
Here's how it works. You "politely shake" the container to jostle the sticks inside, and then let one stick come through the hole. Each stick has a number, and you match it to a drawer. (This is much simpler to do if you know Japanese, because the numbers are in Japanese characters.) Inside the drawer is your fortune.
They are not fooling around here. I got a terrible fortune! Not "life is full of challenges" or any of the vaguely bad news you might imagine. Request not granted, won't get better, bad for marriage, trips, job--a total sad sack life, not one ray of hope here.
Not on my birthday, you don't. I opened another box at random and pulled out a second fortune. Mostly for comparison--I couldn't believe how harsh #70 Bad fortune was--but also because I believe you can choose to change your life, so why not your fortune?
I like this one a lot better, happier like a ship sails before the wind.
I also find the parallels interesting. Do they all talk about getting well and tearing down houses? And waiting for people?
I also see it as significant that the good fortune is more nuanced. Still won't find the lost or heal the sick, still waiting for that person.
Now I want to go back and get a few more, just to see what variety there is. But that might be pushing it. Rules are rules.