Free tarot reading

The Major Arcana

Filed under: Uncategorized

The ancient history of Tarot is somewhat controversial, possibly being linked back to ancient Egypt or Israel. However, modern Tarot Cards appear to have originated in Renaissance Italy, and later popularized in France. Tarot was originally played as a multi player card game.  Jules uses Tarot cards as a tool, as a carpenter uses a hammer. The cards in themselves do not provide the answers, but rather channel the reader’s psychic impressions into a tangible medium. The cards have special symbolic meanings, and may be interpreted in different ways depending on the style of the reading. Jules is expert with Tarot Cards and reads several different ways, including Celtic Spread, Reversals, Wheel of Fortune and Zodiac, depending on the seeker’s situation.

The Major Arcana

The Major Arcana cards represent significant issues and trends. They are generally the more important cards in a reading.

The Fool
The Magician
The High Priestess
The Empress
The Emperor
The Hierophant

The Lovers
The Chariot
Strength
The Hermit
Wheel Of Fortune

Justice
The Hanged Man
Death
Temperance
The Tower

The Star
The Moon
The Sun
Judgement
The World

Tarot Card Meanings - The Fool


 

 

Upright

Freedom, joy, happiness, youth, new experiences, exhuberance, adventure. Friendship, love and sex. The pleasure and excitement of discovery.

Reversed

Foolishness, lust, selfishness, ignorance, irresponsibility, pleasure seeker, focused on sex.

Tarot Card Meanings - The Magician

Upright

New beginnings, optimism, understanding, personal growth, meditation, desire, leadership, awareness, originality, creativity. To control body with mind, balance desires with needs.

Reversed

Stagnation, boredom, imbalance. Lacking self-confidence. Narrow minded. Incompetent. Driven by physical desires and ego.
Tarot Card Meanings - The High Priestess


Upright

Secrets, mystery, the unrevealed future; the woman who interests the Seeker, if male; the Seeker herself, if female; silence, tenacity; mystery, wisdom, science.

Reversed

Passion, lust, conceit, shallowness, closed minded, selfishness, duality, fear, illusion.
Tarot Card Meanings - The Empress


 

 

Upright

Fruitfulness, action, initiative, mystery, clandestine; difficulty, doubt, ignorance.

Reversed

Light, truth, the unravelling of involved matters, sometimes vacillation.

Tarot Card Meanings - The Emperor

 

Upright

Stability, power, protection, realization, a great person, aid, reason, conviction, authority and will.

Reversed

Benevolence, compassion, credit; confusion to enemies, obstruction, immaturity.

Tarot Card Meanings - The Hierophant

 

 

Upright

Marriage, alliance, captivity, servitude, mercy and goodness, inspiration. Intuition, psychic ability. Longing for approval. Resenting authority of others.

Reversed

Dissapation, lacks faith, overly kind, weakness, indulgence. Craves sexual gratification. Unused creativity.

Tarot Card Meanings - The Lovers

 

 

Upright

Decision making, making choices, higher purpose, responsibility, marriage, honesty, faith, attraction.

Reversed

Indecision, frustration, dishonesty, irresponsibility, infidelity, sex drive, hedonism.
Tarot Card Meanings - The Chariot


 

 

Upright

Success, self control, security, focused activity, confidence, knowledge, self direction.

Reversed

Materialism, overconfidence, prejudice, superstition, instability, lack of direction, lacking knowledge.

Tarot Card Meanings - Strength

Upright

Energy, courage, self control, learning, fortitude, power, strong attractions and repulsions.

Reversed

Cowardice, egotism, listlessness, ruthlessness, faithlessness, deceit, conceit, gambling.
Tarot Card Meanings - The Hermit


 

 

Upright

Guidance, knowledge, study, wisdom, experience, insight, spirituality, aloneness.

Reversed

Immaturity, inexperience, prejudice, unreasonable, uninspired, unenlightened, unhealthy, dogmatic.

Tarot Card Meanings - Wheel Of Fortune

 

 

Upright

Success, change, travel, activity, good timing, evolution, happiness, progress.

Reversed

Stagnation, fear of change, unhappiness, misunderstanding, gambling, guilt, failures.

Tarot Card Meanings - Justice

Upright

Balance, law, harmony, karma, fairness, moderation, equality.

Reversed

Imbalance, disharmony, criminality, dishonesty, indecision, paranoia, rebellion.
Tarot Card Meanings - The Hanged Man


Upright

Duty, trials, faith, contemplation, intuition, surrender, discipline, suspension. Spiritual study. Bondage.

Reversed

Procrastination, irresponsibility, lack of faith, gullibility, escape through liquor or drugs, selfishness.

Tarot Card Meanings - Death

 

 

Upright

Transformation. Renewal, endings, destruction and rebirth, action, immortality, new ideas, physical change, regeneration.

Reversed

Decay, inaction, frustration, ignorance, mortality, sexuality, materialism, resentment.

Tarot Card Meanings - Temperance

Upright

Economy, moderation, frugality, management, accommodation.

Reversed

Things connected with churches, religions, sects, priesthood, sometimes the priest who will marry the Seekers; disunion, unfortunate combinations, competing interests.
Tarot Card Meanings - The Tower


 

 

Upright

Misery, distress, indigence, adversity, calamity, disgrace, deception, ruin. A card of unforeseen catastrophe.

Reversed

To a lesser degree, all of the above. Oppression, imprisonment, tyranny..

Tarot Card Meanings - The Star

 

 

Upright

Different interpretations: Loss, theft, privation, abandonment; sometimes hope and bright prospects.

Reversed

Arrogance, haughtiness, impotence.

Tarot Card Meanings - The Moon

 

 

Upright

Hidden enemies, danger, darkness, terror, deception, occult forces, mistakes.

Reversed

Instability, inconsistency, silence. Terror and deception to a lesser degree than when upright.

Tarot Card Meanings - The Sun

 

Tarot Card Meanings - The Sun

 

Upright

Material wealth, happiness, fortunate marriage, contentment.

Reversed

The same as upright, but to a lesser degree.

Tarot Card Meanings - Judgement

 

 

Upright

Change of position, renewal, outcome. One interpretation indicates total loss from a lawsuit.

Reversed

Weakness, simplicity, deliberation, decision, sentence.

Tarot Card Meanings - The World

 

 

Upright

Assured success, compensation, voyages, emigration, flight, new places.

Reversed

Inertia, immobility, stagnation, permanence.

Most popular tarot decks

Filed under: Uncategorized

Adrian Tarot
African Tarot
Tarot of the Ages
Albano-Waite Tarot
Ancestral Path Tarot
Ancient Tarots of Bologna
Ancient Tarots of Lombardy
Angel Oracle
Angel Tarot
Aquarian Tarot Deck
Art Nouveau Tarot
Barbara Walker Tarot Deck
Tarot of Baseball
Blank Tarot Cards
Bosch Tarots
Cagliostro Tarot Deck
Cary-Yale Visconti Tarocchi Deck
Tarot of the Cat People
Celtic Tarot
Celtic Dragon Tarot
Tarot of Ceremonial Magick
Chinese Tarot Deck
Tarot Classic
Connolly Tarot Deck
Cosmic Tarot
Aleister Crowley Thoth Tarot Deck
Crow’s Magick Tarot
Crystal Tarots
Dragon Tarot
Egipcios Kier Tarot Deck
Egyptian Tarot Deck
Egyptian Tarots
Elemental Tarot
Enchanted Tarot
Enochian Tarot
Fairy Tarots
Fairy Wicca Tarot
Fantastical Tarot
Flower Speaks Deck
The Fortune Teller’s
Tarot of Gemstones and Crystals
Gendron Tarot
Gill Tarot Deck
Glow in the Dark Tarot
Goddess Tarot Deck
Golden Dawn Tarot Deck
Golden Rider Tarot Deck
Gypsy Fortune Telling Tarot Kit
Gypsy Witch Fortune Telling Playing Cards
Haindl RUNE Oracle Deck
Haindl Tarot Deck
Halloween Tarot
Hanson-Roberts Tarot Deck
Herbal Tarot
Hermetic Tarot
Hudes Tarot
Ibis Tarot
I Ching (by Holitzka)
I Ching Cards
Kalevala Tarot
Karma Tarot
Legend: The Arthurian Tarot
Londa Tarot
Lord of the Rings Tarot Deck & Card Game
Mana Cards: The Power of Hawaiian Wisdom
Tarot of Marseilles
Masquerade Tarot
Master Tarot
Medicine Woman Tarot
Medieval Scapini Tarot
Tarot of a Moon Garden
Morgan-Greer Tarot
Motherpeace Round Tarot
Mythic Tarot
Napo Tarot
Native American Tarot Deck
Navigators Tarot of the Mystic Sea
New Orleans Voodoo Tarot
New Palladini Tarot
Tarot of Northern Shadows
Old English Tarot
Tarot of the Old Path
Original Rider Waite Tarot
Tarot of the Orishas
Osho Zen Tarot
Oswald Wirth Tarot Deck
Phantasmagoric Theater Tarot
Power of Flowers
Psycards Deck
Quick and Easy Tarot
Renaissance Tarot Deck
Tarots of the Renaissance
Rider-Waite Tarot Deck
Robin Wood Tarot
Rock Art Tarot
Rohrig Tarot
Russian Tarot of St Petersburg
Sacred Rose Tarot Deck
Santa Fe Tarot Deck
Shaman Wisdom Cards
Sola Busca Illuminating Ancient Tarots
Tarot of the Southwestern Sacred Tribes
Spanish-English Tarot Deck
Spiral Tarot
Tarot of the Spirit
Starter Tarot Deck
Stick Figure Tarot
JJ Swiss Tarot Cards
Tapestry Tarot
Terrestrial Tarot
Tarot of the Trance
Ukiyoe Tarot
Unicorn Tarot
Universal Waite Tarot
Visconti Tarots
Visconti-Sforza Pierpont Morgan Tarocchi
Vision Quest Tarot
Voyager Tarot
Wheel of Change Tarot
Winged Spirit Tarot
Tarot of the Witches
Witches Tarot
Wolf Song Cards
Wonderland Tarot Deck
Zerner-Farber Tarot Deck
Zolar’s Astrological Tarot Deck

THE MEANING OF THE SPREADS

Filed under: Uncategorized

The 1 Card Spread

 

This is the easiest means of divining an answer, because there is only one card to look at. All you have to do is pick the card while thinking of your question, then intuitively pick one of the cards.

 


The 3 Card Spread

 

This is also an easy layout, you only use 3 cards. Then while thinking of your question choose the 3 cards.

To get a better understanding of what your Tarot card reading is telling you, read all the positions and let your intuition tell you what you need to know.


Position 1 relates to the Past.
Position 2 relates to the Near Future.
Position 3 relates to the Outcome.


 

 

 

 

The 10 Card Spread
(Positions and Subjects)

 

OVERVIEW
This card is a short summary of your reading and general events coming up in your future. The other categories narrow down to specific areas in your life.

WISHES
The wish card position highlights what you want, or what you will want later.

ROMANCE
The romance card position depicts yearnings of the heart and mind in the area of love and romance.

RELATIONSHIPS
The relationship card position concerns the influence of your family on you, what will happen with relatives or friends.

MONEY
This card position covers your business, career, or the financial area in which you are dealing in most frequently, be it at home or if you’re looking for work.

SUCCESS
The success card position does not only refer to worldly matters, it covers successful accomplishments. It may also reveal from what direction your success will come from.

BLESSINGS
The blessings card position reveals, what you’ll be thankful for in the future.

SURPRISES
This card position covers anything that comes as a surprise (be it good or bad).

PROBLEMS
This is a guidance card it will tell you what you need to know about the unknown stumbling blocks in your way, and the best way to attain your desire.

OUTCOME
This is a combined summary of all the cards in the reading.

WHAT ARE TAROT CARDS?

Filed under: Uncategorized

In the psychic world Tarot cards are used to represent symbolically, what we all go through on our life’s journey. The mediums used are varied for predicting the future, they can be done with tarot cards, psychic visions, regular playing cards, astrology charts, dreams, palmistry, channeling, biorythm, runes, trances or many other types of symbolic vehicles. To keep it simple we are using The Rider-Waite Tarot cards to access the psychic dimensions.
Tarot decks are similar but spreads can differ and all interpretations vary.

 


The Rider-Waite deck has graphic symbols that illustrates experiences we’ve all had or could have sometime in our lives.

Each deck contains four suits: Wands, Cups, Swords, and Pentacles.

 

 

The Major Arcana describes the more important events in our lives while the Minor and Court Arcana describes the everyday aspects.

 

 

Think of them as stories told in picture form. I have used the Rider-Waite deck to show the meanings, but there are many other decks which are all equally valid.

Divination

Filed under: General

Divination, or fortune-telling, is by far the most popular and well-known use of the Tarot in the English-speaking world. This is sometimes seen as an extension of the psychological use mentioned above. Alternatively, it is sometimes seen as a less sophisticated use of tarot. It can be argued that we sometimes perceive the signs of future events subconsciously only. For instance, you might be subconsciously aware that a relationship or job is in trouble, before you admit it to yourself. In that sense, it might be said that the Tarot can give you insights into the future without having any supernatural or occult aspect at all. Meaning may emerge even from purely random patterns, as chance selections force you to consider concepts that you’d normally ignore, and the density of meaning is great enough that meanings can emerge from almost any selection of cards.

That point of view may be unusual among those who use Tarot for divination. Tarot card readers sometimes believe that Tarot cards allow them to exercise an innate psychic ability to see the future. Still others routinely follow the divinatory meanings assigned to each card by popular books and other authorities. Further, some individuals believe that the cards take on the “aura” or “vibrations” of someone who touches them. The cards are therefore sometimes “insulated” by wrapping them in silk or enclosing them in a box, and only touched by the reader and by the person for whom the reading is done (the “querent”).

There are many variations, but in many readings the querent shuffles the cards, then the reader lays out the cards in a pattern called a “layout” or “spread”. A well-known spread is the Celtic Cross. The cards are then analysed according to their positions, their individual divinatory meanings, their relationships, and whether the cards are upside-down (”reversed”). If the reader uses the interpretation technique of reversals, a reversed card has its own set of modified meanings and/or modified energies; a reversed card’s meaning may sometimes be the opposite of the upright card meaning, sometimes weakened, sometimes twisted.

Divination may be seen as magical in itself, but the word “magic” often refers to the use of Tarot cards in a magical ritual designed to achieve some end. This is probably much less common than simple divination.

Tarot, Storytelling and Art

Filed under: General

The Tarot has inspired writers as well as visual artists. Italo Calvino described the Tarot as a “machine for telling stories”, writing the novel The Castle of Crossed Destinies with plots and characters constructed through the Tarot. T. S. Eliot’s poem The Waste Land uses only superficial descriptions of Tarot cards, a few of which are genuine. Random selections of Tarot cards have also been used to construct stories for writing exercises and writing games.
Tarot decks play a significant role in Roger Zelazny’s Amber fantasy series, where most major characters carry a magical deck of Tarot cards whose Trumps represent other characters (and enable communication with them) or locations. A Tarot deck inspired by the Amber series has been published.
Tarot cards also play a role in Stephen King’s Dark Tower series. At the end of Book 1, The Gunslinger, Roland finally catches up to the Man in Black, who reads Roland’s future with a deck of Tarot cards in a golgotha: “Death. Yet not for you.”
From 1977 to 1980, Piers Anthony published the “Planet of Tarot” series, which included God of Tarot, Vision of Tarot and Faith of Tarot. On the planet Tarot, nightmares, visions and fantasies become real, and sometimes tangentially, sometimes on-target, the protagonist lives through myths and stories, e.g., the moment Jesus of Nazareth “dies” and accepts his spiritual journey as Christ the savior, related to Tarot cards.
In John Crowley’s novel Little, Big (1981), characters use a Tarot deck with non-standard major arcana (”the lesser trumps”) for divination.
Tim Powers’ 1992 novel Last Call depicts Tarot decks used for magic beyond just divination, particularly in a variant of poker, and alludes repeatedly to The Waste Land.

Cards - 6 - The Lovers

Filed under: Cards

The Lovers is one card that is easy to remember. Love and sex are riveting subjects, and, as you’d expect, this card represents both. The urge for union is powerful, and, in its highest form, takes us beyond ourselves. That is why an angel is blessing the bond between the man and woman on this card.

In readings, Card 6 often refers to a relationship that is based on deep love - the strongest force of all. The relationship may not be sexual, although it often is or could be. More generally, the Lovers can represent the attractive force that draws any two entities together in a relationship - whether people, ideas, events, movements or groups.

Card 6 can also stand for tough value choices and the questioning that goes with them. In some decks, the Lovers shows a man torn between two women - a virgin and a temptress. This rather old-fashioned triangle symbolizes the larger dilemmas we face when we are tempted between right and wrong.

The Lovers can indicate a moral or ethical crossroads - a decision point where you must choose between the high road or the low road. This card can also represent your personal beliefs because to make such a decision you must know where you stand. Following your own path can mean going against those who are urging you in a direction that is wrong for you.

KEYWORDS
Relationship
Sexuality
Personal Beliefs
Values

Cards - 5 - The Hierophant

Filed under: Cards

Except in rare cases, every human grows and develops within a culture. We learn by living with others. The Hierophant represents such official learning, especially in groups. A Hierophant is someone who interprets secret knowledge. On Card 5 we see a religious figure in a formal church setting. He is wearing the elaborate vestments of his office. His task is to bring the two initiates into the church so they can take up their appointed roles.

Besides churches, there are schools, clubs, teams, companies, and societies. The Hierophant represents all of these because his realm is structured groups with rules and assigned roles. Such environments emphasize belief systems - facts, rules, procedures, and ritual. Members are rewarded for following conventions. They develop a group identity. The Hierophant is one of three cards that focuses on the group. (The 3 of Cups and the 3 of Pentacles are the others.)

In readings, the Hierophant often represents learning with experts or knowledgeable teachers. This card also stands for institutions and their values. The Hierophant is a symbol of the need to conform to rules or fixed situations. His appearance in a reading can show that you are struggling with a force that is not innovative, free-spirited or individual. Groups can be enriching or stifling, depending on circumstances. Sometimes we need to follow a program or embrace tradition, other times, we need to trust ourselves.

KEYWORDS
Education
Belief Systems
Conformity
Group Identification

Cards - 4 - The Emperor

Filed under: Cards

The figure of the Emperor says much about the essential qualities of this card. We see a stern, commanding figure seated on a stone-slab throne. His back is straight, and his eyes meet ours directly. He is confident of his complete authority to rule.

The Emperor represents structure, order and regulation - forces to balance the free-flowing, lavish abundance of the Empress. He advocates a four-square world where trains are on time, games are played by rules, and commanding officers are respected. In chaotic situations, the Emperor can indicate the need for organization. Loose ends should be tied up, and wayward elements, harnessed. In situations that are already over-controlled, he suggests the confining effect of those constraints.

The Emperor can represent an encounter with authority or the assumption of power and control. As the regulator, he is often associated with legal matters, disciplinary actions, and officialdom in all its forms. He can also stand for an individual father or archetypal Father in his role as guide, protector and provider.

KEYWORDS
Fatherhood
Structure
Authority
Regulation

Cards - 3 - The Empress

Filed under: Cards

The Empress and the High Priestess are the two halves of the female archetype in the major arcana. The Empress represents the fertile, life-giving Mother who reigns over the bounty of nature and the rhythms of the Earth. From her comes all the pleasures and joys of the senses and the abundance of new life in all its forms. The Empress encourages you to strengthen your connections with the natural world which is the ground of our being. Too often false sophistications and pleasures take us far from our roots. Let the Empress remind you to keep your feet firmly planted in the Earth.

In readings the Empress can refer to any aspect of Motherhood. She can be an individual mother, but as a major arcana card, she also goes beyond the specifics of mothering to its essence - the creation of life and its sustenance through loving care and attention.

The Empress can also represent lavish abundance of all kinds. She offers a cornucopia of delights, especially those of the senses - food, pleasure and beauty. She can suggest material reward, but only with the understanding that riches go with a generous and open spirit. The Empress asks you to embrace the principle of life and enjoy its bountiful goodness.

Keywords
Motherhood
Abundance
Senses
Nature

Purchase Silagra
Discount online pharmacy offering online prescription medication
www.luckypharmacy.com

Generic Florinef
FDA-approved prescription drugs, quick shipping, and free secure online medical consultations.
www.luckypharmacy.com

Order Caverta
Largest OnLine Pharmacy and Health information Website
www.luckypharmacy.com

Ads by PharmaCity!





















Get free blog up and running in minutes with Blogsome
Theme designed by Minz Meyer