A Diviner’s Life: From the Mystical to the Meaningful

"Sold my soul to the callingSold my soul to the sweet melodyNow I'm gone, now I'm gone, now I'm gone"- from Fire by Barnes Courtney AUTHOR'S NOTE: This is another installment in my lifelong divination saga that I've puckishly subtitled "I'm a student of human nature, so of course I'm a cynic." Here I'm waxing … Continue reading A Diviner’s Life: From the Mystical to the Meaningful

A “Life’s Big Questions” Spread

AUTHOR'S NOTE: Here is a tarot spread that should be useful for exploring any profound existential issues confronting a seeker. In it, the analytical shares equal billing with the mystical (which is my customary approach to divination). The five-fold architecture of the layout is more philosophical than pragmatic in a "fortune-telling" sense. It is to … Continue reading A “Life’s Big Questions” Spread

A Potential-Mapping Spread in Three Parts: High Road, Low Road and Middle Way

AUTHOR'S NOTE: This is a spread for the analysis of situations that offer three ways to confront the ethical choices facing the querent: a "High Road" of wisdom; a "Low Road" of folly; and a "Middle Way" of apathy. There are five factors on each path that are subject to optimization or abasement according to … Continue reading A Potential-Mapping Spread in Three Parts: High Road, Low Road and Middle Way

The Diviner’s Role: Oracle or Coach?

AUTHOR'S NOTE: Back in the day when professional tarot reading was almost exclusively a face-to-face affair (unless - like Etteilla, the "father of modern cartomancy" - one occasionally resorted to "snail-mail" communication with clients), the reader served as a personal advisor who delivered first-hand consultation regarding a seeker's presumed future and what might be done … Continue reading The Diviner’s Role: Oracle or Coach?

The Psycho-Spiritual Approach to Tarot Reading

"Deal them down and deal them dirtyLife's a wheezing hurdy-gurdyDeal them up and deal them cleanMan is just a soft machine"-from Dame Fortune by the Holy Modal Rounders AUTHOR'S NOTE: This essay gave me another opportunity to trot out the card-playing trope from the Holy Modal Rounder's song Dame Fortune, which alludes to the fact … Continue reading The Psycho-Spiritual Approach to Tarot Reading

One Oar in the Water: Reversal as “Rowing in Circles”

AUTHOR'S NOTE: In common slang, failing to have "both oars in the water" carries a meaning similar to "not playing with a full deck," but in tarot terms this nautical metaphor could imply rowing in circles, unable to find a direct route to one's destination. Here I'm applying it to the conundrum of reversed cards … Continue reading One Oar in the Water: Reversal as “Rowing in Circles”