‘Only 1% Of People Have These Marks’: Do You Have 2 Ms On Your Palms? If So, You’re In Rare Company—And Here’s What It Means


TikTok user Palmsecrets (@sunnygate07) says that the secrets to knowing and understanding yourself are basically coded DMs from God. And you can decipher them through palmistry, cosmic messages hidden in the lines of your hands.

It’s the kind of thing that makes you roll your eyes, even as you low-key scrutinize your own anatomy. Is palmistry physical evidence of the world we can’t see and can’t really touch, yet secretly hope is real? An argument could be made. If matter can’t be created or destroyed, then maybe the universe is sending a slew of divine messages. What if you’ve actually been touched by God?

Ancient Aliens For The Palmistry Set?

“Only 1% of people have these 3 divine marks-the kind that many believe are signs from God,” reads on-screen text in the TikTok that’s been watched 123,900 times.

The marks? A golden letter “M,” a smiling cruise ship, and a single, disembodied eye. These ad hoc pictograms illustrate some of the messages found in the palm of your hand—or so some people say.

“On your palm, when the life line, head line, heart line, and fate line come together to form an ‘M,’ it reveals something powerful: people with this mark have sharp intuition, they can sense lies like they were born with a truth detector. It also stands for wisdom, leadership and divine protection,” says Palmsecrets in the video.

Next, Palmsecrets addresses the so-called “eye of God.” An almond-shaped mark made by the creases in the knuckle of the thumb. “It’s a rare symbol that speaks of strong intuition, creativity, and a deep pull towards life’s mysteries … a spiritual link, a bridge to higher energy,” the account adds.

Finally, there’s the cruise ship: “When the lines on the palm come together to form a boat shape, it tells a story of wealth and destiny. Your journey is nearing completion, your ship is returning.”

However, according to YourTango writer Christine Schoenwald, the major lines on your hands (heart, life, fate) don’t actually predict the future. “They focus more on the quality of your life…the life line doesn’t say how long you’ll live but the kind of life you’ll lead. The head line doesn’t indicate how smart you are, but how you think,” Schoenwald pens.

Do You Have An ‘M’ On Your Palm?

Viewers checked their own palms for these markings.

“All 3 on both hands,” Stephanie Wade (@stephanieleigh036) confirmed.

“I have them all and [I’m feeling] weirder day by day,” GF (@giovanniferrari91) added.

“Nice, that explains my God-like powers I’ve learned to tap into. We all have it, just haven’t been taught how to access,” a third more snarky user replied.

Another quipped, “Got all 3…but no treasure.”

Rarest Of The Rare

Though many commenters insist they bear these rare marks, YourTango reports only 1% to 2% of people worldwide have them. That means for every 100 people you encounter, only one or two of them actually have these marks.

Palmistry is thousands of years old, and its roots trace back to ancient India, China, and Greece. “Palmistry is based on the tenet that your hand is a map of yourself,” writes Kelly Surtees in Wellbeing.

Like anything self-reflective, you need a good bit of interpretation and curiosity to pursue it. Dr. Sohini Sastri, the self-proclaimed best astrologer in India, notes: “While some view it as symbolic rather than scientific, the way we interpret palm lines often encourages reflection on our own behaviors and emotions.”

So perhaps it’s the willingness to seek and ask—that can turn the palm of your hand from simply a tool for high-fives into a map of your soul. Maybe palmistry just reveals that if you want to be, you are totally connected to something bigger and more mysterious than yourself.

BroBible reached out to Palmsecrets via TikTok direct message. We’ll update this article if they get back to us.

Madeleine Peck Wagner is a writer and artist whose curiosity has taken her from weird basement art shows to teaching in a master’s degree program. Her work has appeared in The Florida Times-Union, Folio Weekly, Art News, Art Pulse, and The Cleveland Plain Dealer. She’s done work as a curator, commentator, and critic. She is also fascinated with the way language shapes culture. You can email her at madeleine53@gmail.com
Want more news like this? Add BroBible as a preferred source on Google!
Preferred sources are prioritized in Top Stories, ensuring you never miss any of our editorial team's hard work.
Google News Add as preferred source on Google