Head Lines that start far away from the Life Line are passed down genetically
When you have read the palms of over 100,000 people, you come to notice a lot of things.
For instance, I have noticed that the so-called “Separate-Type” Head Line, in which the Head Line starts at a point far away from the Life Line, is very often passed down from parent to child.
Separate-Type Head Line (Head Line that starts at a point far away from the Life Line): This palm line is found in about every one in 10 Japanese people.
Individuals with this line will sometimes do things that absolutely astonish those around them.
The further the Head Line is from the Life Line, the more bold the person tends to be—fearless, reckless, and carefree, quick to bounce back from any setbacks or failures.
Many will do things like study abroad, or marry someone of a different nationality.
*Looking at it globally, Americans are more likely to have a Separate-Type Head Line than those in other countries, with it being found in about every 1.5 to 2 in 10 people.
A very separate Head Line is only found in about one in 100 people
Y (60 years old), a palm reading customer of mine, had Separate-Type Head Lines on both of her palms, with both very far away from the Life Line.
Over the course of our session, I found that her eldest daughter had a Separate-Type Head Line as well, with hers also very separate from the Life Line.
A Head Line is considered “very” separate if it is about seven to eight millimeters away from the Life Line.
Both Y and her daughter had Head Lines that were about eight millimeters away from their Life Lines.
The two of them were both very optimistic people.
An adventurous Separate-Type Head Line mother-daughter pair
Another palm reading customer of mine, A (40s), also had Separate-Type Head Lines on both of her palms, and was a business owner living in Hawaii.
That alone is a bold thing for a Japanese person to be doing. Her Head Line was about seven to eight millimeters away from her Life Line.
When I said to her, “You have very separate Head Lines on both your palms. You must be a bold person,”
she responded,
“You should see my mom (70 years old). Her Head Lines are even further away than mine.
She goes abroad all by herself for a month or two every year, even though she can’t speak any English—can’t even understand it.
She still finds her way around everywhere, getting around on trains and buses and everything. It’s amazing!”
As you can see, the so-called “boldness” palm line—the Separate-Type Head Line—is often passed down genetically, with the boldness, of course, passed down with it.
I deduced that A’s mother’s Separate-Type Head Line had to be about nine millimeters to a centimeter away form her Life Line.
This kind of extreme Separate-Type Head Line is only found in about every one in 500 people.
A’s mother seemed fearless—a truly astonishing character.
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