Faces

     ”Glenna Trout is a world leader in the field of Face Reading.

      By combining this expertise with her background in 

      justice and education, and her art in making-learning-fun

      Glenna has produced information and understanding for

      the lay person and professional alike, that offers a

      fascinating and compassionate insight into the

      area of human nature”

                                             Suzanne Daley, SDVMA, Brisbane, Australia.

         

Welcome to my website.  

Join me on a journey that will help you understand that a ‘Face Can Tell A Thousand Stories’, and provides a ‘roadmap’ to a person’s life experiences.

On a daily basis I am building and refining this website, so please ‘pop back and re-visit at any time’.

There are many layers of information on our face.

Many of us have learned to be considered about what we say, how we answer questions and to conduct conversations and interviews based on what we expect rather than on what we can actually observe. For example, we sometimes put a ‘brave face’ on things to hide our uncertainties, cover feelings of fear and insecurity with aggression, hide our anger behind a smile or otherwise control our facial expression to help get the result we’re looking for. However, we cannot completely hide what motivates us or what we are really thinking and feeling.

Our body and mind act as one to respond to powerful influences in our life and during our early developmental stages, we formed specific thought patterns and made essential decisions of “self” based on our earliest experiences. Over time, our thought patterns and emotions become etched into our faces. Experiences from this early part of life are usually forgotten at the conscious level, but are remembered in our subconscious. Most of us spend the rest of our life acting on these decisions without ever evaluating them. The face of David Carradine (featured below) provides a fascinating insight into the ‘road map’ that chartered his life journey and experiences.

Developing and using face-reading tools allows us to gain deep insights and more compassionate understanding of self and others. We have access to a person’s strengths and vulnerabilities and often gain information about individuals that they may not normally be willing to share with others. Using this information with sensitivity, compassion and great restraint, it becomes possible to encourage positive growth and to improve commutation and investigation skills. If we choose, each of us can become empowered to make conscious decisions to become the person we want to be.

I invite you to visit the Resources section, where you will find my Picture ArchiveThe library provides twelve pictures each year from 2005 – 2011.

Each month my Newsletter invites comments on my choice of ‘Face of the Month’, and I provide my comments the following month.  The archive features all twelve pictures for the year that you chose to visit. My interpretations are featured in the Newsletter Archive section.

Please note that it may take a few minutes for your brower to load all twelve photographs  featured in the Picture Archive.

If you would like to join me in the ‘journey behind the mask’, I offer a series of introductory and advanced Face Reading courses, and a Distance Learning facility. Full details are available by clicking on the Courses link at the top of this page.

Thank you for visiting my website.

If you have any questions please e-mail me at facingfacts@aol.com

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