Palm Reading

Does anyone happen to know some good sites for palm reading? I found the following site which seems to have some good links to various palm reading sites but I'm not sure which one would be the best to pursue: _http://www.handresearch.com/. One of the reasons that I'm interested in learning more about palm reading is that I've noticed that the lines on my dominant hand are different than the lines on my other hand. For example, the "fate line" on my dominant hand is broken/staggered whereas on my other hand it consists of one clear line with one branch. Another example is that on the "mount of venus" on my dominant hand there appears to be a grid that is much larger with many more "squares" relative to my other hand. Additionally, there is a line on my dominant hand that extends from the "life line" and crosses through my "fate line", "head line", and "heart line", and ends right below and to the inner side of my smallest finger but is completely absent on my other hand. More than anything else I'm curious what any of these lines might mean, if anything, and I was hoping someone here might be more knowledgeable than I on the subject and could help point me in the right direction. Or is palm reading really just a waste of energy and time? 
 
SeekingtheTruth said:
More than anything else I'm curious what any of these lines might mean, if anything, and I was hoping someone here might be more knowledgeable than I on the subject and could help point me in the right direction. Or is palm reading really just a waste of energy and time?

Wow, now there's a blast from the past. ;)

I got into hand reading out of curiosity, and did a number of experiments to see if the lines on my hand ever changed, incorporating the results in artworks. I found that the major lines of both hands do change over time, but its minute. Its in the finer lines that most of the changes, if any, happen. Fingernail condition and shape can offer clues to medical problems, but I don't know of any that include hand lines.

Hand reading, at least for me, was one half understanding what the lines 'meant' and the rest was some kind of psychic thing. I don't do it anymore, but I think I still have a few of the books: The Art of Hand Reading by Lori Reid, and Palmistry by Mary Anderson (I think that's her last name, its on the top shelf in my 'take to donate' pile and I can't quite see it) I learned it from books and talking to other people interested in it, but this was before the internet was a big deal.

I think if you looked into Palmistry with the intention of learning about yourself, it could be a creative way to track down internal programs to do the Work. The only caution I can give you is the usual one for any 'occult art': Don't be so open minded that your brain falls out, and watch out for Obsessive tendencies.

The two books mentioned above should be easy to get used on amazon, and they are cheaper than paying money on websites.
 
I have a similar inquiry into Hand Analysis which is based on traditional palmistry but largely different from it in that it does not predict a definite future but addresses what is happening in one's life now. It hints to one's potential. A few main things that are revealed after a reading are one's life school, life purpose, life lesson and gift markers. On one website about Hand Analysis it mentions that from about five months prior to birth one's fingerprints do not change and on another site, that the hand prints reveal neural pathways and energies that have accumulated over one's lifetime. I had my hand analyzed last year and thought that before I get too involved in trying to understand the system and what my hand prints reveal, I would ask anyone here on the forum if they are familiar with Hand Analysis and/or what their thoughts on it are?

Gimpy said:
I think if you looked into Palmistry with the intention of learning about yourself, it could be a creative way to track down internal programs to do the Work. The only caution I can give you is the usual one for any 'occult art': Don't be so open minded that your brain falls out, and watch out for Obsessive tendencies.

Although this is in reference to palmistry and I'm not sure Hand Analysis would be considered an occult art, I will keep this in mind.
 
Hi edgitarra,

Could be that it has to do with how long the hands remain closed or folded in the months of conception.

On one website about hand analysis they mention that a main argument against them being crease lines is that the palm lines are all present by the time the fetus is 3 months old (lifeline-7-8 weeks, heart and head lines at 9-10 weeks). On another website though about hand analysis which appears more scientifically based and cites it's findings it mentions the timeline: life line in 7-9 weeks, heart line in 9-12 weeks, and the head line in 9-13 weeks.

On the first website they continue on with the argument and state it is not until 11 weeks that that the muscles needed for movement of the hand form and voluntary hand actions don't start till 23 weeks. From there they state that the hand lines are forming around the same time as the nerve endings which stimulate the muscles so the lines are there long before the hand has voluntary muscle movement.

I may try to locate a book that has more information about this, since at this point, I'm just going by what I've found online and I'm not sure how accurate it is.
 
Hi, I've been reading more about Hand Analysis lately and would like to share more about it with you all.

From the International Institute of Hand Analysis website (the website sums it up better than I):

http://www.handanalysis.net/yourfingerprints.html said:
Hand analysis is the modern form of the ancient art of palmistry. Whereas palmistry is defined as foretelling the future from the lines of your palm, hand analysis seeks to further self- understanding through an examination of the entirety of your hands.

I mentioned before in this thread I had a hand reading, but before that which would've been a couple years earlier in 2011, I just had my fingerprints looked at. I received some info about one of the schools in the system that day called the 'school of service.' The hand-out listed in so many words what is 'service vs. servitude' or the difference between service and sacrifice. Next to 'skills required' is written: "Ability and willingness to discern and choose Service rather than Sacrifice." I know at the time it made me think of what I'd been reading here on the forum and in the Wave series, about the concepts of STO and STS..

The book I've been reading lately on the topic is 'LifePrints' by Richard Unger who established the International Institute of Hand Analysis in 1985. In the book, he explains how the four main fingerprint types (Whorl, Loop, Tented Arch or Arch) determine the type of school one is in, and describes how to identify the school by examining each of the ten fingerprints. I'd like to know what it is about the patterning of the fingerprint type that determines the school but haven't yet been able to find the info.

Excerpt from 'LifePrints':

The four schools, each represented by one of the main fingerprint types (see chart below), correspond to themes of human development, ranging from the most basic (feeling safe in your body) to the development of awareness and intellect, to the recognition of heart and empathy, and finally to the inclination to serve others. Each person is challenged to grow in each of these four areas. None is more or less important than the others, but the school you are in represents the area of development worthy of your extra attention. As your life-purpose map comes into full view, you will gain a greater perspective on the pivotal role this developmental theme has played, and continues to play, in your personal growth.

So far I've mostly just read the chapter on the 'school of service,' wherein he discusses service consciousness and how a theme of 'service vs. servitude' might unfold in one's life. He also mentions something called 'service backlash,' which is from what I understand, being extremely self-indulgent and in burnout and resentment mode.

I've included the below excerpt of the Introduction to 'LifePrints' called 'The Next Extraordinary Map.' It's kind of long but I think others might find it interesting. Provides background info on how Richard Unger merged the two disciplines of dermatoglyphics and palmistry to create Hand Analysis. The part I bolded below about the fingerprints I find pretty fascinating: how the patterning system of fingerprints show up elsewhere in nature, how they are like a wave energy imprint.

DERMATOGLYPHICS OPENS THE DOOR

Dermatoglyphics (dermo = skin, glyphics = carvings), a name coined by Harold Cummins, MD, in 1926, is the scientific term for the study of fingerprints and related line and hand shape designations. Its main uses are in population studies, genetic research, and medical diagnostics. Dr. Cummins is commonly referred to as the father of dermatoglyphics, and his seminal work with Dr. Charles Midlo, Fingerprints, Palms, and Soles, is considered the standard in the field. Examining embryonic hands, Dr. Cummins documented the emergence of eleven ball-like structures at the eighth week after conception. These “volar pads” will later become the thumb, fingers, and the six sections of the palmar surface. At the fourteenth week, the skin corrugations (fingerprints) begin to appear, forming a topographic-like map of the developing fetal hand.

What? Fingerprints are arranged like a topographic map? I almost fell out of my chair. It was almost too obvious-human fingerprints look like a map. A map is a tool that tells you where you are and how to get where you need to go. How could this have been overlooked for so long?

For ten years, I had been deciphering the personality components of my hand reading clients by comparing the size and shape of their thumbs, palms, and fingers (plus looking at their lines). Each of these factors is subject to change over time. I had gotten pretty good at finding hidden talents and behavioral tendencies, but I still couldn't tell why people with the same traits sometimes behaved so differently. Now, in the medical stacks, I was reading that the fingerprints form a topographical map prior to birth, a map that will remain unaltered throughout life. Could this map contain the hidden variable for which I had been searching?

Dermatoglyphics and palmistry both derive from comparative hand topography. Both seek the inner condition based upon outer signs, but there the similarities end. One employs the scientific method, the other is based on folklore and thousands of years of anecdotal experience. One is high tech, the other, ancient wisdom. Arising as they do from such divergent cultures, could a marriage of the two disciplines be possible? When I overlaid the two systems and tested my findings in the human laboratory, it turned out they were made for each other.

DOWN TO THE CORE

After years of searching for isolated jigsaw puzzle tidbits, being in the Texas Medical Center library felt like having access to a giant puzzle-piece warehouse. Ca-chunk , ca-chunk: one new interlocking piece after another! Hour passed in an instant. I couldn't believe the library was closing and I would have to wait until 7:00 the next morning to resume. I was at the door at 6:45.

I learned that each fingerprint is composed of between fifty and one hundred lines, each line having its own signature. There are stops and starts to the lines, forks, and bubbles, a series of easily classifiable formations called pattern minutiae. The FBI does not need all ten of your fingerprints to identify you. Comparing the pattern minutiae of one line of one fingerprint may well do the job. The fact that each fingerprint is unique and unalterable but easy to categorize is what makes fingerprint identification the useful tool it is.

Interestingly, the same patterning system that appears on fingerprints shows up elsewhere in nature: on sand dunes, for instance. Sand dunes are not smooth; they are ridged, and ridges have stops and starts, forks and bubbles, just like fingerprint lines. So too at the beach. When the water recedes, we see a ripple pattern in the sand with markings just like those on sand dunes and our fingerprints. Apparently, the ocean waves have left their imprint on the shoreline. Is it only a coincidence that these patterns share the same characteristics with those on our fingertips?

As I stared at the diagrams in Fingerprints, Palms, and Soles, a shudder went across my shoulders and up and down my spine. The experience was similar to waking in the middle of the night from the power of a Technicolor dream. I felt sensationally calm, profoundly alert, as though I was remembering something long forgotten. The entire system of fingerprint identification appeared in my brain, whole, intact. And I knew, as I know now in my bones, that fingerprints are a soul-level imprint.

The LifePrints system joins the fingerprint census of arch, loop, whorl sequence of medical literature to the mythic interpretations of hand analysis. The result of this union is a tool as precise as a scalpel and as meaningful as a philosopher's stone: a life-purpose map that can be used as a daily compass to life-scale meaning and fulfillment.

Five months before you were born, a pattern appeared on your body, one with design characteristics similar to the wave impressions left on a beach. Call it a soul map, a holographic image, or a DNA printout, a bar-coded peek at the biological legacy of your ancestors. Consider it your transcript as you begin a new semester at the Earth University.

I'd like to eventually get the notes and the recording I have about the hand reading together so that it's more cohesive and clear on paper and in my mind, I could then also share more about the actual results. Wonder too if I might be identified in some way..

Interested to hear others thoughts/opinions/impressions.
 
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