*The techniques described below can also be applied to the elemental attributes of the Major Arcana by either direct association or astrological correspondence. AUTHOR'S NOTE: I recently commented on an r/tarot sub-reddit post about a spread that was "all Pentacles." This brought up the question of preponderance or absence of an energy (or energies) in … Continue reading All or Nothing: Suit Distribution* as a Key Factor in Divination
Tarot Theory
The Tarot Reader and the “Sword of Truth” – The Perilous Pursuit of Speculative Divination
“It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so.”- Attributed to Mark Twain (with thanks to Dean Radin for the tip) AUTHOR'S NOTE: Those tarot readers who champion freestyle improvisation and dismiss matter-of-fact appraisal of the cards have an implacable "sword of truth" … Continue reading The Tarot Reader and the “Sword of Truth” – The Perilous Pursuit of Speculative Divination
The Tarot Court and the Magician’s Creed
AUTHOR'S NOTE: Here and there in the esoteric literature I've encountered what I'm calling the "Magician's Creed," a set of four postulates that every practitioner of the occult arts should adopt and apply diligently: "To Know, To Dare, To Will and To Keep Silent" (Scire, Audere, Velle, Tacere). This morning I recognized that these stipulations … Continue reading The Tarot Court and the Magician’s Creed
Beyond the Facts: The Role of Speculation in Tarot Reading
AUTHOR'S NOTE: First a disclaimer. I'm no fan of the word "intuition" as universally applied to tarot reading because I think of it as a "one-size-fits-all" mystical answer-generator that encourages over-reliance on subjective bias, as in "If it feels true it must be true." I'm far too cautious (not to mention too skeptical) to swallow … Continue reading Beyond the Facts: The Role of Speculation in Tarot Reading
The Approximate Tarot Reader
AUTHOR'S NOTE: Those tarot readers who use decks with non-scenic or semi-scenic minor cards are already masters of approximation since they aren't being steered by someone else's vision. They had to come up with a personal set of definitions that is not dependent on prosaic scenes, so their divination is often fresher, more extemporaneous and … Continue reading The Approximate Tarot Reader
Over the Hill: The “Post-Crisis Downslope” in a Five-Card Tarot Reading
"So you know, that you're over the hillWhen your mind makes a promise that your body can't fill."- from Old Folk's Boogie by Little Feat AUTHOR'S NOTE: The Little Feat quote was a late pick as I began thinking about a title for this post. The first inspiration was a quip I came across online: … Continue reading Over the Hill: The “Post-Crisis Downslope” in a Five-Card Tarot Reading
The Monkey Mind and the Meat Brain: Putting the Brakes on Mystical Excess in Divination
"I'm a monkey, m-m-monkeyI'm a monkey, m-m-monkeyI'm a monkey, m-m-monkeyMonkey, monkey man"- from Monkey Man by the Rolling Stones AUTHOR'S NOTE: I'm indebted to James Ricklef and Lon Milo DuQuette, in Tarot Reading Explained and Tarot Architect respectively, for bringing these concepts to my attention. (Oh, and to Mick Jagger for obvious reasons.) By way … Continue reading The Monkey Mind and the Meat Brain: Putting the Brakes on Mystical Excess in Divination
Expansion and Contraction in Tarot Reading
AUTHOR'S NOTE This essay has been in the "pending" queue for a while now and I've moved on from where I was when I wrote it to explore other topics, but I think it's still worth posting. It seems that I can't push even one page further into my renewed study of James Ricklef's Tarot … Continue reading Expansion and Contraction in Tarot Reading
“Stepping Back from the Brink” – Wisely Confronting Adversity
AUTHOR'S NOTE: It's not uncommon during our life's journey to encounter major pitfalls that can only be described as steeply plunging cliffs barring the way ahead. Assuming the risks have been identified far enough in advance to allow for timely deliberation, we may have a number of choices for dealing with them. My focus here … Continue reading “Stepping Back from the Brink” – Wisely Confronting Adversity
Reversal as “Underdeveloped Potential”
AUTHOR'S NOTE: Over the years I've formulated and applied my own style of reversed-card interpretation, and I finally concluded that inversion of the image doesn't materially alter the core meaning of the upright presentation, just redirects it in various subtle ways as detailed in my nearly two dozen previous essays on the subject. The required … Continue reading Reversal as “Underdeveloped Potential”