Piling wrote:They had many ways to read future, but I don't know if they use it now : in Mem and Zin, Xanî made allusions to that : reading in the sand (geomancy). Now they know mostly to read in coffee.
I used to practice sand magic but never sand reading
Piling wrote:They practice also the divination by opening a special book : the Book of a great poet, or the Qoran. You ask your question, you open randomly the book and you place your index finger on the page. The beyt (2 verses) or the surat under your finger is the answer. Persians do it with Hafez's dîwan.
I let my Hafez's dîwan in France. Now I only practice I ching. Before I practice also divination with dices, but it was for simple and quick answers.
I wonder if I can buy a copy in English
Piling wrote:I am not worry for Pirouette. I should better make a faal (divination) by asking : What to do with that stupid pigeon ?
Your pigeon LOVES you so you have to protect it
Piling wrote:Kurds are more impressed by tarots : find a nice and colored tarot desk and they will believe you.When I travelled a lot in Kurdistan and Turkey I had a tarot and when they saw it, they will always asked me to read their future.
The Belline Oracle works well, also. It is easier to red and memorize than Tarots, I think, though, many people say it is the hardest one.
So all I have to do is find the most colourful cards I can and they will believe me - and pay me VAST amounts of money
Piling wrote:If you don't like coffee, you can read also future in tea leaves, but I never practiced myself.
I used to read tealeaves before the invention of teabags

My friend and I are going to run Psychic Fairs - much better than working UNPAID for ungrateful Kurds











