AUTHOR'S NOTE: When I buy a new tarot book after casually researching it, I trust that the contents will provide insights to inspire my own writing. Although it has its merits in that regard due to fostering a couple of my recent essays, Lon Milo DuQuette's Tarot Architect didn't quite measure up overall. Knowing DuQuette's … Continue reading Tarot Architect: A Book Review
The 8 of Cups: Indolence or Abandoned Success?
AUTHOR'S NOTE: It has always been my opinion that the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn was on the right track with the 8 of Cups as "Lord of Abandoned Success" (although the ambition being thwarted seems to fall within the purview of Wands, not Cups). The only reason I can see for Aleister Crowley … Continue reading The 8 of Cups: Indolence or Abandoned Success?
The 9 of Wands: Why “Strength?”
AUTHOR'S NOTE: I've written about the 9 of Wands a couple of times before, usually in more detail. But I keep coming back to it because it's one of several Golden-Dawn-named cards that doesn't wear its title well. Aleister Crowley tried to fix most of them in his own way but - at least in … Continue reading The 9 of Wands: Why “Strength?”
“Crimson King” Under the Tarotscope
AUTHOR'S NOTE: I don't know why I never tackled In the Court of the Crimson King before, it's tailor-made for the "tarotscope" treatment of text-and-card correlation because it's chock-full of Medieval imagery. Lyricist Pete Sinfield said in 1971: “Crimson King is about oppressors and manipulators" and the king of the title seems to be the … Continue reading “Crimson King” Under the Tarotscope
“Here An Angel, There an Angel, Everywhere An . . . “
AUTHOR'S NOTE: My mother-in-law, who was a devout Catholic, had a small figurine of an angel with spread wings in her living room. My wife had been reading children’s books to our two-year-old son, who glanced quickly at the angel and said “Look at the duck, quack-quack.” The title of this essay comes from my … Continue reading “Here An Angel, There an Angel, Everywhere An . . . “
Sagittarius: Distant Cousin of the Flame
AUTHOR'S NOTE: Among the Fire signs of the zodiac, the Sagittarius native can be a perennial "dabbler" while the other two are usually accomplished "doers." Aries sports the ruddy flush of Fire on its ample brow (I know a few who fit the description), and Leo wears the sentiment on its sleeve, but Sagittarius keeps … Continue reading Sagittarius: Distant Cousin of the Flame
The “Qabalistic Onion” Situational-Awareness Spread*
AUTHOR'S NOTE: I liken tarot reading to "peeling an onion " because what we see in the cards at a surface level isn't always what is going on in the hidden depths of the situation, and we must "drill down" to find the reality. Here I'm turning that concept inside-out by proposing that the truth … Continue reading The “Qabalistic Onion” Situational-Awareness Spread*
“Hair of the Dog” – Elemental Mixing in the Court Cards
AUTHOR'S NOTE: One of the oddest puzzles facing the esoteric neophyte upon first exposure to the Golden Dawn's "Chaldean" wheel of astrological correspondences for the tarot is "Why on Earth don't the twelve zodiacal court cards line up precisely with the 30-degree span of their designated signs? Why the offset?" For some strange reason, they … Continue reading “Hair of the Dog” – Elemental Mixing in the Court Cards
Logical Mysticism and Pragmatic Action: Quantifying the Unknown
AUTHOR'S NOTE: It's no secret that I prefer logical inquiry to unquestioning acceptance when confronted with the many romantic myths that shroud so much modern tarot practice in sheer fantasy. I've come to believe that there is an empirical explanation for the seemingly unfounded intuitive and psychic impressions attending the act of divination, we just … Continue reading Logical Mysticism and Pragmatic Action: Quantifying the Unknown
Nightfall?
AUTHOR'S NOTE: In light of the increasingly dire situation in the Middle East, I decided to ask my favorite sociopolitical deck, Brian Williams' PoMo (PostModern) Tarot, whether Iran is likely to attempt a nuclear incursion into Israel. I took my inspiration primarily from the images rather than from conventional definitions. PoMo Tarot, copyright of HarperCollins … Continue reading Nightfall?