Update: Drinking too much alcohol reduces your lifespan

Table of Contents

The lifespan of regular drinkers

During my palm reading sessions, I often hear about the lifespans of people who were regular drinkers.
The relationship between alcohol and lifespan is an area I’m particularly interested in.

For instance, I often hear about people’s fathers, or grandfathers, passing away at an early stage from heavy drinking.

I find that generally, people who drink a lot tend to pass away in their 70s, and that particularly heavy drinkers tend to pass away in their 60s.
Those who drink even more than that—what would be called excessive drinking, like drinking a whole “sho” bottle (1.8 l) of sake a day—usually pass away in their 50s.
This is the general pattern I have found.

How to enjoy alcohol responsibly

If you are someone who drinks every day, the general consensus of what is considered a safe amount is..
for beer, 500 ml;
for sake, 1 go (180 ml);
and for wine, 1 glass.

Drinking more than this is considered excessive, and will shorten your lifespan.

The same can be said for smoking as well. After talking to as many people as I have, it is obvious that drinking excessively and smoking excessively do indeed shorten your lifespan.
This time around though, let’s focus on just alcohol.

Drinkers “inherit” their destiny

Drinking as a habit is often passed down to one’s children and descendants. This is, in a sense, a form of destiny.
It is one’s destiny in that this feeling of wanting to drink becomes unbearable, unstoppable. It can no longer be stopped by one’s will alone, and one will continue down that path until they are ruined, until their life is destroyed.

In this way, this unstoppable tendency can develop in a person based on their DNA, the genetics passed down to them particularly from their parents or grandparents.

Those who don’t drink don’t understand?

I imagine people who don’t like to drink will wonder, “Why do they even like that stuff anyway? It doesn’t even taste good.”

It turns out that human beings, if they have that specific destiny, will find alcohol to taste very, very good.
For those who don’t drink, drinking is something that’s bad for the body, expensive, that takes away time you could be spending studying, or that prevents you from sleeping enough—something that doesn’t seem to provide any enough benefit to their lives.

But life is also about having fun, and so it is important to learn how to drink responsibly.
It would be wonderful to be able to enjoy drinks into your 90s.

Overcome this destiny using azimuthology

It might seem from what I’ve said that there is nothing a person could do about this destiny.
But if you know how to apply azimuthology—specifically, auspicious directions—to your life, you can get astonishingly good results.

Say, for instance, that there is a person who is always saying, “How could I stop drinking when it tastes so good?” There are people like this everywhere.

I would recommend that someone like this either go on a trip or move homes in their auspicious direction.

Do this, and their drinking habit will stop being able to exert itself, and the person’s mind will return to normal.
Then, the next time they drink, they will find themselves shocked: “Wait. This doesn’t taste all that great. Huh. Why have I been drinking this whole time?”
And naturally, they will stop drinking.

In other words, there had been a sort of insanity in their mind that was making them think alcohol tasted good, and regaining their sanity has allowed their mind to make the correct judgment.

Quitting smoking is the same way

The same applies to smoking.

A person who previously couldn’t believe that anyone could quit something so good, will find themselves astonished after going on a trip in their auspicious direction.
Taking a drag of their cigarette, they will think to themselves,
“Wait, this is just smoke. What about this tasted so good to me?”

Often, this is enough to immediately push them into quitting.

I hear of many people who quit smoking in this way, cold turkey.

I too stopped smoking cold turkey after a trip in an auspicious direction

In fact, I myself experienced this very phenomenon.
I had been a smoker for many years, smoking many times a day. But then I returned from a trip I had taken in my auspicious direction, and went out for a smoke, and was astonished to find that it didn’t taste good at all.
And so I stopped immediately. Since then, I haven’t smoked once in 25 years.

So if you want to stop drinking or smoking, or if you have been thinking, even vaguely, that these habits are not good for you, I recommend you go on a trip or move to a new home in your auspicious direction.

Give it a try.

Please feel free to share!
  • URLをコピーしました!

Comments

コメントする

Table of Contents