PreHistoric Hand Analysis

tn_chinese_clay_sealThe reading of hands is nothing new; it is believed to date back as far as 5,000 years to the ancient cultures of Egypt, China and India. Of course, as an esoteric art, hand reading or palm reading has been around since we have had hands! I love to imagine our prehistoric ancestors sitting and comparing grubby hands as they sat around the campfire gnawing on some mammoth bone or another.

The Ancient Chinese use inked fingerprints on a vast variety of legal documents…everything from land deeds to contracts to land debts. By 246 BC, Chinese officials pressed their fingerprints in clay seals, which were then used to seal official documents.(see picture) There is proof of a trial around 300 BC where a handprint was used as evidence in a theft trial. When silk and paper came into widespread use parties put their handprints on legal document. Fingerprints were able to be used to establish identity in courts over business conflicts, but historians are not sure if the Chinese were aware of the uniqueness of the fingerprints or if there were some type of spiritual significance given to the touching of the finger to the paper. I like to think BOTH.

In 14th century Persia, many official government papers had fingerprints used for identification and one government official, a doctor, noticed that no two fingerprints were exactly alike.

In many ancient, and some not so ancient, cultures the punishment for committing an offense was the cutting off of the hand that was used to commit the crime.

Post to Twitter

My New YAK

babyyak1As many of you know, my husband and I have a small family oriented resort in nw Minnesota, Dancing Bear Resort. As you would imagine, this is our crazy busy time of the year and I feel so blessed! We have some of the greatest guests imaginable and we love spending time with them…which leads to my rather spotty posting during peak weeks (mea culpa). Hey, summer only lasts a precious few weeks in nw Minnesota!

But I have BIG news! I have a baby YAK. Yep, a YAK. He looks like a little Holstein calf, but give him some time and he WILL grow into his true yak-ness. He drinks from a huge bottle 2-3x a day and makes the cutest grunting noise. Here he is with some of our guests…how many resorts can you go to and feed a Yak????

I know this has absolutely nothing to do with hand analysis…but bear with me, as I am a proud new Yak Mom.

Post to Twitter