joan trinh pham
  • HOME
  • About
    • Vision + Mission
    • More About Joan
    • Media
  • Work With Me
    • Hand Analysis >
      • About Hand Analysis
      • Services
      • Book Online Now: My Available Appointments
      • Long Distance Hand Readings
      • Testimonials
      • FAQs
    • Hospice Palliative Care Educator >
      • Palliative Educator >
        • The Workbook
        • The Manifesto
      • Webinar for Caregivers - From Confusion to Clarity >
        • Library of Favorite Books for End of Life Caregivers
        • Link to Latest Webinar Recording
        • Related Online Resources
    • Art
  • Connect
    • Events
    • Covid Content >
      • Dr. Bonnie Colouring PDF
  • Store
    • Etsy Shop
    • Shop Here
  • Newsletter

3 Essential Skills for Living with Loop Fingerprints

9/3/2015

1 Comment

 
Fingerprints come in 4 basic designs.
Each forensic pattern, in hand analysis world, corresponds with a major theme of consciousness.

This post will focus on the Loop fingerprint which represents the theme of Love!

Picture
I usually send my hand reading clients away with a doodle summary that summarizes the major themes of the associated fingerprint.  
Here's the doodle I have for Loops = Love
(for people with 6 or more of these fingerprints!)  
These doodle summaries also name the general fear associated with the fingerprint, gives a handy affirmation and tool that will be helpful and resonant with people who have a whole lot of love fingerprints.  It's a great place to start getting specific about love / feeling / vulnerability awareness.
Picture
When I speak about Love in the fingerprints, I equate it with the quest of a person who is here to grow their emotional presence + express their feeling landscape authentically. Essentially, they are here to be master of expressing the feels, thereby reaping the towards of deep, honest + meaningful connection to their own self + others.
I would like to offer what I think are 

3 Essential Skills for Living with Loop Fingerprints 

1.  Feel emotion as an organic experience. 

Picture
What not to do.
Just feel the emotion, the energy in motion through your body first and foremost. 
Where are you feeling it and what does it feel like?  
How would you describe the qualities of this sensation:  gentle, intense, subtle or strong?  
Does it feel like tingles in my tummy?  Heaviness in my chest?  Bursting bubbles of lightness?  
This trains us to just notice the physical experience of feeling.
The key here, especially with you air / logical / practical / thinking / rational types is to not try to explain the feeling but just recognize and experience it.  That's all!

2.  Name It.  

Wonderful!  Now you have felt the feeling, the emotion it is time to try to name what you felt - so you can share the experience with others.  Trust me, sharing feelings is awesome.
This can be tricky as there are so many words to name your experience precisely. I love to grow my vocabulary around these words.  Here are a couple charts / pictures that I love:
Picture
And here is a chart using the characters from Pixar's new animated movie, Inside Out, which I think is a brilliant commentary on how all feelings are important:
Picture

3. Express the Feelings / Share Them / Let It Go

People with loop fingerprints are challenged to be their most authentic self first and foremost.  
Usually that this looks and feels like is the willingness to speak / feel what seems most prickly and uncomfortable.
It is a willingness to notice the place within us that resists, that wants to blank out and be willing to sit patiently and invite this resistance to unfurl itself, bringing with it a wisdom + insights.

When loop fingerprinted people are able to acknowledge, accept + lean into the evasive, scary part of their experience (and recognise the symptoms of it in their life)  the great gift is to learn to yield to feeling.  
This can lead to a profound feelings of relief, lightness and awareness.
The loopy fingerprinted person is gifted with an opportunity to see and accept truths within them that once seemed intolerable.  
This self-love and self-connection is the foundation for being able to hold the same unconditional regard for other people's hard-to-love elusive parts in tandem with the sublime + genius aspect of their being.

Feelings are essential to this process - feelings indicate when we are closer to being and expressing our authentic self.  Put simply, being our full authentic self often feels invigorating, easy, light, joyful and good.  When we are out of alignment with being who we really are we can feel dense, fearful, evasive, depressed, stuck or numb.  We don't feel good.  
In this light, the skill to express emotions in the moment freely becomes an imperative for our physical well-being.
Picture
Another metaphor I love to use is this:
We are organic radios!
  • Learning to feel is like being able to read a dial:  How tuned into real me am I?
  • Identifying feelings is like learning to recognise the different tunes that give us even more clues and textures to how we are feeling
  • Finally, being willing to do the messy practice work of learning to deftly express our feelings in the moment to whomever we choose gives us the opportunity to create deep, lasting relationships based on realness + truth.  


These relationships, forged in the fires of vulnerability, are opportunities to be  fiercely real and open-hearted.  These are pinnacle connecting experiences for loop fingerprinted embodied-love kind of people.

Here's a tribute to the wisdom of Dr. Wayne Dyer whose words of wisdom and wardrobe are
 perfectly in sync with 
'love' themes.

Picture
Does this help or give clarity to you loopy-tipped folk?
I would love to hear.
Until then, here is your friendly neighbourhood hand analyst signing off with much love + joy :)
Picture

PS.  Favourite Loop Fingerprint Resources:

Picture
  • Article:  ''Loops:  The Relationship Trail'' (1991) written by Alana Unger, faculty of the International Institute of Hand Analysis (http://www.handanalysis.net/loops.html)
Picture
Picture
  • Book:  Daring Greatly:  How the Courage to be Vulnerable Transforms the Way We Live, Love, Parent and Lead written by Brene Brown + Karen White (2012)
  • Movie:  Inside Out by Pixar Studios (2015)
Picture
Picture
  • Toy / Educational Resource:  Kimochi: Toys with Feelings Inside (2011).  Yes these are technically for children but they are genius! (http://www.kimochis.com.au/)
1 Comment
Karen link
12/23/2020 07:36:16 am

Appreciiate this blog post

Reply



Leave a Reply.

    Picture
    Picture
    Follow @joantrinhpham on instagram

    Quarterly Newsletter!

    Archives

    August 2017
    February 2016
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    July 2015
    April 2015
    October 2014
    July 2014
    February 2014
    January 2014
    December 2013
    November 2013
    October 2013
    September 2013
    August 2013
    July 2013
    June 2013
    May 2013
    April 2013
    March 2013
    February 2013

    All materials
    © joan trinh pham 
        2013-2015

    Categories

    All
    A Course In Miracles
    Activism
    Advance Care Planning
    Annual Review
    Art
    Autobiography
    Awesome
    Burlesque
    Butterfly
    Calligraphy
    Catholic
    Coaching
    Communication
    Cranial Sacral Therapy
    Death
    D Fork
    D-fork
    #dieawesome
    #dieawesome #dying #grief #soulpancake
    Doodle
    Ecology
    Elderrific
    Elders
    Environment
    Family
    Feeling
    Fingerprint
    Fingerprints
    Handanalysis
    Hand Analysis
    Holistic
    Inspiration
    Kanye West
    Learning
    Live Well
    Love
    @marieforleo
    Meditation
    Mommy Pham
    Nerd
    Newsletter
    Nurse
    Original Work
    Ornery
    Palliative Care
    Palmistry
    Phamily
    Pope Francis
    Practical Palmistry
    Renegade Courtesan
    #rhhbschool
    Selfcare
    Service
    Sex
    Sketchbook
    Soul
    Stillpoint
    True Story
    #WarriorUp
    Water Hand
    Water Heart Line
    Whirl
    Whirl Fingerprint
    Whorl
    #winBSCHOOL
    Wisdom

    RSS Feed

Site template by Weebly + customized by Joan Trinh Pham
Copyright © 2013-2018  /   Joan Trinh Pham. All rights reserved.