Can palm reading help you find the right teacher for your child?

Dormitory at The Armidale School, Australia, 1898
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Finding the right teacher for your child is crucial, and non-predictive palm reading called hand analysis can help shed light on compatability and special needs.

How so?

Self esteem is most fragile at an eary age and can easily be smashed by teachers with a different thinking style to your child.

I had this experience with my own child in a Swiss school 5 years ago.

Fortunately I knew from hand analysis that his thinking style was totally incompatible with his teacher’s and I found a loophole in the system to help him escape the experience of being broken down or turned into a zombie by a ‘teacher from hell’.

When I was in the 5th grade growing up in South Africa, I had my own brush with a ‘teacher from hell’.  Actually now that I look back in that safe little mirror called ‘hindsight’, with the humps of several decade in between, I think that this was in fact my very first brush with a Swiss Farmer!

We’ll never know for sure.  It was a very long time ago. Long before anyone was in the habit of querying religious icons or looking up nuns skirts. Nor had those xrays been invented yet, that strip you naked at the airport.

So we’ve only got my memory to go on, at it swears blind that she/he wasn’t a German nun after all but actually an escaped Swiss farmer. A big burly one that thought he’d got away and found a secret pasage to heaven until they dressed him up and stuck him in my class. Those big coarse boots were a dead giveway and the way ‘she’ sweated profusely and had to mop her brow whenever anyone asked an unlikely question.  Her habit was too dainty for her thick neck and her pasty face looked almost as if it had been squeezed out of a tube.

The thing that first roused my suspicions about her was the way she spelt ‘socks’ SOX. This just wrote her off totally in my book. I decided that her knowledge was unreliable and so I slipped into a dream world where the lights were on but no-one was at home. The more she bullied me the more I disappeared into dreamtime.  She tried to force me to write light up dark down and I absolutely refused.

All hell broke lose when I scored 0 % for Afrikaans. I had decided t to write ‘Ek weet nie’ (I don’t know) for every answer without bothering to look at the question. I even wrote ‘ek weet nie’ on the top of the page where my name should be. Personally I thought that was rather funny but she didn’t.

She gathered together supporting evidence tha tI was ‘unteachable’ and got her superiors to back her.

The nuns called a meeting with my parents and informed them that I was mentally retarded and should be sent to a special school way up in the mountains, somewhere where I would probably be thrashed daily and hopefully turned into somebody useful to society.

My parents agonised over the situation for weeks but fortunately my father, who’d had decades of terrible school experiences himself to draw on, decided not to believe her. Otherwise, god knows what would have happened to me. They cancelled this ‘special boarding school’ at the last minute and stuck me in the local government school instead.

We laugh about this now but it could easily have ended up a tragedy.

A similar thing happened to my own son growing up in Switzerland when he was 5.

I saw the lights go out of his eyes during his first year in kindergarten. And suddenly he changed his speech pattern from ‘I can I can’ to ‘I can’t I can’t.

The problem with Switzerland is that people are trained fom a very early age not to rock the boat. The tendency is to just sweep everything under the carpet and say, ‘It’s only a few years it will soon be over.’

This is absolutely not true, because self esteem is the backbone of everything in your life.

It took a huge amount of courage for me to stand up to my husband and everyone else and do what was best for my child.  (As usual with standing up for anything that really matters to you – after a year or so all the family who resisted agreed that it was the right decision!).

I moved him from his village school and put him in another next to his granny who became his official ‘day care mother’ to make the whole thing legal.

What actually happened here?

This is where hand analysis comes in useful. (Hand analysis is a highly accurate form of nonpredictive palm reading).

Both my son and I have very bent headlines. Your headline shows your thinking style.  A long very curved headline shows a creative, but highly subjective, intuitive brain. What German school teachers will probably label ‘a hopeless dreamer’. What hand analysts label ‘a Persephone type’.

The Persephone type brain is actually a gift marker. If your child has this kind of brain type it’s important to know about it and takes steps to ensure her/his creativity doesn’t get knocked out of her/him at an early age, along with  self esteem. It’s also useful to know the positive and negative sides of this marker so that you can help your child (or your inner child!!) live the light rather than the dark side of this marker.

Whatever your child’s thinking style, do everything you can to protect his or her sense of self esteem.  This is the single, most fundamental quality a person needs to get get ahead later in life.

To find out more about subjective thinking styles read my previous post
‘curvy equals emotional’

I’ve also written something humorous about this and Swiss farmers in a newsletter and post titled ‘Pooh democracy.’

Still haven’t linked this blog to Technorati etc.  Getting there.!

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14 thoughts on “Can palm reading help you find the right teacher for your child?

  1. johnathan Reply

    I agree, research the teacher before putting your kids in that particular class because you never know! I would suggest asking around the school about the teacher.

  2. Joey Reply

    A good teacher can guide you children to the right path while some commercial teachers (I wouldn’t say them bad teachers) can misguide them. I think parents should take proper interview of the teachers and also keep taking updates from their children after appointing a teacher for them.

  3. Yash Reply

    Hi,
    Informative post.
    I think the parents should be aware of their teachers.Teachers played an important role in everyone life.
    Well great stuff.
    Thanks for sharing.

  4. Aditya Reply

    Hi,
    Very nice post.teacher plays very crucial role in the children education.
    I really enjoy the reading.
    Thanks for sharing.

  5. jeff Reply

    hey man nice blog here I love the background and your style of writing. keep up the good work. jeff

  6. phil Reply

    Teachers are the ones who work for foundation of the children. Parents should be more specific in choosing teachers a proper homework is needed before deciding them.

  7. Ramon Murph Reply

    I just wanted to stop in and let you know that I really loved this post. It was full of useful information and creativity, both of which we always can use more of.

  8. durma Reply

    Ha, makes me think of a couple teachers I have had in the past. Though some teachers I had sucked, it really did help me appreciate the good ones I had.

  9. Jima Reply

    Parents should be more specific in choosing teachers the important is she teach your child very well. Enhancing the skills of a child takes courage, what one need is endurance and long patience.

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