Take a Break Fate & Fortune

Mandy’s lucky dip

Each month, Mandy picks two readers at random and gives them a reading... She’s seen you crying

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You must intervene Mandy says:

YOUR DAD WANTS TO TALK ABOUT YOUR DAUGHTER. He says, ‘It can’t be left as it is, something needs to happen.’ It is up to you to help her.

Now you’re asking if you will move. Dad won’t say yes or no, only that you must not rush into anything and make sure the house you’re offered is the right one. However, I am certain something will happen for you this year.

Dad will be around you in June and November and someone called Lesley, a woman who is on the earth plane, will be important, and so will Karen. She isn’t a friend but will be there to offer you help.

Do you get on with all your sons? I’m being told one of them took a different path to the others. Next year will be important for him.

Finally, your dad is with a woman in spirit, but she isn’t your mum.

Yasmin says:

I asked Mandy to contact my dad Bert, who passed in 1999, aged 89.

He was close to my daughter Toni, who has had health problems for years. I have done everything I can to help, but Mandy gave me a few ideas.

I’ve lived in my flat for six years, but the lockdown has stopped me going outside for a whole year as I use a mobility scooter and can’t open all the fire doors on my own. I desperatel­y want to move to somewhere more suitable, so I hope the months of June or November are when that will happen. Perhaps Lesley and Karen will be from the Housing Associatio­n.

I have three sons and was estranged from my eldest for 30 years. However, we’re back on speaking terms now.

I thought Dad was with Mum as they were together for 70 years, but Mandy was adamant he was with his own mum.

That was an interestin­g reading. Most of it was about my daughter, but Dad is obviously very worried about her. At least it sounds like I will move, which is good news.

Mandy says:

DO YOU KNOW SOMEONE CALLED JUNE? She has just popped in to say hello, but she’s not going to stay as she knows you’re here to talk to your mum. She seems like a lovely, good-hearted person.

Now Mum is here, but she’s upset because she’s seen you crying at work. You need people around you as you’ve felt quite alone.

Mum says don’t be afraid to take a new path. Now she is talking about you taking out new insurance and an old photo of you with short hair that sticks in her mind. Did someone recently get a new TV?

She is holding up a Welsh flag.

The month of May seems important.

Your dad is standing behind your mum and is saying, ‘What’s going on, can I come in?’ He has quite a quirky personalit­y. He says his legs are better now and he knows Joyce can be quite difficult. Finally, he says, ‘Tell Julie about the caravan. She’ll know what I mean!’

Julie says:

I asked Mandy to contact my mum Ruth, who passed in January 2019, age 83. It’s true I’d been having a bad time at work, but I didn’t cry until

I got home. I’ve worked there for 30 years as a carer so I can’t think what the new path might be. June was a colleague who died of Covid last year. She was lovely. Joyce is a resident who is quite difficult!

Funnily enough, I have just taken out some car and home insurance. I had very short hair when I was eight.

My brother David got a new TV the day before my reading and Steve, my other brother, lives in Wales.

May was my dad’s birthday. He died on Mum’s birthday in 2017 and she went downhill after that. He had Parkinson’s and needed a wheelchair so I’m glad his legs are better.

The year after he died, I went to see a psychic who said Dad had wanted to buy me a caravan! When Mandy said that, I knew she had Dad there.

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 ??  ?? Julie Hennessey, 56, Liverpool
Julie Hennessey, 56, Liverpool
 ??  ?? Yasmin Colbourne, 79, Brighton
Yasmin Colbourne, 79, Brighton

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