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Reading Tea Leaves, and Their Meanings |
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You stare into the teacup for a few minutes. After a while you will easily be able to make shapes from the leaves, and the more you do it, the better you will be at it. You can look at the leaves from any angle. The tea
leaves will form shapes which resemble real life things and objects.
The best kind of tea to use if tea-leaf reading is to be successful, is China tea. Indian tea and the cheaper mixtures contain so much dust and so many fragments of twigs and stems that oftentimes they will not combine to form pictures, or symbols clearly to be discerned. The best
shape of cup to use is one with a wide opening at the top and a bottom not
to small. A plain surface cup is the best to use and the interior should be white and have no patterns printed upon it.
The tea drinker should drink the contents of his or her cup so as to leave only about half a teaspoonful of the beverage, just enough to swill the leaves around. They should then take the cup by the handle in their left hand, rim upwards, and turn it three times from left to right in one fairly rapid swinging movement. They should then very slowly and carefully invert it over the saucer and leave it there for a minute, to permit all the moisture to drain away, and the leaves to settle. The cup to
be read, should be held in the hand and turned to any angle in order to
read the symbols without disturbing them, which will not happen if the
moisture has been properly drained away. The bottom of the cup represents the remoter future foretold; the side of the cup represents the not too far distant, and matters symbolized near the rim are those that may be expected to occur quickly. The fortune may be equally well told, whether there are many or few leaves, but of course there must enough to form some form of image. Around 300 dreams meanings. Just £5.00, sent by email |