The Head Line can tell you about a person’s job
In my career, I have read the palms of well over 100,000 people from all around the world, and form across various different specialties—politicians, cultural figures, artists, media personalities, professional athletes, and more.
I also currently run my palm reading practice in the Koenji area of Tokyo.
I offer two types of palm reading sessions: face-to-face sessions, and phone sessions based on photos of the palms.
My sessions are open to anyone, so please feel free to register if you are interested.
Palm lines of university professors
As I mentioned, I have seen the palms of many, many people. Among them, there have been many university professors.
So for this entry, I would like to discuss, for those who are interested, the tendencies I have seen in the palm lines of university professors.
University professors tend to have a long Head Line or a Masukake Line
In a nutshell, the palm lines that I tend to see in university professors is either a long Head Line or Masukake Line.
Long Head Line: Seen in those who are good at working diligently and maintaining concentration, and who show exceptional perseverance, able to focus on a single task for hours, not just for three or five hours but for a day or even multiple days.
There are some, however, whose Head Lines became longer only after they got into the habit of concentrating for long periods of time, without them really realizing it.
In either case, this ability to maintain concentration allows those with long Head Lines (or Head Lines that have grown longer) to achieve great success when they have a specific goal, and set their mind to accomplishing it.
This means these individuals, when they are able to study things they are good at, or devote themselves to a single topic of research, are able to become professors of a specific subject at a university.
Meanwhile…
Masukake Line: Seen in very unique individuals who focus on a single area of expertise, specifically topics in that area that others would not pursue, and that are not particularly relevant to their own life or lifestyle.
For instance…
This kind of person, for instance, may be very interested in language.
But of all the languages, they would choose to study something like Swahili, devoting themselves to the research of it.
A person studying Swahili in a country like Japan, for instance, would most likely get very few opportunities to actually speak the language over the course of their life.
And yet they would choose to study and devote their life to the study of a language they may not use even once in their lifetime.
This is the kind of person where the people around them are constantly wondering why they do what they do.
In any case, those with Maskake Lines tend to be rather unusual people.
As discussed, university professors tend to have one or the other of these two lines.
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