coldreader
New Blood
- Joined
- Sep 28, 2007
- Messages
- 2
I hope that forum members can help me resolve an ethical dilemma.
When I was a teenager, many years ago, I looked around for something distinctive I could do to break the ice at parties and make friends. I hit on palm reading, mainly because no one else I knew was doing it and it sounded cool.
In the course of studying palmistry I came across my city's bylaws against fortune telling. Forewarned -- in the conventional sense! -- I took care never to make predictions during readings. My routine was to tell the subject that the palm was like a map, showing them where they had the power to go. Then I'd proceed with what I later learned was a cold reading, always emphasizing the positive -- I was, after all, trying to make friends.
My palm reading did have the social result I wanted, but after a while I began to feel very uncomfortable with how seriously some people took it. I stopped for several years and only started again when a friend asked me to do readings for a charity fundraising. I've since been invited to perform at several fundraisers.
When giving a reading, I state first that I am not a psychic and will do only a personality analysis. This approach usually goes down well enough, except once with a Baptist church that kicked me out of a bazaar on the grounds that as only God knows what will be, if I made predictions that would prove I was a harmless charlatan; therefore, not making predictions smacked of satanism.
My ethical dilemma relates to the fact that, as you know, many people want to believe in psychic powers, sometimes desperately. I am concerned that despite my not-a-psychic caveat and upbeat readings, I am contributing to harmful beliefs that open up emotionally vulnerable people to exploitation by predators. For example, a young woman came back to me after a reading, said I'd seen the real her, and asked me seriously if she should consult a voodoo priest who advertised in a local tabloid. I talked her out of it, but it was an unsettling experience.
I am a regular reader of Swift and even have a Randi doll that sits on my computer desk to remind me daily that there is still sanity in the world. I would value the views of forum members about the ethics of doing palm readings to raise funds for charities.
When I was a teenager, many years ago, I looked around for something distinctive I could do to break the ice at parties and make friends. I hit on palm reading, mainly because no one else I knew was doing it and it sounded cool.
In the course of studying palmistry I came across my city's bylaws against fortune telling. Forewarned -- in the conventional sense! -- I took care never to make predictions during readings. My routine was to tell the subject that the palm was like a map, showing them where they had the power to go. Then I'd proceed with what I later learned was a cold reading, always emphasizing the positive -- I was, after all, trying to make friends.
My palm reading did have the social result I wanted, but after a while I began to feel very uncomfortable with how seriously some people took it. I stopped for several years and only started again when a friend asked me to do readings for a charity fundraising. I've since been invited to perform at several fundraisers.
When giving a reading, I state first that I am not a psychic and will do only a personality analysis. This approach usually goes down well enough, except once with a Baptist church that kicked me out of a bazaar on the grounds that as only God knows what will be, if I made predictions that would prove I was a harmless charlatan; therefore, not making predictions smacked of satanism.
My ethical dilemma relates to the fact that, as you know, many people want to believe in psychic powers, sometimes desperately. I am concerned that despite my not-a-psychic caveat and upbeat readings, I am contributing to harmful beliefs that open up emotionally vulnerable people to exploitation by predators. For example, a young woman came back to me after a reading, said I'd seen the real her, and asked me seriously if she should consult a voodoo priest who advertised in a local tabloid. I talked her out of it, but it was an unsettling experience.
I am a regular reader of Swift and even have a Randi doll that sits on my computer desk to remind me daily that there is still sanity in the world. I would value the views of forum members about the ethics of doing palm readings to raise funds for charities.