| This
is an intriguing, yet puzzling book on archetypal hand analysis.
Let's start
with the intriguing. The methodology and explanatory format for
hand analysis created by Haft-Pomrock are both unique. In a field
replete with look-alike books, someone who has gone to such great
lengths (over thirty years of research) to present new material
deserves our applause.
The author
does not invent her system out of thin air, openly borrowing from
Spier, Debrunner, Wolff and others. Those already familiar with
the basic tenets of hand analysis will easily recognize her hand
shape typology and other aspects of her approach.
Where Haft-Pomrock
sets out on a new trail is in her discussion of the feminine archetypes
in the hands. Rather than settling for the traditional approach
in naming the fingers and their mounds after male gods, she allots
each finger (excepting hermaphroditic Mercury) male and female
counterparts. Jupiter becomes Zeus/Hera, Saturn becomes Saturn/Athena,
and Apollo is Apollo/Artemis-Persephone.
Various conditions
of the fingers and mounds bring out different archetypal aspects
of the god/goddess energies. To use Zeus/Hera as an example, the
author presents four forms of Hera:
- Parthenos:
Hera as virgin, equated with eagerness or hesitancy depending
on the characteristics of the finger,
- Tellia:
Hera as the married woman, knowing her worth as family or group
leader,
- Chera:
Hera as the divorced or widowed woman, and
- Hestia:
a shadow element of Hera associated with devotion and sacrifice
as a means of control.
Haft-Pomrock
displays photographs of each type of index finger, with explanations
of character based upon the mythological archetypes. For instance,
if the index finger is bent in toward the wrist, looks heavy,
and is slightly separated from the other fingers; this is Hera
in the form of Chera, an indication of sadness. The Moon, Venus,
and Mars, as well as the lines of the palm also receive archetypal
explanations.
Another apparent
innovation is her physical method of analysis. She analyzes the
client's hands with elbows on the table, hands in the air, and
palms toward the body. This she treats as the "inherent personality".
The hand prints, in her system, reveal the "current expression".
I have met hand readers who read the back of the hands in detail,
and others who like to read with the elbows on the table, but
I have not come across this author's approach before.
As with every
palmistry book I have read, there are statements in this one that
agree and disagree with my own analyses. Haft-Pomrock sees the
long, flat heart line ending under Zeus/Hera as, among other things,
devotional (agree), and the head line upturned toward Mercury
as an indicator of manipulation (disagree). She says that the
head line stopping at the fate line shows "rationalizing
behaviors" (interesting, I'll have to think about that one).
Now for the
puzzling part of this book: the execution leaves me somewhat unsettled.
The photographs seem too confusing for me to try out her system
and I wish the numerous archetypes were further fleshed out so
I could understand better when and how to apply them. Still, reading
any palmistry book with a new approach makes me think my time
is well spent.
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