Fortune Telling Collection - Comprehensive fortune-telling - Square ass fortune telling _ How to improve square ass

Square ass fortune telling _ How to improve square ass

Friends who know fortune telling come in! thank you

There is a custom in our place (Handan, Hebei), where the hair spins around the top of the head: one turns to rush, the other to be at a loss, the third to be fatal, and the fourth to dare to touch the train. This shows that the spiral is related to life. The more spiral, the harder life, the more stubborn temper.

You can understand the meaning of these two sentences, which are money and power. As the saying goes, Liu Bei and Liu Huangshu are called "Big Ear Thief" in The Romance of the Three Kingdoms. What you said has a lot to do with close-up and close-up, which is unique in China's traditional culture. Of course, fortune tellers use this as a "mysterious" machine.

Your third question is the most interesting. When I watched the news last year, I saw that someone abroad invented "fortune telling", which is to judge a person's fate by looking at his ass. There are fortune tellers who look at the whole body, including private parts. Similarly, "touching bones" also includes groping and touching other women's breasts and private parts. It's simple. They all take advantage of others. It is puzzling that some people really bear this loss voluntarily.

Physiognomy has existed in China for thousands of years, and it is recorded in the Book of Changes. Generally speaking, people with big bellies and buttocks are blessed. But no matter which part of the human body is touched, it can only be regarded as "physiognomy" or "touching the bone". If we have to force a scientific explanation, we can't say that physiognomy and bone touching are absolutely useless. In fact, the skills of "looking" and "pulse" in traditional Chinese medicine have something in common with physiognomy and touching bones. Only few people are familiar with the real physiognomy and touch the bones, including the "king" and "pulse" of traditional Chinese medicine, which may have been lost.