Chasing Fate: Pulling the Thread on Trends

AUTHOR'S NOTE: It's a well-worn cliche that nothing presented in a tarot reading is carved in stone; any outcome is subject to adjustment by timely action (and, it must be said, negligent inaction) of the seeker. However, there are cards that lean toward a fortunate outcome no matter how ill-favored they are by surrounding cards, … Continue reading Chasing Fate: Pulling the Thread on Trends

The Malleable Clay of Probability

AUTHOR'S NOTE: Here is another 3:00 AM meditation that is trying to turn itself into a full-blown essay. Divination with the tarot cards is an unlikely craft that presumes to mold a reasonable approximation of upcoming circumstances from the malleable clay of probability with nothing more than the symbolic images on the cards and a … Continue reading The Malleable Clay of Probability

“Destruction of Illusion” – A Crowleyan Exercise

AUTHOR'S NOTE: This one has been in the queue for a while, but my recent essay on the Wheel of Fortune was a perfect lead-in to finally publishing it. The following quote from Aleister Crowley got me thinking about an intriguing way to harmonize the interaction of any two cards in a tarot deck. I'm … Continue reading “Destruction of Illusion” – A Crowleyan Exercise

Detachment, the Master Key to Objectivity

AUTHOR'S NOTE: I've yet to meet a tarot beginner who hasn't agonized over whether an emotionally unsteady state of mind will improperly bias the outcome when reading for themselves.* This can certainly happen (for example, in stressful romantic situations), but it doesn't have to. For the record, divination with the cards is an emotive storytelling … Continue reading Detachment, the Master Key to Objectivity

Circular Thinking and the “Simultaneity of All Opposites”

AUTHOR'S NOTE: The Wheel of Fortune is a card that is passed over lightly by many tarot writers, and by most readers who think they know exactly what it means: some kind of change that can go either way, favorable or unfavorable. The reading then moves on to the next card in the spread to … Continue reading Circular Thinking and the “Simultaneity of All Opposites”

“The Kid-Glove Treatment:” A Soft Approach to Reversals

AUTHOR'S NOTE: This meditation on reversed cards joins more than a dozen other unconventional approaches I've already examined in past essays, while revisiting some of my earlier observations. (See my two "compendiums" [compendia?] of earlier posts on the subject elsewhere in this blog.) "Kid gloves" were made from the exceptionally supple hides of baby goats … Continue reading “The Kid-Glove Treatment:” A Soft Approach to Reversals

The “Do/Don’t Do” Problem-Solving Spread (with “Bottom Line”)

AUTHOR'S NOTE: Tarot spreads frequently include positions for "Do This" and "Don't Do That." Here is a problem-solving spread that expands on that premise by offering two paths, one involving active disposition of situational factors in five areas and the other suggesting either inaction or a more passive stance in those aspects of the matter. … Continue reading The “Do/Don’t Do” Problem-Solving Spread (with “Bottom Line”)