In the new episode of her podcast “Liebes Leben” Amira Aly talks about her visit to a shaman. Brother Hima reacts skeptically.
The war of roses between Oliver Pocher (46) and his ex-wife Amira Aly (31) seems to be calming down. In the latest episode of her show with her brother Hima Aly, Aly doesn’t mention her ex-boyfriend at all. Instead, she gives a little insight into her planned house building – and reveals that she recently visited a shaman in her native Austria.
An Austrian house for Germany
At the beginning of the new podcast episode, Aly briefly talks about her house-building project in Cologne. The 31-year-old famously kept the prize money from her victory in “Beat the Star” for her new home. Now Aly is having a house built in Austria using solid wood, which will then be transported to Germany. She should be able to move in in “spring next year” – a timetable that her brother, who is so realistic and prudent, considers unrealistic, as delays and problems always arise with such projects.
Amira Aly was with a shaman
But Aly’s visit to an unnamed shaman takes up an even larger space in the latest episode of “Liebes Leben”. She also paid the woman a visit in Austria.
“Do you say witches? Fortune tellers are just seers. They see your past, they see into your future, they sense these energies,” is how Aly describes her expectations of the profession. Her special seer was recommended to her by friends and she apparently knew nothing about her beforehand.
“That’s why you hate all men”
Brother Hima immediately expresses skepticism, while his conversation partner tells that her shaman initially thought she was Croatian because of her name and tried to speak Croatian with her.
However, according to Aly, the woman then demonstrated clairvoyant abilities when she sensed that her father had abandoned her when she was three years old. That is why, according to the shaman, she subsequently punished “the men”.
“You punish the men because you are so angry about this situation. That’s why you hate all men,” the woman revealed to her customer. The seer foresaw a good future with her new partner Christian Düren (34), and there were no concerns here.
Brother Hima listens to these explanations and then expresses his skepticism. “In my opinion, these shamans simply have extremely good human understanding and empathy. They can also put themselves in people’s shoes and read people very well,” he says, trying to rationalize his sister’s experiences.
Hima suspects that drugs may also be used by some of the self-proclaimed seers. His sister would go back to her shaman at any time, to whom she paid 200 euros for her services on a voluntary basis.
Source: Stern

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