The “Soft Landing”

AUTHOR'S NOTE: Although it still surfaces occasionally among new students, the outdated opinion that the upside-down orientation of a tarot card automatically overrules and refutes the upright meaning doesn't get much play these days. The implications of reversal are now understood to be far more subtle and nuanced, even beyond the typical assumptions of "blockage" … Continue reading The “Soft Landing”

Sowing Dragon’s Teeth in the Garden of Death

AUTHOR'S NOTE: For post number 1,900 I thought I would tackle something a bit more profound. In her essay on the Death card, Sallie Nichols notes that the severed heads, hands and feet on the ground beneath the skeleton in the Tarot de Marseille version don't appear to have been dismembered and strewn about haphazardly, … Continue reading Sowing Dragon’s Teeth in the Garden of Death

Run, Don’t Walk – A Critique of “Pathworking”

AUTHOR'S NOTE: I was recently criticized in an online forum for having chosen long ago to avoid taking a "deep dive" into the tarot by not using the Major Arcana for "scrying in the astral vision." I decided to respond with this broadside. I think these matters deserve a mentor (I'm not volunteering!) since they … Continue reading Run, Don’t Walk – A Critique of “Pathworking”

The “Compleat” Celtic Cross

AUTHOR'S NOTE: "Compleat" is an archaic English spelling that I'm using here to characterize my advanced approach to the considerably less-archaic Celtic Cross (CC) spread. (My "completely" irrelevant point-of-reference is Izaak Walton's 1653 "fish-tale," The Compleat Angler.) Almost forty years ago I spent some time modifying Eden Gray's version of A.E. Waite's venerable Celtic Cross … Continue reading The “Compleat” Celtic Cross

The “Golden Dawn Swap” – Strength and Justice

AUTHOR'S NOTE: I've written about the relocation of Strength and Justice before, but not in terms that strayed so far from the beaten path as this essay does. I have no clue what (if any) use I will make of this, but it's an intriguing philosophical study. (The framework shown in the graphic could be … Continue reading The “Golden Dawn Swap” – Strength and Justice

“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

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”

Further Thoughts on the “Trump-Card Diamond”

AUTHOR'S NOTE: Following up on my previous comments about inscribing an equilateral diamond (essentially a "tipped square") within the circumference of a circle, I decided to do just that with the double-triangle arrangement of trump cards from my earlier essay. Refer to the photograph below. (I did something similar with the pip and court cards … Continue reading Further Thoughts on the “Trump-Card Diamond”

The Hierophant, the Archetypal “Five” and the Maelstrom

AUTHOR'S NOTE: I credit Edgar Allan Poe with educating me about the maelstrom: it is the "Mother of All Whirlpools" that will relentlessly suck down any seafaring vessel careless enough to wander into its embrace, kind of like an oceanic "black hole." Here I'm drawing unflattering parallels to religious fundamentalism and its purveyors, although that … Continue reading The Hierophant, the Archetypal “Five” and the Maelstrom