AUTHOR'S NOTE: There is endless debate in the online tarot community over whether studying tarot literature is of any value when reading the cards from an entirely intuitive or psychic perspective, or whether it merely impedes fluency. It has come up again on one of the Facebook pages I frequent and, although I've covered it … Continue reading Book, No Book . . . or Pure “Glorp”
Cultural & Social Commentary
Look But Don’t Touch!
AUTHOR'S NOTE: As an old-school tarot reader who expects face-to-face clients to shuffle and cut the deck, I find it amusing that so much fretful angst exists in the online tarot community over the prospect of someone other than ourselves laying hands on our precious cards. The source of this aversion seems to lie in … Continue reading Look But Don’t Touch!
The Solitary Diviner and the Unholy Alliance
AUTHOR'S NOTE: Many years ago, Wiccan author Scott Cunningham wrote at least one book of guidance and advice for the "solitary witch," the isolated practitioner with no coven to call home. My experience over the last fourteen years as a professional tarot reader seeking sophisticated fellowship echoes that unhappy sense of seclusion, The regional communities … Continue reading The Solitary Diviner and the Unholy Alliance
“Neat Borders:” A Further Case for Tarot Spreads
AUTHOR'S NOTE: I was just reading a fascinating post in which a miscellany of famous authors expounded on why they (often vociferously) disliked a variety of important books by other esteemed writers (some of them very popular). I came across this gem from Charlotte Bronte, who was eviscerating Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen: it … Continue reading “Neat Borders:” A Further Case for Tarot Spreads
The Fate of the Nation (According to Tarot)
AUTHOR'S NOTE: Now that the dust from the US election has settled and, as the bingo callers shout, "We have a winner!" (although many will think "a wiener"), I decided to do a year-ahead "fate of the nation" reading with my personal twist on the Celtic Cross spread. (I'm also test-driving the new spread cloth … Continue reading The Fate of the Nation (According to Tarot)
Dabblers in the Future
AUTHOR'S NOTE: I was reading an essay about Medieval historians and came across the 12th-Century Italian theologian and monastic abbot Joachim of Flora (or Fiore) who was described not as a historian but rather as a "dabbler in the future," mainly for his theory about a coming new age based on clear (at least to … Continue reading Dabblers in the Future
Crunch Time for Source Material
AUTHOR'S NOTE: Any writer who attempts to post a blog essay every day (which I've now done for 290 consecutive days) has to walk a fine line between imparting useful knowledge and entertaining readers enough to keep them coming back. It's more important for those who are trying to earn money from their online publishing … Continue reading Crunch Time for Source Material
Therapeutic Tarot: Counseling or Healing?
AUTHOR'S NOTE: I recently came across a debate in the online tarot community that argued whether a tarot reading should be used as a form of therapy that, instead of seeking an answer to a specific question, can "work through and heal the anxiety underlying why the question is being asked in the first place." … Continue reading Therapeutic Tarot: Counseling or Healing?
“Prohibited, Occulted and Scorned” – Individuation vs Institutionalization
"The occulting of ideas, especially those that empower individuation and spirituality as opposed to ideas which offer institutionalization and religiosity, has been taking place since . . . around the first century."- From The Tao of Thoth by Ethan Indigo Smith AUTHOR'S NOTE: I try to get in half-an-hour of metaphysical reading every morning while … Continue reading “Prohibited, Occulted and Scorned” – Individuation vs Institutionalization
Barbarians at the Gate: The Rejection of Traditional Tarot Wisdom
AUTHOR'S NOTE: I'm currently re-rereading The Discarded Image, a fascinating treatise on Medieval society in Great Britain and elsewhere by C.S. Lewis. He talks a good deal about that culture having been strongly influenced by barbarian incursions, in particular mentioning that the vestigial English language owed far more (but in a hidden and now forgotten … Continue reading Barbarians at the Gate: The Rejection of Traditional Tarot Wisdom