With the rapidly changing economy and advanced technology nowadays, things can happen very fast and life is full of ups & downs. It can be full of joy one moments, and frustration the next. If you are able to have a destiny forecast as your guidance, life will definitely be a smoother one. "Find that rainbow, go ride it!"

在我们这复杂忙碌, 工商业突飞猛进的今天,得意快, 失意也快. 如果能预知命运祸福而趋吉避兇, 必能改善命运。在这里与有缘人分享传统八字风水。希望能协助寻求您的人生方向, 解决困境或增进对自己与别人的谅解。这就是您漫漫旅途的加油站,茫茫大海的避风港。我们是新加坡最值得您信赖的网络命理顾问。值得信任、真心诚意、替您设想,是我们服务的唯一宗旨。(畇溱风水命理服务)


Sunday, October 14, 2018

Fortune Telling news - AsiaOne.com

More and more young people in Hong Kong are turning to fortune-telling and astrology in their search for meaning, answers and solace.
Joseph Wong Ka-lok, a fortune teller in Wong Tai Sin in New Kowloon, shared that he had seen a rise in numbers when it comes to young Hong Kongers, university students specifically, who come to him for help.
"A lot of young people feel that it's getting harder to survive in Hong Kong," Wong Ka-lok was quoted in a South China Morning Post report last July 7. "Very often they are not satisfied with the status quo. They don't understand why they are not being properly rewarded for their hard work. That's why they come to me for explanations."
Wong is now in his 60s and has been fortune-telling for about 26 years. He sees around 200 customers every month, most of which are students. Wong, on his end, makes use of different divination methods in his approach, methods that are fast becoming popular among the younger crowd, such as traditional feng shui, palm readings, and even tarot cards.
"Before I sought the advice of my fortune-teller I was clueless about making choices," Cheng Wai-yin, a regular subscriber of fortune-telling on Temple Street, was quoted as saying. "Now I have something to follow. For example, if I don't know whether I should make a move on a girl, or whether I should choose this job or that. There are rules I can follow that might bring me a higher chance of success."
Many academics gave their own take, too, sharing that these unorthodox practices that appeal and pervade the younger crowd aren't surprising at all.
In a society like Hong Kong which views elders' authority as absolute, a sharp break or shift from tradition in pursuit of something newfangled and novel, such as a fascination for the mystical or occult, is expected to happen.
"There's a certain proportion of young people who have a great deal of uncertainty about their future, and these systems give them reassurance," Cecilia Chan, a professor at the University of Hong Kong's social work and social administration department, said in the report.
Dr. Paul O'Connor, a research assistant professor at the Department of Sociology at Lingnan University, also acknowledged this trend.
"We've been seeing the emergence of a subjective sense of religion or belief," Dr. O'Connor said. "And it's not just Hong Kong. There's been a general worldwide trend of people moving away from structured religion."
But while some are quick to say that such things are only made up stories, Dr. O'Connor maintained that people aren't necessarily concerned whether the readings are true or made-up.
"People often recognise that these stories are made up. They're not concerned about that, it's about the feeling of constructing your own identity."

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