The Joint-and-Several “Relationship Fishbone” Spread

AUTHOR'S NOTE: The "fishbone" of the title refers to the Ishikawa (aka "fishbone") diagram that is sometimes used in manufacturing problem-solving to pin down the various causes that led to an off-normal condition (typically called "root-cause analysis"). All of the inputs are streamed diagonally into a main stem that, when fully populated, resembles the skeleton … Continue reading The Joint-and-Several “Relationship Fishbone” Spread

The “Fog Cutter” – A Tarot Disambiguation Technique

"Now when the day goes to sleep and the full moon looks/ And the night is so black that the darkness cooks" - from The Green Manalishi by Peter Green AUTHOR'S NOTE: My allusion in the title is to the potent, three-liquor "Tiki" cocktail that, in sufficient volume, will do anything but "cut the fog" … Continue reading The “Fog Cutter” – A Tarot Disambiguation Technique

“Hold Him While I Hit Him” – A Summary-Justice* Spread

*Summary Justice: "A . . . judicial action accomplished swiftly and without observance of certain formalities of legal procedure, with the connotation of arbitrary and unfair judgment." (If you've been unjustly harmed in a lopsided conflict and are seeking the advice of the tarot, you can ignore that last part and [like "Judge" Roy Bean, … Continue reading “Hold Him While I Hit Him” – A Summary-Justice* Spread

“The Carrot and the Stick” – A French Cross Variation

AUTHOR'S NOTE: In this spread I'm using the French Cross (tirage en croix) as the template for a tarot-based exploration of I Ching Hexagram 35 (Jin; Advancement), with its emphasis on loyalty and generosity as the keys to progress. I've tinkered with the position meanings but have left the structure largely intact. Note that all … Continue reading “The Carrot and the Stick” – A French Cross Variation

Just Walk Away: A Mixed-Media Situational Awareness Spread and Example Reading

AUTHOR'S NOTE: This time around I'm bringing three different forms of divination together for a single inquiry: tarot, Lenormand and numerology (as expressed by standard dice). To establish some visual continuity, I'm using the Waite-Smith Centennial Edition with artwork by Pamela Colman Smith and Pixie's Astounding Lenormand by Edmund Zebrowski with artwork inspired by Pamela … Continue reading Just Walk Away: A Mixed-Media Situational Awareness Spread and Example Reading

Reversal As Misapprehension: Blind to the Obvious

AUTHOR'S NOTE: The oracular commentary for Hexagram 20 (Observation) of the I Ching includes the advice "Sometimes it is not the judgement that needs observation, but the judge." I occasionally find that, rather than obliquely illuminating the matter itself, a reversed card in a reading will throw the spotlight back on the querent's mistaken view … Continue reading Reversal As Misapprehension: Blind to the Obvious

The “Go With The Flow” Decision-Making Spread

AUTHOR'S NOTE: In my ongoing I Ching studies I'm reading about enlisting the qi (life-force) of water to effect a reversal of misfortune. In nature, water flows where it will, surrounding and over-topping all obstacles in its relentless advance. It fills "potholes" in the road, which can give the illusion of firmness even though water … Continue reading The “Go With The Flow” Decision-Making Spread

The “Inner Question” Spread: Darkness at the Center

"When the day goes to sleep and the full moon looks/ The night is so black that the darkness cooks" - from The Green Manalishi by Peter Green AUTHOR'S NOTE: In my ongoing study of I Ching divination (a lifetime pursuit similar to astrology and tarot but much more scholarly), I discovered the premise that … Continue reading The “Inner Question” Spread: Darkness at the Center

Inside the Box: Quaternary vs. Quinary Synthesis*

AUTHOR'S NOTE: I've been loosely using the term "quintessence" to describe the numerical conflation of any quantity of tarot cards in a spread, but traditionalists have criticized that assumption as being inconsistent with the historical meaning of the word as the symbolic fifth iteration (or "quinary essence") of a four-card "tirage on croix" (French Cross) … Continue reading Inside the Box: Quaternary vs. Quinary Synthesis*