allibee
So, with our combined knowledge on here, why hasn't anyone one come up with the lottery numbers spread yet?????
please, grovel, grovel, lol
allibee
please, grovel, grovel, lol
allibee
If the Tarot can tell me when to keep my mouth shut at work, why can't it tell me when the time is right to buy a house or a car or a lottery ticket? I think I may try it. I will let you all know.SlyR said:I'm joining the conversation late i guess, but are you suggesting a spread that predicts the lottery? My friend, the Tarot is a form of counseling, not fortune telling. If we could predict the future without fail, we would lead very empty lives.
L.V.X.,
Frater S. L. Raymond
yes, you are right. But I believe that nothing is ever really "random" Otherwise, How would I be able to predict KENO numbers and the like?SlyR said:jlbvt:
There's a difference between using the Tarot to determine a course of interpersonal interaction and using it to determine the outcome of a purely random occurence.
Yes, but when I leave with more money than I went in with, what do you call that?Also, according to gambling theory, even when you win at a game like Keno, you're still paying the house. They don't make money by selling losing tickets. They make money by skimming off the payouts.
Believe it or not I used to predict numbers with great frequency, and I also got flashes of what people were going to say before they opened their mouths. I also have a friend who can answer the phone before it rings, and she already knows who it is! This is not a joke, I can't believe you are so skeptical about psychic ability! Also, Sly, please don't take this the wrong way. I am not here just to argue with you, but you say you are open-minded. So I hope you will keep an open mind about me and what I have to say.I'm a very open minded person about psychic abilities, but the prediction of random events is something I'm extremely skeptical about. Maybe it's the pragmatic gambling theorist in me, but something tells me that the very nature of random events is that they defy prediction, even to the point of negating precognitive abilities. Using remote viewing to crack a murder case is one thing; using precognitive talent to accurately predict a totally controlled chance occurence is another entirely. Just a thought - I'd love to be mistaken, of course!