life. In the minor arcana wands deal mainly with business matters and career ambitions, cups with love, swords with conflict, and coins with money and material comfort. The tarot deck is shuffled by the questioner, and then the fortune-teller lays out a few of the cards (either selected at random by the questioner or dealt off the top of the shuffled deck) in a special pattern called a "spread". The meaning of any card is modified according to whether it is upside down, its position in the spread, and the meaning of adjacent cards.