Valentine’s Day isn’t the only time to interview a face reader about loving your face, warts, wrinkles and all.
[USPRwire, Mon Jan 16 2006] Valentine’s Day isn’t the only time to interview a face reader about loving your face, warts, wrinkles and all. Any time that self-esteem, relationships or integrity are concerns, Rose Rosetree can add thought-provoking elements to the conversation. America’s leading physiognomist can change forever how your audience sees faces.
The flip side of our glam culture is self-loathing. Physiognomists help interpret faces according to a different standard: Talent and life lessons. This is particularly true of Rosetree’s trademarked adaptation of the 3,000-year-old art. Ask about celebs of your choice and the accuracy will amaze you. As for age-related face insights:
During 20s, face reading can help young adults to appreciate how their quirkiest characteristics relate to talent they can use for their life work.
The 30’s aren’t just a time for swinging sex in the city. Self-discovery continues, and faces can reveal information that could make a huge difference for relationships and career.
At 40 and beyond, the most fascinating thing to see about faces isn’t the wrinkles. It’s the other 90% of face changes, everywhere from brow height to ear position and chin bottom shape. Aging NEVER is one size fits all, not when you really look at people. And every change means something.
As Baby Boomers turn sixty, face reading brings the esteem-boosting message they need to hear.
Face reading has a message for every age. Unless one is integrity-challenged, the news is mostly good… and completely helpful for making future choices to make life better.
Ask Rose about dating tips, too. Most controversial is her view of vanity surgery. Here’s a perspective you won’t hear from those whose livelihood depends on persuading folks that their natural faces are “deformed.” In her how-to “Wrinkles Are God's Makeup,” Rosetree takes on the negative consequences of vanity surgery, one procedure at a time.