I`m glad that it kinda worked! I tried not to hot read Mr. Zero, honest, but it`s incredibly hard not to as the alternative feels like writing something you know to be incorrect about a person! However I don`t feel I should be too apologetic as surely a wise performer would indeed hot read whenever damn well possible?! Perhaps you would consider giving me a score if you were to pretend you drew the tree...?
Magicwand - the reason I`m drawn to this method is as you might guess if you were asked: I simply don`t want to go down the pseudo-psychic "readings" route. Be it crystal balls, tarot, runes, whatever - I believe in them all to the same extent as I believe in this, i.e. not a lot, but the associations they have mean I personally would rather not touch them at all. To me it`s all cover for a cold reading, but I`m comfortable pretending it`s to do with the subconscious mind, but not with astrology or anything to do with the occult (however historically misplaced those associations may be).
Perhaps it`s the types of people we come into contact with, but the people I meet would be far more open to the idea of psychological windows into the subconscious than they would be with tarot or anything else like that.
Plus, what I`m loving is the fail safe out: if you phrase it as "this feature is often indicative of..." then you can never really be wrong, as anything that doesn`t hit is simply an anomaly of the method, and you have free reign in very openly trying to cold read something else to pin it to; "or perhaps this... or perhaps that... you say you had a car crash? Ah yes, that`s it then..." - I tried it quite a few times over the weekend and it seems like a very natural and fair way to fish for info!
I realise that good cold readers should never sound like they`re missing anyway, I just think that this method kind of powers itself without having to do any obvious U-turns or backtracks.
Besides, this is a form of graphology, and other than palm-reading it is more transportable, impromptu and informal than any discipline zhich requires props like tarot cards.
With regard to the actual method, there is only a teeny tiny bit of memory work really - by that I mean, there is a fair bit to remember, but the structure and method means it`s all very obvious once you have a bqsic idea of what the different parts represent.