Readings for children

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sno
Posts: 301
Joined: Thu Mar 02, 2006 9:44 am

Readings for children

Post by sno » Sat Mar 04, 2006 2:43 pm

Hi,

Has anyone ever had their childs palm's read? Are the lines developed enough to do a proper reading?

bssrinivasan
Posts: 923
Joined: Mon Apr 25, 2005 1:23 pm
Location: mumbai

hand reading of children

Post by bssrinivasan » Sun Mar 05, 2006 7:04 am

hi,
it will not give correct indications.better if they reach an age of 18 to give a reasonable reading.
srinivasan

sno
Posts: 301
Joined: Thu Mar 02, 2006 9:44 am

Post by sno » Sun Mar 05, 2006 12:19 pm

Yes, I guess the hands are not well enough developed. Although even if they were, would you want to know your childs future?

bkesm605
Posts: 35
Joined: Sat Jun 30, 2012 4:07 am
Location: Goshen, IN

I beg to differ "Palmistry For All" By Cheiro!!!

Post by bkesm605 » Sat Jan 19, 2013 5:31 am

This is an exert from the book "Palmistry For All" by Cheiro the most talented and knowledgeable man in Palmistry...

"I think that if all parents knew at least something of Palmistry, the vast majority of children would be more usefully trained and their proper tendencies developed.

It is often too late when a child discovers—and most probably by accident—some tendency or talent that had never been suspected by its parents.

It is no wonder that so few persons find their true vocations in the world, when it is remembered the random, haphazard way in which children are brought up—educated for the most part in some scholastic mill that grinds down all to the same dead level of mediocrity, and then turns them into the Army, the Church, or into trade.

If, on the contrary, all these studies that teach the understanding of character were more encouraged, parents would have less excuse for the supreme ignorance they now show as to the real nature of those children who hold them responsible for their entry into the battlefield of existence.

These same parents would lift up their voices in righteous indignation if soldiers were sent into battle untrained, without their proper equipment, and yet these same parents have never, in the whole course of their lives, made the simplest study of any one of those many subjects by which they could in knowing[Pg xix] the nature of their child, have strengthened weak points in the fortress of character, or by developing some talent or gift, doubly armed him for his entry into the battle of life.

It is from this standpoint that I earnestly hope this study of hands may some day be taken up. It was from this standpoint that I interested such men as Gladstone, Professor Max Muller, of Oxford, Lord Russell, when he was Lord Chief Justice, King Edward VII., and many others too numerous to mention; and lastly, it is from the same standpoint that I have now written this book, which under the title of Palmistry for All, will, I hope, appeal to all classes, and cause such an interest in the Study of Character that, instead of such an art being left in the hands of a few, it will, on the contrary, become universally used for the benefit of all.
Cheiro
Katy Snodgrass

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