AUTHOR'S NOTE: This spread needs little explanation. It is intended to examine the key qualities of aspirants to public office. (I'm leaving age and infirmity off the table.) It is best to use a different deck for each contender so all cards are available to both (or all) of them. In the US political system … Continue reading A “Warring Factions” Political-Profile Spread
Cultural & Social Commentary
Lord of the Rings Tarot (2022 Version): A Deck Profile
AUTHOR'S NOTE: As a lifelong fan of Tolkien's Lord of the Rings trilogy and an equally enthusiastic devotee of tarot divination, I'm always interested in new tarot decks based on the LotR universe. Although there have been playing-card packs and card games in that genre, as far as I know - until recently - we … Continue reading Lord of the Rings Tarot (2022 Version): A Deck Profile
“Feigning Clarity”
AUTHOR'S NOTE: One again, I'm indebted to Benebell Wen's I Ching the Oracle: A Practical Guide to the Book of Changes for giving me a pithy phrase than can be applied to tarot reading. I've covered this ground before so my skeptical attitude is well-known, but I've acquired some fresh inspiration. In her analysis of … Continue reading “Feigning Clarity”
“Weaponizing” the Tarot
AUTHOR'S NOTE: Every day on local highways I encounter risk-taking "alpha" types (usually adult males) who have clearly "weaponized" their automobiles. They drive aggressively at high speed, weaving in and out of bumper-to-bumper traffic and squeezing into tight spots at 80 miles an hour; they're always quick to lean on the horn and brandish the … Continue reading “Weaponizing” the Tarot
“A Spiritual Death”
AUTHOR'S NOTE: One of the most difficult challenges in professional tarot reading is grappling with the presence of the Death card in a spread when an anxious client is waiting expectantly for a constructive explanation. There is an inevitable fixation on its gloomy portent and our own mortality even when nothing of the sort is … Continue reading “A Spiritual Death”
“Auspicious to Proceed”
AUTHOR'S NOTE: The predictive text supporting the 64 hexagrams of the I Ching is full of brief advice that occurs with regular frequency. Two of these insights are "Auspicious to proceed" and its counterpart "Ominous to proceed." There is nothing quite that formulaic in tarot divination, whose practitioners often pride themselves on avoiding such prescriptive … Continue reading “Auspicious to Proceed”
Randomizing and Shuffling: “Generating White Noise” and “Creating Order Out of Chaos”
AUTHOR'S NOTE: In previous posts I've mentioned in passing that the purpose of the shuffle is not to randomize the cards but rather to subconsciously arrange them in the proper order to tell the story. Judging from the responses I received (or more tellingly, didn't receive) nobody really "got" what I was trying to say. … Continue reading Randomizing and Shuffling: “Generating White Noise” and “Creating Order Out of Chaos”
Too Much “Woo” and Not Enough to “Shew” for It
AUTHOR'S NOTE: Another rant, just when you thought it was safe to come out. This has been in the queue for a while and I debated whether to post it because it could burn another bridge or two between me and those who might have had an interest in following my work. But that work … Continue reading Too Much “Woo” and Not Enough to “Shew” for It
Tarot and Physical Appearance: “The Packaging vs. the Content”
AUTHOR'S NOTE: One of the least useful questions I've encountered in online discussion groups, after the ubiquitous "What does this person think or feel about me?" is "What will my future lover look like?" Probably because most of its later development occurred in Western Europe, traditional (that is, non-inclusive) tarot is notoriously poor at identifying … Continue reading Tarot and Physical Appearance: “The Packaging vs. the Content”
“Third Time’s the (C)harm”
AUTHOR'S NOTE: We all recognize the proverb "The third time's the charm" when we've failed twice at something and are trying again with finger's crossed. (Elizabeth Barrett Browning wrote "The luck of the third adventure is proverbial.") But when it comes to divination, asking the same question over-and-over again and expecting a more agreeable answer … Continue reading “Third Time’s the (C)harm”