AUTHOR'S NOTE: A recent r/occult sub-reddit thread explored whether divination is only superficial fortune-telling or whether it can take on a deeper, sturdier and more intense ritual form. Tarot and the I Ching were the main focal points. When I began pursuing Golden-Dawn-based study and practice in the late '70s after having worked with predictive … Continue reading Divination As Ritual Practice
Divination
The Pros, The Cons and The Reality: An Opportunity and Challenge Spread
AUTHOR'S NOTE: Here is a another "best-case/worst-case" decision-making spread that includes a "reality check" card intended to mediate between the two and serve as the resolution of the matter. The "A" cards represent the "Opportunity" arc in three phases, while the "B"cards show the "Challenge" arc, also in three phases. These cards are to be … Continue reading The Pros, The Cons and The Reality: An Opportunity and Challenge Spread
Real Tarot (Not Just “Coping”)
AUTHOR'S NOTE: I've just begun reading Dean Radin's Real Magic, and I can already see that it aligns with my own view of rational metaphysics that has evolved over the last fifty years of study and practice, both anecdotally in the public arena and experimentally in private. As I’ve often said, I’m inclined to believe … Continue reading Real Tarot (Not Just “Coping”)
Tactfulness: The Professional Diviner’s Best Friend
AUTHOR'S NOTE: A recurring topic of discussion in the online tarot community is whether a public reader who is confronted with a highly negative prediction should just dump it on the seeker with no attempt at moderating the presentation. There are some who would rather walk away in these situations than sugarcoat their statements or … Continue reading Tactfulness: The Professional Diviner’s Best Friend
Say What? “Neutral” Cards in the Tarot?
AUTHOR'S NOTE: That's a rhetorical question because every card carries an elemental "charge," whether by suit or astrological association: Fire and Air are positive; Water and Earth are negative; none are neutral. But for the sake of argument, I'm proposing that some cards are decidedly less emphatic in their normal expression than their peers. The … Continue reading Say What? “Neutral” Cards in the Tarot?
Pages and Knights: Message or Messenger?
AUTHOR'S NOTE: Once again in the tarot literature, I've come across the old assumption that the Pages can represent "messages" for the querent when they appear in a spread. At other times I've seen the Knights described as "messengers" entering the situation. I thought it would be worthwhile to examine the differences between the two … Continue reading Pages and Knights: Message or Messenger?
Going to Plan B: Reversal as “A Hole That Needs Fixing”
AUTHOR'S NOTE: I sometimes think of a card's reversed (or "upside-down") condition as signifying a "hole in the bucket" that is carrying its energy, letting the vitality dribble away. This echoes the standard meaning of "diminishment," but I like to be more impressionistic in my interpretation by using metaphors and analogies. My current thinking on … Continue reading Going to Plan B: Reversal as “A Hole That Needs Fixing”
The Eight of Swords as “Interference”
AUTHOR'S NOTE: Anyone who grew up in the 1950s with a tiny black-and-white CRT (cathode ray tube) television and a "rabbit-ear" antenna knows what video "snow" is: the grainy, flickering gray haze that all but obscured the transmitted images due to poor reception. Although the main culprits were distance from the transmitter and occasional electrical … Continue reading The Eight of Swords as “Interference”
All or Nothing: Suit Distribution* as a Key Factor in Divination
*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
The Ten of Swords: Success by a Thousand Cuts
AUTHOR'S NOTE: The title is a riff on ling chi, the ancient Chinese method of torture and execution that bled the victim to death over an extended period of time using myriad small cuts (technically, the methodical removal of body parts). In English it is variously called "slow slicing," "lingering death," or "death by a … Continue reading The Ten of Swords: Success by a Thousand Cuts