Home
Top AuthorsTop ArticlesArticles WritingSubmit ArticlesRSSFQA 
 
Spirituality
Astrology
Feng shui
Kabbalah
Meditation
Mysticism
New age
Numerology
Reiki
Spirituality

 
 
 

Understanding The Meaning Of Tarot Cards


Publisher: Koz Huseyin
Date: 2008-04-18
Ranking Click at the star to rank
Ranking Level
0
No. ranking 0
 
Sponsored Links

Some people question the legitimacy of the tarot cards. For us to be able to get accurate readings from tarot cards, we will need to understand something. There are 2 ways to understand the meaning of the tarot cards in a reading, and though one is a guide, the other is essential for accurate readings.

When you first begin to read tarot cards, the only way to start understanding the meaning of tarot cards, is by looking at a book, on a website or learning from someone. This is a great way to learn about tarot cards, and begin reading the cards; however it is not the best way.

Yes, you need to learn the meanings. However, these meanings are only a rough guide. Reading tarot cards in the true sense, is to delve into your intuition to find answers. This is not always easy. Some people find they have great skills at finding the answers through intuition, while others simply need the book.

Can you divine without using your intuition? Yes, it is possible; however, you will only find that you have very general meanings. You won't come to understand the true benefits and insights that the tarot cards can provide you.

Developing intuition takes time. By doing tarot for a number of years, you will find that you can get more of a picture of what the cards are saying. When you first start reading tarot cards, and having a book with you, you may be apt to thinking that you need to memorize the meanings. However, I must stress that those meanings in the tarot book are only a guide.

Understanding the meaning of tarot cards is pretty easy. Either memorize or use intuition. Both work, however, to get a better understanding of tarot cards, you will need to utilize your intuition.

Again, we are trying to divine not read tarot cards, but in the beginning, it can be an exercise which is necessary in the beginning. You have to get used to your tarot cards, and more you use them, more personal they become. Over time, you will find that you and your tarot cards share a bond, and can provide you with the answers you need.

You maybe thinking that you may not be able to utilize your intuition in the beginning, and that is ok. As you continue to do tarot, and do tarot readings for others, you will find whether tarot or more importantly divining is a route you want to go down.

It can be trying times, and tarot is more close to the new age, than the television is! When you first embark on the journey through finding your own spirituality, you will find many options. Tarot is usually one of those options. Some of us find that tarot is a great thing in our lives, and we come to understand the meaning of tarot cards, while others may find other ways of divining, and understanding spirituality, and life.


 

Understanding The Meaning Of Tarot Cards Keywords:

Tarot      Tarot Cards      New Age      Buy Tarot Cards      Understanding The Meaning Of Tarot Cards      New age      Spirituality     

 
     
 
 

Related Article:Understanding The Meaning Of Tarot Cards

Collapse All
 

Learn how to Read Tarot Cards: Taking the first 2 Steps to Reading Tarot Cards for yourself. What does Your Future hold?

Alexandra Luna 2007-08-09
Title: Learn how to Read Tarot Cards: Taking the first 2 Steps to Reading Tarot Cards for yourself. What does Your Future hold?

Before you can learn how to read the tarot cards, you must choose a tarot card deck. Some say that they must be given to you, or you must find them: that is not the case (although, if you really believe that to be true, then, of course, it will be true for you). Although it is awesome if someone gives you a deck, or you discover one in your grandmother’s attic, that is not how most modern-day tarot card readers come across their decks. Go look at them, (all of the cards in the deck that you think you like), and feel them. If a merchant will not let you feel them, go somewhere else (you do not have to go to a psychic fair, even popular book stores, like Borders, carry tarot cards nowadays. However, you might not find as large of a selection as if you go to a self-help/spirituality/new age store). Pick the deck that pleases you the most, and go ahead and buy it for yourself.

Once you have yourself a tarot deck, you will want to do things like, cleanse it (not with water, but with the smoke of incense or burning sage), bless it or attach the tarot deck to yourself (infuse it with your energy), and store it in a nice silk scarf, or box. Now, once you have used your own psychic energy (your thoughts, infused with your spirit) to cleanse the vibration of commerce and other people from your new tarot deck, you are ready to do a reading. Well, almost. That is, first, you want to choose a format, or how many tarot cards you are going to throw, in what order, and what you are seeking to learn from the tarot cards when you toss them (You will, of course, shuffle the cards well, or have the querent (person you are reading for) shuffle them, and cut them at least 3 times with your/her left hand first).

An easy reading to get started with is the 7 day tarot card reading. A seven day reading gives the querent what s/he expects: a reading covering what energies will be present in the next seven days. After the cards are shuffled and cut, the reader will deal out seven cards, in a horizontal row. Next, before analyzing the cards, the reader will deal seven more cards, one on top of each of the previous seven cards. Two cards are required for each day because the focus of a psychic reading is always energy. And, energy is always in motion.

The first set of tarot cards reflect the energies for the next day. It is important for the tarot reader to pay attention to the potential interactions of the two cards and hence the two energies. What also must be considered is the energy of the querent. I have found that the querent’s energy is often reflected in the position of the card. For example, if the card is positive, such as the Wheel of Fortune, and it lands upright in the reading, the querent will interact with the positive energy in a positive way, and there is likely a positive result: that is, a great day with some goal realized.

If however, the wheel of fortune comes up reversed, (or similarly, if it covered by another card that is not so positive, such as the ten of swords) then the outlook for that day is not as positive, and the cards are more difficult to read. Perhaps the querent will have a great opportunity but will take an inappropriate stance and will not realize on the potential positive energy. Perhaps the querent will get the benefit of the energy, but will have to overcome some drama or other obstacle before acquiring the goal. One benefit to utilizing circular tarot cards, such the Motherpeace tarot, by Vicki Noble and Karen Vogel, is that the card can land, not only upright, or reversed, but also, it can land a little to the right, a little to the left, or a lot to the right or a lot to the left. A circular card can land in any position and can give you a wider degree of variables.

The next two cards will reflect the energies for the day after the day following the reading, and so forth, until the reader details the querent’s (or her own) next week. The reading will get less precise as time goes on. This is because reading tarot cards and telling fortunes are prophetic arts. And, people change all the time. When a person changes, her or his energy changes. How the person thus interacts with the energies coming into her or his life will hence be different. Over the longer term, a shift in a person’s energy will ultimately affect what energies will come into her or his life, rendering any previous reading even less accurate. The reason that a psychic reading tends to be relatively accurate is because most people do not change themselves very quickly or very often (there are many exceptions to this generalization). Use this information to remind yourself that every day is a new opportunity to change how we interact with world, and hence change the world we live in.


 

A Few Facts On Tarot Psychic Reading

Robert Watson 2008-04-09
Title: A Few Facts On Tarot Psychic Reading
Tarot cards have been used for centuries to foretell how a persons life will turn out or how a certain event will come to pass in the future. Now more than ever, the tarot is being used as a divination tool for psychic readings.

Here are a few facts on the meaning of some of the tarot cards.

- The 2 of Cups: The Tarot can sense when love is near. The 3 of cups means a wedding or happy celebration is at hand. The Ace of cups when it appears with other relationship cards may mean the beginning of a new romantic relationship, or the renewal of an old relationship is on the horizon. The 9 of cups, 4 of wands, and even The Sun in the right place in a spread, point to love. The biggest signal that love is close is the 2 of cups.

- The Lovers Card: This card may indicate a relationship, but all is not rosy. The Lovers card indicates that a decision regarding a relationship needs to be made.

- The Death Card: This card does not indicate that you will die soon, but rather that an old way of life is passing away to make room for a new chapter, a change in the way you look at things, a change in living arrangements, or a relationship of some kind is coming to an end. This is a good thing and you must give up the old so that the new can manifest in your life. Death is always the harbinger of new life.

- The Tower: Indicates an upheaval in your life that has already happened and is over now. You may still be suffering from the incident, but the tower tells you that it is time to begin building a new foundation to rebuild a better life, relationship or whatever you have lost.

- The Knights: Wherever a knight appears there is action, activity, and drama. Not all of the knights of the Tarot tell of the same type of event. If the knight of cups appears in your spread, for the most part, you will be swept off your feet by a romantic, sensitive man or woman. This may be the one. The knight of swords may not mean to but he will bring chaos and pain in your life. The good news is that he will not stay long, but you will be left to straighten things out. The Knight of Wands loves to rescue a damsel in distress. If you are a man and this card comes up in your reading it can mean that you have the same qualities.

This guy is honest and always sees the glass as half full. If a girl gets this card after a question about the fella she is currently with, know that he is not cheating on you. The Knight of Coins (Pentacles) Is a bit of a workaholic but does not ignore his family. He is always concerned about taking care if his duties, especially when he can help and provide for others. He is a planner and a thinker and is not hasty with a decision. A knight in your reading may also mean that you have the same trait in yourself, may be a suggestion to use that part of yourself to overcome an obstacle, or an emotional or travel- related movement that is worth considering. Knights may depict a man or a woman with certain qualities. Robert Watson, noted hypnotist and owner of Developing Psychic Powers has trained dozens of students to develop their powers of intuition and mediumship. Visit his Psychic Academy review page to learn more.


 

Reading Tarot Cards as a form of Alternative Therapy

Chloe Kor 2008-03-24
Title: Reading Tarot Cards as a form of Alternative Therapy
Many individuals view a tarot deck as a set of illustrated cards used for predictions and the individual reading the tarot cards is often thought of as an eccentric person who is dressed in robes and seated behind the fortune-telling booth in a fun fair. Many people have associated reading tarot cards and tarot readers in such a manner and are comfortable in thinking so. Hence, not many have dug deeper into the matter. Many individuals reading the tarot cards misinterpreted the Death Card and associated this tarot card with too many negative meanings. Hence, reading tarot cards and the tarot decks have often been thought of as tools of the evil. While some individuals do make use of the tarot decks for evil purposes, we can't avoid the positive benefits of tarot decks and reading tarot cards. In fact, reading tarot cards can be a good therapy and can be used for good causes. The most solid piece of evidence to prove that the tarot decks may be a good therapy is the fact that tarot decks and reading tarot cards were a game for the Italians in the fifteenth century. The tarot deck served just as an ordinary form of playing cards and was not taken as a tool of divination, until 17th or the 18th century. As time passes, scholars begin to take closer look at the rich symbols illustrated on the tarot deck and began to associate deeper meanings to the tarot decks. Reading tarot cards began to evolve into a form of divination. This radical shift in the nature of the tarot deck changed reading tarot cards into a life-changing therapy. Carl Jung, a prominent psychologist has always considered tarot deck and reading tarot cards as an alternative psychotherapy. By utilizing the rich imagery encapsulated in every tarot card, reading tarot cards enabled the tarot readers to voice out concerns, look into the past and prepare for the future. In certain cases, children who have difficulties in speaking can make use of the rich images depicted in the tarot cards to piece together their thoughts. Seen in this matter, the tarot cards and reading tarot cards is simply a form of beneficial therapy and shouldn't be shunned as a tool of evil. Jung further explained that tarot cards actually represent different archetypes of human personality and situations. For example, the Death Card is not simply a dreaded card which means physical death. Rather, it should be seen as the death or end of something inside us, such as a vice, long standing pain, bad habit or sorrow. It can signify rebirth, and taken in the positive light, it actually means a new life. Hence, reading tarot cars is not a tool of evil. It is just a tool and can help many. It depends on how people perceive the activity of reading tarot cards. After all, the tarot cards is just a piece of tool. It is the human being who gives meanings to it.

Interested in learning how to read tarot cards? Want to know how tarot cards can provide advice to your love life, career or relationships? Visit Chloe Kor at www.tarotnewbie.com”> Tarot Newbie


 

Tips to Reading Tarot Cards

Chloe Kor 2008-03-16
Title: Tips to Reading Tarot Cards
If you think is hard, then please read this article.

The Tarot may be one of the most accessible tools that can be learned by anyone and reading tarot cards need not be as hard as most of the tarot newbies think. There are many advantages to learning the skills of reading tarot cards; one of the most being: extra-sensory sensitivities of individuals who have mastered the art of reading tarot cards will be enhanced.

For newbies who are just starting out on the journey of reading tarot cards, it is highly advisable that some time is taken to really study the cards. Do not be restrained by the reading instructions which often accompany the tarot deck that is purchased. Just follow your own feelings about the tarot cards that you see.

Very often, the difficulties in reading tarot cards are not in the actual tarot cards themselves but when these cards are positioned in a certain manner. Many newbies who are just starting to learn the art of reading tarot cards will often get jitters and lose their confidence. However, practice makes perfect. Just be consistent with the practice of reading tarot cards and very often, fluency will be attained. Try to think of the individual cards like a segment or piece of a story. Each time the cards are mixed, a new version of a story occurs and reading tarot cards is just a matter of relating the story that the cards are trying to tell. With these in mind, think of reading tarot cards as an activity which creates infinite possibilities of stories, futures, wisdom and advice.

Practice is a vital part of becoming a confident and proficient Tarot Reader. Treat the art of reading tarot cards as acquisition of a new language. Plan to do a tarot reading at least once a day. Choose to do the reading in the morning and formulate a question that you are interested in. Shuffle, divide and layout the cards in the Celtic Cross pattern, a very common and popular form of tarot spread. Look over the reading with the notion that the spread represents your path for the next 24 hours. If possible, leave the cards in their original positions. Return to the cards at the end of the day. Review the cards and relate the day's events with the readings that you have obtained earlier in the day. See the connection between the day's events and the readings. Repeat for 90 days. Very soon, you will see how reading tarot cards is a meaningful activity as it encourages you to reflect on your day's activities with reading tarot cards.

Newbies very often find that reading tarot cards may be a difficult task as they are limited by their own experiences, filters and prejudices. Hence, objectivity is pretty crucial in reading tarot cards. Do be diligent in practicing reading tarot cards and try to keep an open mind when reading tarot cards as it will prove more benefits than otherwise. Reading tarot cards is meant to be an activity to tap into our inner talents and capabilities and also can serve as advice to improve ourselves. Only with an open mind can the benefits of reading tarot cards be truly reaped.

Interested in learning how to read tarot cards? Want to know how tarot cards can provide advice to your love life, career or relationships? Visit Chloe Kor at www.tarotnewbie.com”> Tarot Newbie


 

Some Facts About Tarot

John Gibb 2006-08-20
Title: Some Facts About Tarot
The first question one might ask when the word “Tarot” is mentioned, most likely has to do with what is Tarot and how does it work. According to its practitioners, Tarot is a form of divination using a deck of cards, each carrying a symbolic meaning. Tarot is a window through which one can learn to see the future. It is best if one considers Tarot as a mirror that deeply and, for its funs, accurately reflects the feeling, dreams, thoughts and aspirations of a person. For the thousands who have been reading or listening to Tarot cards readings, Tarot resembles a guide that can help someone face the unknown landscape of his or her life. Contrary to many of its opponents, Tarot is not spooky or something supernatural. But where did it come from and why people seem to be drawn by its “magic?”

There are a number of different theories, stories, guesses, and assumptions, regarding Tarot’s origin, the exact sources of Tarot are not completely known. People that have researched on Tarot’s history, find that the earliest available reliable information categorizes Tarot as a card game played in Italy during the fifteen century –the oldest of found Tarot cards belonged to the Visconti family, rulers of Milan. But it is unknown when exactly Tarot earned its reputation as a device used for fortune-telling. Different civilizations over time, like that of Ancient Egypt, used images drawn on cards which were used to predict events through symbolic representation. There are some who claim that Tarot cards traveled to Europe from the Middle East through trading caravans or during the Crusades. But although the exact origin of Tarot cards remains unknown, the fact still is that Tarot makes some people, who do not believe that the future can or should be predicted, feel uncomfortable. Interestingly enough, Tarot has managed to survive over the centuries, although fortune-telling is actually forbidden by some religions and is considered incompatible with some spiritual approaches to life.

For a long time Tarot cards remained privileged to the upper class of society, but after the invention of the printing press the once hand-painting deck of cards became available to the masses. The typical 78-card Tarot deck is structured into two distinct parts: the major arcana and minor arcana. The word “arcana” means the secret or mysterious knowledge. Neither part is more important than the other, just different. The first set, major arcana, also referred to as the Trump cards, consists of 21 cards without suits numbered from 1 through 21, plus a 22nd card “The Fool,” which is sometimes given the value of zero. The second group, minor arcana, consists of 56 cards divided into 4 suits of 14 cards each. Further classified, the 14 cards in each suit consist of an Ace, nine cards numbered 2 through 10 and four court cards; just like the regular deck of 52-cards.

Today Tarot is used by many practitioners in assisting people to examine carefully their past experiences, explain their present actions and figure out how to better pursue their future endeavors. Although Tarot is assigned an illusive and mystical character, many of its proponents argue that everything comes from a person’s willingness to see things clearly and allocate the available resources to the areas needing his or her attention the most. If you are now convinced that you would like to learn more about the Tarot deck and its meanings, a plethora of articles, books, and online sources, exist to assist you in retrieving additional information, which can at least entertain you during a dull evening. John Gibb is the owner of tarot-reading resources For more information on Tarot Reading check out http://www.tarot-reading-guidance.info


 

How Do Tarot Cards Work?

joan candaza 2006-08-05
Title: How Do Tarot Cards Work?
Many people wonder how a deck of cards can tell us anything but as we study the cards we realize that they go way beyond the pictures that we see. As we use the cards we gain a greater understanding of ourselves and the world around us. We can see the cards as a journey that each of us must take and complete to master the lessons we are here to learn on the earth plane. In most cases the tarot is viewed as a tool for divination. With a normal tarot reading we have someone who seeks information and answers, in many cases to personal questions and then a reader who knows how to interpret the cards. A typical reading begins with the person who is seeking answers shuffles the deck and then lays them down on the table and picks out certain cards with them facing down. As these cards are chosen they hand them to the reader who places them down face up on the table in a certain way which is called the spread. The spread can be any one of a number of patterns each of which has a certain name and are used for various types of readings. One of the most popular spreads is the Celtic cross and is used to give a general reading. But to ensure you receive the best results your Tarot card reader will select the best spread for the question you are asking. For example they will change their layout of the cards for love readings, relationship readings, money readings etc. Many people can be very concerned when certain cards arise especially the Death card. But as with so many cards including the Death card the meanings are not what you may think and in the case of the Death card this can mean simply the end of a certain part of our lives and rarely has anything to do with our actually dying. As the Tarot reader lays down the cards they also receive ideas and impressions in their subconscious that helps them answer your question. They are not simply looking at the pictures and giving you the answers otherwise everyone would be reading the cards they are feeling their way and being guided. It is through this combination that they are able to give you the information you seek. We hope this has given you an insight into the Tarot cards and how our gifted readers can gain such insight into your life for you.


 

How Tarot Cards Can Help You...Really!

Glen Wearden 2006-06-19
Title: How Tarot Cards Can Help You...Really!
What Are Tarot Cards? Made up of no less than seventy-eight cards, each deck of Tarot cards are all the same. Tarot cards come in all sizes with all types of artwork on both the front and back – some even make their own Tarot cards. The meaning and the message of each one of those seventy-eight cards, however, always remains the same.

Tarot cards were first used by the Celtic people more than two thousand years ago. Many believe that Tarot cards serve only to tell the future, but this is not true. When used traditionally, Tarot cards speak of the past and present, and are supposed to give clues and ideas about the future that you are potentially heading into.

What’s In the Cards? Tarot cards are made up of four suits – much like any regular deck of cards. In fact, Tarot cards have all the same values as traditional playing cards: ace through king for each suit. Only one extra card is added to the royal family in Tarot cards – the squire, his position is just under that of the knave (also known as the jack).

The suits are as follows: wands, which in general speak of esoteric issues such as spirituality or creativity; swords, which speak of conflicts and tensions; cups (or pentacles), which are always about money; and cups, which deal in relationship matters and love. The other twenty-two cards of the standard Tarot deck are called the Major Arcana cards, and are all very specific. Cards such as the Devil, the Tower, and Death are in the Major Arcana.

How Could a Tarot Card Reading Actually Help Me? When done traditionally, a Tarot card reading can put everything into perspective in a clear and understandable way. Every Tarot card reading is prefaced by a question, one that you do not have to reveal to your Tarot card reader but that you keep to yourself. Each card will come up in the past, present, or future position and will shed some light on the topic of your question.

Whether or not you believe in spiritual or esoteric things, or even in the art of telling the future, a Tarot card reading can help you better understand your own thoughts. You’ll realize potentially dangerous patterns in your life, and get a better understanding of self. Even the question that you ask in your mind can help you understand something about yourself, and in this way a Tarot card reading can truly help you.

Can Anyone Read Tarot Cards, Or Do I Have To Call Someone or Go Online? Anyone can learn how to read Tarot cards. There are many books available, both in online and physical bookstores that will tell you the meaning and message of each and every card. Every card in Tarot has a card-specific meaning, and a message or warning. The good news is, there’s no secret about what these cards mean to convey – so you, too, can learn how to read the Tarot.

Once you know the meaning of the cards (and it’s not something you have to memorize; it’s perfectly okay to keep notes by you when you try to give yourself a Tarot card reading), you can read the Tarot for yourself or for others. Any book you read about the Tarot will explain the spreads to use – the way to lay the cards out to understand their meaning and placement in the scheme of your question.

An Ancient Mystery Tarot cards are more ancient than religion. Tarot cards are older than most languages and most writing, and yet they are still around and are still being used today the exact same way they were used thousands of years ago. If Tarot cards didn’t help people, why would they still be used and still be so popular?

I have been studying Tarot for seven years and have incorporated it in my dailly meditation routine. My purpose for this article is to give others a free resource which can hopefully change their lives for the better.


 

Taking the first 2 Steps to Reading Tarot Cards for yourself. What does Your Future hold?

Alexandra 2007-08-01
Title: Taking the first 2 Steps to Reading Tarot Cards for yourself. What does Your Future hold?
Before you can learn how to read the tarot cards, you must choose a tarot card deck. Some say that they must be given to you, or you must find them: that is not the case (although, if you really believe that to be true, then, of course, it will be true for you). Although it is awesome if someone gives you a deck, or you discover one in your grandmother’s attic, that is not how most modern-day tarot card readers come across their decks. Go look at them, (all of the cards in the deck that you think you like), and feel them. If a merchant will not let you feel them, go somewhere else (you do not have to go to a psychic fair, even popular book stores, like Borders, carry tarot cards nowadays. However, you might not find as large of a selection as if you go to a self-help/spirituality/new age store). Pick the deck that pleases you the most, and go ahead and buy it for yourself.

Once you have yourself a tarot deck, you will want to do things like, cleanse it (not with water, but with the smoke of incense or burning sage), bless it or attach the tarot deck to yourself (infuse it with your energy), and store it in a nice silk scarf, or box. Now, once you have used your own psychic energy (your thoughts, infused with your spirit) to cleanse the vibration of commerce and other people from your new tarot deck, you are ready to do a reading. Well, almost. That is, first, you want to choose a format, or how many tarot cards you are going to throw, in what order, and what you are seeking to learn from the tarot cards when you toss them (You will, of course, shuffle the cards well, or have the querent (person you are reading for) shuffle them, and cut them at least 3 times with your/her left hand first).

An easy reading to get started with is the 7 day tarot card reading. A seven day reading gives the querent what s/he expects: a reading covering what energies will be present in the next seven days. After the cards are shuffled and cut, the reader will deal out seven cards, in a horizontal row. Next, before analyzing the cards, the reader will deal seven more cards, one on top of each of the previous seven cards. Two cards are required for each day because the focus of a psychic reading is always energy. And, energy is always in motion.

The first set of tarot cards reflect the energies for the next day. It is important for the tarot reader to pay attention to the potential interactions of the two cards and hence the two energies. What also must be considered is the energy of the querent. I have found that the querent’s energy is often reflected in the position of the card. For example, if the card is positive, such as the Wheel of Fortune, and it lands upright in the reading, the querent will interact with the positive energy in a positive way, and there is likely a positive result: that is, a great day with some goal realized.

If however, the wheel of fortune comes up reversed, (or similarly, if it covered by another card that is not so positive, such as the ten of swords) then the outlook for that day is not as positive, and the cards are more difficult to read. Perhaps the querent will have a great opportunity but will take an inappropriate stance and will not realize on the potential positive energy. Perhaps the querent will get the benefit of the energy, but will have to overcome some drama or other obstacle before acquiring the goal. One benefit to utilizing circular tarot cards, such the Motherpeace tarot, by Vicki Noble and Karen Vogel, is that the card can land, not only upright, or reversed, but also, it can land a little to the right, a little to the left, or a lot to the right or a lot to the left. A circular card can land in any position and can give you a wider degree of variables.

The next two cards will reflect the energies for the day after the day following the reading, and so forth, until the reader details the querent’s (or her own) next week. The reading will get less precise as time goes on. This is because reading tarot cards and telling fortunes are prophetic arts. And, people change all the time. When a person changes, her or his energy changes. How the person thus interacts with the energies coming into her or his life will hence be different. Over the longer term, a shift in a person’s energy will ultimately affect what energies will come into her or his life, rendering any previous reading even less accurate. The reason that a psychic reading tends to be relatively accurate is because most people do not change themselves very quickly or very often (there are many exceptions to this generalization). Use this information to remind yourself that every day is a new opportunity to change how we interact with world, and hence change the world we live in.

 

Reading Tarot Cards: How to Give A Tarot Reading In 7 Steps

Tenzin Pemo 2008-01-09
Title: Reading Tarot Cards: How to Give A Tarot Reading In 7 Steps

There are many, many ways to read Tarot cards, but it helps to have a consistent method that you use each time. In this way, you can think less about how you are going to read and focus completely on your subject, the cards and their meaning.

A basic reading can be boiled down to seven steps: Rituals, Shuffling, Selecting, Turning, Reading, Discussion and Refining.

1) Rituals: Rituals are an important part of reading the Tarot, but whatever those rituals may be will be uniquely yours. Some people take special care of their deck, wrapping in a beautiful cloth or keeping the cards in a special box. Other sleep with their cards under their pillow, to increase their connectivity with their deck, and many people feel that the must never read their own cards using their deck. Whatever rituals you employ, including the methods you use to lay out and read the cards, keep them consistent.

Before reading, make a silent opening statement such as a prayer or affirmation, or a greeting to your inner guide.

2) Shuffling: Always shuffle face-down, so no one sees the cards, and avoid bending the cards as this is no time for fancy tricks. Beyond that, there are a number of methods of shuffling. You can hold about half the deck in each hand, and insert one half down through the other half.

Another method, designed for maximum hand contact with little damage to the cards, is the one recommended by Norma Cowie in her book called Tarot for Successful Living. Hold the deck face down in your dominant hand. Push some cards from the top with your thumb into the other hand. Then, push again, but this time to the bottom of the new pile. Continue alternating a push to the top, then one to the bottom until all the cards have been transferred.

At this point, put the entire deck back into your dominant hand and start over. This method can be difficult at first, but your technique will improve with practice. Stop shuffling when you feel that it is time to stop, or if a card falls from the deck (and take note of any fallen card, for it has meaning) and then return it or set it aside. If you choose to return the card to the deck and the same card turns up later in the reading, consider that significant.

3) Selecting: Spread the cards in a line or sem-circle, face down, above the area you will use for the layout. Ask your subject to choose a card, then slide it face down to the first position within your chosen layout, keeping it vertical, not horizontal. Add new cards in the same order to complete the layout.

4) Turning: Turn over the first card from side-to-side, so it is not reversed by you. Tell your subject the significance of that card position in the spread, studying the card to get a sense of its meaning, both alone and in that position. Turn the next card only when you are ready to focus on it, repeating until all the cards are turned.

5) Reading: Using your knowledge of the Tarot or, if you are new, a guidebook, comment on your impressions of the meaning of the card. Do not just go by the book definitions of the cards and say whatever comes into your mind. Look at the image on the card and remark on the card themes as they come to mind. Whatever your first impressions are, they're correct. Then analyze the meaning of the card in connection with its position and comment on it. If a card is reversed, explain its meaning (Upright, it means _____) and then comment on its reversal (But when reversed, it indicates ______). Do this with each card, saying what comes to mind. Do not ask for validation from the subject yet, just share any thoughts and interpretations that come to mind.

Try not to second-guess yourself or overthink what you are saying. You are going to learn to tap into your intuition, not your intellect.

6) Discussion: After you have given your interpretation of the cards, ask your subject if anything you have said was particularly meaningful as regards some issue in their life. If yes, reinterpret the cards in more detail, specific to the circumstances that they describe. If your client says no, nothing sounds familiar, ask them questions and re-phrase the themes of the cards and you may well be on the right track, but need to explain the cards in a different way for the client until something rings a bell.

7) Refining: Once your subject gives you some feedback, reinterpret the cards in a way that is specific to the subject situation. Tell a story tying all of the cards together, explaining them in as clear a way as possible. tying all the themes together, and perhaps using a different way of explaining them which might make it even clearer to the client.

Focus on the positive aspects of the cards, and stress that nothing is carved in stone and the subject actions can change the situation later.

If any of the cards indicate a negative event, explain again that the subject is master of their own destiny and if they change their course of action then they can remedy the situation and head off trouble. Remind the subject that the cards only reflect what is in his or her mind, and that they have free will to change the outcome of future events. If you cannot get a good read on a particular card, ask the subject to draw another and use it as a modifier and read it in connection with the original card.

If a card was dropped or set aside during the shuffle, interpret it as a guidance card, offering overall advice on the entire reading as a whole.

Naturally, your style of reading Tarot cards will be unique, and you may have a method that is very different from this one. As long as you are consistent with your rituals and techniques, you will be able to focus entirely on reading the cards without the distraction of wondering what you should be doing next.


 

Meaning of Each Tarot Card: Secrets Revealed

Meg Tallon 2007-12-11
Title: Meaning of Each Tarot Card: Secrets Revealed

In every life there comes a time to move on and to make decisions for change, so we have to ask ourselves where is it that we want to go. These life changes involve major decisions about career, relationships, and finances. Is this new job the one where I'll be able to build a career? Should I marry this person now or wait until I've gotten to know myself better? Is it a good time for me to purchase a new vehicle or will I live to regret it?

In this instance some people might go to psychics, astrologers, or tarot card readers for advice. Many people believe that these people have the power to read our futures and advise us on how we should be proceeding now. This article is an introduction to tarot cards. We will explain the meaning of each card and try to help you understand why a reading could be a valuable tool at this point in your life.

We all have heard of tarot cards, haven't we? But what are these tarot cards and what is the meaning of each card? A tarot deck is comprised of a set of cards beautified with universal images and old symbols which vividly represent the essence of ancient knowledge, teachings, archetypes, etc. The deck includes what are called the Major Arcana and four suits of cards. Each tarot card has a very special meaning that contributes to the overall message of a tarot reading.

Among the different tarot cards, the 'Fool' represents someone unenlightened; the 'Magician' represents someone extremely talented; the 'High Priestess' represents someone who possesses great wisdom and intuitive ability; the 'Empress' rules over the life cycle of birth, death, and rebirth; the 'Emperor' represents someone with great worldwide power; the 'Pope' represents the idea of following beliefs and traditions; the 'Lovers' represents love; the 'Chariot' represents struggle; the 'Strength' card represents just that, strength; the 'Hermit' represents someone soul-searching; the 'Sun' represents personal contentment; and the 'Moon' represents ideas of feminism and seduction.

The 'Pentacles' suit is associated with materialistic things like money and luxury, while the 'Wands' tarot suit is used for work-related predictions. The 'Swords' suit is used for predictions as well, but for mental changes and sufferings. If you're interested in hope, then you'll want to see the 'Star' suit appear. Lastly, the 'Cups' reflect how a person is emotionally, as well as any other emotional changes.

The card of 'Justice' is self explanatory and represents exactly what its name means. The card of 'Death' is more symbolic and signifies a death that is spiritual or mental. Martyrdom is representative of the 'Hanged Man'. The symbol for sudden change is the 'Tower'. 'Temperance' denotes balance and harmony. Self-examination is represented by 'Judgment'. Collectively these cards lead to the card 'World'.

We have finished examining the meaning of each tarot card. The next thing to do is learn how to read tarot cards. This is an ever-evolving quest of mastering the art and skill of tarot card reading. You should be studious, patient, and have a sharp intuition. The reading's depth and value is directly dependent on the level of skill of the read. The best thing to do is seach for a website that offers a free tarot card reading. This will introduce you to the practice of tarot card reading.



 
 

Leave Comment

Author Name*
:
Author Email*
:
Comment*
:
Security Code*
: captcha