Wow. Well let’s be blunt here- this profession of giving strangers forecasts and insight into their private lives is undoubtably the world’s second oldest profession (and we all know what the first one is, and it isn’t known as a magnet for trustworthy, sterling characters!) No proven certification, no degree, no rules, no proof they even are who they say they are—so no surprise it’s a wild west roll of the dice when we engage their services. Unless they publish their actual name or at the least, their actual photo —(which is one reason I do give some credit to California Psychics, they require an actual pic of every advisor—) we are entrusting these complete unknowns who have absolutely zero interest in us to demonstrate a molecule of ethical integrity.
I bet easily 75% are complete phonies. It’s a gypsy trade— ANYBODY can step in and score a fortune.
The easy money naturally attracts thieves.
There ARE real ones. But they are scattered far and few.
This Mondez person seemed bogus from the get go to me— I never got the hype— seemed like typical cosmic blather, easy to fake? Unless I’m wrong, and he actually did get veritable details?
But that said, I’d never ask for a refund for something as ethereal and quixotic as a “psychic reading”.
Occasionally we encounter a person with a highly developed, repeatable and demonstrable pineal ability to astonishingly access details by name, description etc, that defy our 3D logic and senses.
And even more inexplicably, some can actually ‘see’ through the boundaries of time, but it’s RARE.
Because even for those rock stars, it’s an on/off thing—psychic ability on demand is not a tangibly settled “science”—it’s NOT—it’s quicksilver, fluid and mysterious.
I do not penalize them with a poor review—unless they are obviously running a BS complete scam, in which case they need to be called out to the consuming public.
That dude's reaction was a full frontal attack on you, his customer. It smacks of him being a fake.