AUTHOR'S NOTE: In a recent reddit conversation about reversed cards, the OP asked "Can it be said that the aim is to do something that will turn the card upright again? But how does this work for cards such as the Devil rx or the Seven of Cups rx? I'd assume having them rx is … Continue reading Redeeming Reversed Cards Through Coping
Tarot Techniques
The Stop, the Plop and the Flop: Reducing “Slop” in Tarot Reading
AUTHOR'S NOTE: I'm indebted to Ethan Indigo Smith (in The Tao of Thoth) for the inspiration behind the quirky title (along with the "jammed radar" scene from Mel Brook's Spaceballs: "I've lost the bleep, the creep and the fleep"). As a martial artist in the Tai Chi discipline, Smith was talking about being unbalanced and … Continue reading The Stop, the Plop and the Flop: Reducing “Slop” in Tarot Reading
Filtering Illusion: Countering Misinformation in Tarot Reading
AUTHOR'S NOTE: It's no secret that I don't condone purely intuitive tarot reading, particularly when it is performed remotely in the form of psychic guesswork using the cards as "props." Here I'm exploring the premise of Eastern mysticism that "emotions are the stuff of illusion." My main problem is that intuition can deviate without apparent … Continue reading Filtering Illusion: Countering Misinformation in Tarot Reading
The “Power Grab” Spread: A Personal Power Profile
AUTHOR'S NOTE: As inquisitive beings we are always looking for insights that will aid us in understanding our inherent strengths and weaknesses. Although I don't use the "Tree of Life" spread often, here is a version that employs tarot cards to create a "power profile" showing the relative potency of eleven different aspects of our … Continue reading The “Power Grab” Spread: A Personal Power Profile
The “Side-Eye” – Looking Askance at Card Meanings
AUTHOR'S NOTE: In one of my online tarot conversations I've once again fielded the perennial question about the need to use reversals in divination. My response was: "Many people insist that - depending on the context of the reading - they can squeeze contradictory intent out of the upright meaning of any favorable tarot card … Continue reading The “Side-Eye” – Looking Askance at Card Meanings
“Who Shall I Be Today?” – A Tweaked Daily-Draw Spread
AUTHOR'S NOTE: During my ongoing study of the Taoist Bagua I encountered the idea that, in the three lines of a trigram, the top line represents Heaven, the bottom line signifies Earth and the middle line shows the individual poised between the two. I've been thinking about ways to relate this model to the three-card … Continue reading “Who Shall I Be Today?” – A Tweaked Daily-Draw Spread
The “Response-Spectrum Tableau” – A Tarot, Lenormand and Dice Decision-Making Spread
AUTHOR'S NOTE: Here is a mixed-media spread that combines tarot cards with Lenormand cards and dice to come up with a tableau that offers a range of inputs for making an important decision. Begin by shuffling a Lenormand deck while concentrating on the topic of interest, then deal five cards face-down from left-to-right in the … Continue reading The “Response-Spectrum Tableau” – A Tarot, Lenormand and Dice Decision-Making Spread
The 3 of Swords as “Patience”
AUTHOR'S NOTE: This is one I didn't see coming, and I wasn't quite sure where to go with it. But I think I got there in reasonable fashion. I was reading about the Taiji concept of "patience" recently and unearthed an interesting fact: the two pictographs (aka "radicals") that make up the Chinese logogram naixin, … Continue reading The 3 of Swords as “Patience”
The Great Escape: A Conflict-Resolution Spread
AUTHOR'S NOTE: I was just reading about the historical view that many ancient philosophers and mystics envisioned a primordial "Cosmic Egg" that coalesced out of formless chaos, from which all life emerged as the culmination of an embryonic seed-state. I decided to explore this concept as the basis for a new conflict-resolution spread that uses … Continue reading The Great Escape: A Conflict-Resolution Spread
“Untying All Tangles” – A Syncretic Insight
AUTHOR'S NOTE: I love the following definition of the Tao presented in Benebell Wen's I Ching, The Oracle: A Practical Guide to the Book of Changes: " . . . the Tao is described as 'the origin of all things . . . It unties all tangles, it harmonizes all lights, it unites the world … Continue reading “Untying All Tangles” – A Syncretic Insight