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City workers turn to psychics for advice

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    City workers turn to psychics for advice

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/f...or-advice.html

    Bankers and accountants who used to put their faith in spreadsheets and complex formulas are now turning to clairvoyants for guidance. Many have even started taking in job offers and contracts to be analysed.

    The British Astrological and Psychic Society (BAPS) said it had witnessed a dramatic increase in the demand for readings in the last year – particularly in the last three months.

    Websites such as thepsychicsociety.co.uk and psychics.co.uk, which also offer psychic readings over the phone, have also reported a significant increase in enquiries.

    "I've definitely noticed a new trend," said Jayne Wallace, a clairvoyant who works in the Selfridges department store, in central London. "We're getting lots of city workers – particularly men coming in for readings.

    "A surprising amount of my clients are very high-up, wealthy, important people from within the financial industry.

    "They might be worried about losing their job or a lot of the time they're asking about whether it's right to get out of the finance industry altogether.

    "Often if they've had a job offer from another company they'll even bring the contract in with them to ask me about it. I've seen four today alone."

    One of her clients, a director at ICAP, the London-based brokers firm, said he had been offered a job in Hong Kong but had been unsure about whether to accept it.

    "I've gone to Jayne in the past and she's given me really good advice," said the man, who did not want to be named as he had not yet told his employers about the offer.

    "She advised me on my last job offer and that worked out well. I showed her the new contract and she said I should move to Hong Kong as I would be happier, so I'm going to take the job."

    William Hooper, 39, a former City trader, said he gave up his job on the advice of his psychic, Robin Lown, to become a property developer in Cyprus at the end of last year.

    "He was always very concerned about the way the economy was heading and warned me to get out of banking. He said I needed to be out of the industry by September 2008.

    "So that's what I did – just before the collapse of Lehman Brothers in the US. The property market has crashed so I'm hoovering up cheap properties while things would have become pretty difficult for me if I had stayed in the UK."

    "He was always one of the first people I would consult about my career. If I had a job offer I would ask him whether or not I should take it."

    Other psychics have also reported a surge in demand for their services. They said they had also seen a change in the type of questions that were being asked during readings.

    Katie Winterbourne, an "intuitive therapist" based in Harrods department store, in London, charges £120 for an hour-long reading and has a three-month-long waiting list.

    "Most of the questions I used to get asked were by women seeking advice about their personal lives, in particular their love lives.

    "But there's been a noticeable shift. Now I'm getting lots of questions about people's work lives, or financial security. Questions like "will I lose my job?" and "should the credit crunch stop me from starting a family?".

    Despite the sceptical way in which the industry is often perceived, many psychics believe they have an important role in a time of economic turmoil.

    Jackie Towers, a clairvoyant and president of BAPS, said questions had become less about spiritual issues and more about practical, everyday issues.

    "It makes sense really," she said. "People are more concerned about keeping their houses, or keeping their family fed, than whether or not they can be put in contact with their dead relatives."

    She added that most of the society's members had reported an increase in demand for their services – particularly in the last six months.

    "People are scared. I have one client whose husband is on suicide watch. She doesn't know who to turn to for help. It's a difficult time for a lot of people and it's our job to put them at ease – to give them that bit of guidance or clarity that they are looking for."


    #2
    Hum - I use to do tarot reading as a joke for my friends - prehaps this can be my Plan B?
    Just call me Matron - Too many handbags

    Comment


      #3
      Maybe City workers should turn to physics for advice instead.

      At least a physicist will be able to tell them which floor of their skyscraper to jump out of in order to reach terminal velocity.



      IGMC ...

      Comment


        #4
        Gordon used them last month but gave up when they told him there was no hope whatsoever for him.

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by moorfield View Post
          Maybe City workers should turn to physics for advice instead.

          At least a physicist will be able to tell them which floor of their skyscraper to jump out of in order to reach terminal velocity.
          More likely is that a physicist would point out that terminal velocity is the speed at which something will stop accelerating when falling because the drag has matched the gravitational force of acceleration and that as one approaches terminal velocity, the rate of approach goes down so you do not, in theory actually reach terminal velocity. However, by jumping from a great height, it is possible to reach a speed in that low-pressure, low drag high altitude atmosphere that is greater than the terminal velocity of a a lower altitude thereby the faller actually slows down as they approach the ground.

          The ideal would be to choose a height sufficiently high to nearly exceed the terminal velocity at ground level. This would maximise ground impact speed whilst minimising the unpleasant falling time.

          However, presumably it is more important that instant death is achieved upon deceleration when achieving ground level? In which case the velocity required is unlikely to be the terminal velocity, it may be higher or lower. That will depend also upon the positional attitude of the faller. Should the unhappy banker choose to take the case to fall head first, a lower starting height can be used although a greater terminal velocity would apply.

          Then again, one may take the view that we would rather they selected a height that will not quite kill but cause sufficient brain and physical damage that they could never work again and would be such a burden upon their family that they would be abandoned, to spend the rest of the miserable existence in their glorious ill-gotten wealth but institutionalised and alone such that they cannot gain any enjoyment from their being alive.

          But that's more sociologist than physicist.
          Drivelling in TPD is not a mental health issue. We're just community blogging, that's all.

          Xenophon said: "CUK Geek of the Week". A gingerjedi certified "Elitist Tw@t". Posting rated @ 5 lard points

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by zara_backdog View Post
            Hum - I use to do tarot reading as a joke for my friends - prehaps this can be my Plan B?
            If you get any bankers : tell them they are about to jump from the top of a tall building. What a jolly jape that would be......

            Comment


              #7
              I can see an opening here for a canny entrepeneur

              Forget excel. buy our new - revolutionary 'Forseeing sheet', for all your 'corporate incorporeal' needs.

              runs on 240 volt Ki energy, comes with telekinetic mouse pointer and our new rune-font and our 'EctoPlasma' screen.




              (\__/)
              (>'.'<)
              ("")("") Born to Drink. Forced to Work

              Comment


                #8
                When I got student holiday jobs, the weekly payday was always on a Thursday. Without fail the horoscope in the Wednesday evening paper would predict that the next day would be good for money. That's the way to write 'em
                Behold the warranty -- the bold print giveth and the fine print taketh away.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by BrowneIssue View Post
                  That will depend also upon the positional attitude of the faller. Should the unhappy banker choose to take the case to fall head first, a lower starting height can be used although a greater terminal velocity would apply.
                  Or one could fall feet first from a lower starting height and then establish a successful career as a Toulouse Lautrec stunt double

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Katie Winterbourne, an "intuitive therapist" based in Harrods department store, in London, charges £120 for an hour-long reading and has a three-month-long waiting list.
                    Has anyone here ever used a psychic and why ?
                    Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience.

                    C.S. Lewis

                    Comment

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