tarot reading

When you’re first learning to read Tarot cards, you sometimes despair of ever memorizing the meanings of 78 cards (not to mention the reversals). But never fear! You don’t have to memorize a thing, unless you want to. As you work with the tarot cards on a regular basis, you will begin to have personal associations with them.

Almost everyone starts to play with a new tarot deck by laying cards out in a spread, then looking up the meaning of the cards in the companion book. There’s nothing wrong with that approach; it’s definitely a good idea to know why the deck creator chose certain elements and symbols for each card. But you are not limited to the deck creator’s interpretations. You need to develop your own. Trust your own intuition and responses to the tarot cards.

Here’s a few ideas for intuitively reading the cards.

Description Method:

(I learned the description method from Mary Greer at a workshop some years ago. It’s the second “way” she lists in 21 Ways to Read a Tarot Card. It’s one of my favorite Tarot books.)

Gaian Tarot Star1. Simply describe the card, as if you were describing it to another person. Use lots of adjectives and descriptive phrases. What is going on? How do the figures seem to feel in this situation? What is the atmosphere of the card?

(Example: Gaian Star)
I wrote: “A beautiful woman in a white gown is kneeling on soft green moss and ferns next to a spring or pool. A kingfisher is perched on the moss next to the pool.  A starry sky is spread out behind her. She has an expression of wonder on her face. Her hands are cupped and she is holding a ball of glowing light in them. It might be starlight. The light “drips” stars into the spring, making ripples on the top of the water. She is experiencing a moment of magic, grace and communion with the Divine.”

2. Repeat what you’ve just said, but in the declarative first-person, present-tense form: “I . . .”

“I am a beautiful woman in a white gown kneeling on soft green moss and ferns next to a spring or pool. A kingfisher is perched on the moss next to the pool. A starry sky is spread out behind me. I have an expression of wonder on my face. My hands are cupped and I am holding a ball of glowing light in them. It might be starlight. The light “drips” stars into the spring, making ripples on the top of the water. I am experiencing a moment of magic, grace and communion with the Divine.”

As I say those words aloud, using the present tense, I can feel the energy of the card filling my body and spirit. The “meaning” of the card came to me in the last phrase: “experiencing a moment of magic, grace and communion with the Divine.”

I know from my years of study that most Tarot writers ascribe keywords such as hope, inspiration, the Muse, peace, calm after the storm, bright promises, faith, destiny to the Star card. But my own personal association with the card has more to do with connecting to God/dess while I’m out in the natural world.

But they’re not so far apart, are they?

3. You can go further with the Description method by asking yourself questions based on your description, and then answering them.

Other ideas for intuitively reading a card:

  • Ask yourself: What does the card look like? What does it remind me of?
  • Notice your first impressions, and your emotional reaction to the card. Love it? Hate it? Puzzled by it?
  • Throw out a few one-word descriptions (like “serene” “innocent” “peaceful”).
  • Give it a title, as if it were a dream (“Woman in the Water”).
  • Be open to wild ideas or associations that fly into your head.

When you are first learning about a new tarot deck, I encourage you to turn up a card a day, and jot down your impressions of the card in your tarot journal (you have one, don’t you?) before you look up the meaning in the book. Then compare your own impressions to the text in the book. What insights do you have that are not found in the book?

(I’ve been teaching workshops on how to read the cards intuitively for more years than I can remember. Students will practice these methods in my upcoming online course, Gaian Tarot for Tarot Beginners, which starts mid-May. Sign up for my mailing list if you want to be among the first to hear all the details about the class!)

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Sometimes, you just know you’ve tapped into something deeper and more mysterious than you can imagine. (It’s not coincidence, it’s synchronicity.)  Of all the 78 cards in my deck, shuffled and shuffled again, which one did I pull today?

Gaian Tarot Death Card

Blessed be.

When you get this card in a reading . . .

Something in your life is dying, while something else is nearing its time to be born. Take the time that you need to recognize that this is a natural process, a part of the great cycle of all life. Grieve if you need to for that which is ending, whether it is a cherished dream, a relationship or a belief system. Don’t rush the process or deny all your turbulent feelings. Whether a literal death or the ending of a chapter in your life, death isn’t pretty and it can hurt. It’s painful. Whatever dies, is gone, and it will never return again in the same form.

But just as the Dark Moon gives way to the New, and Winter gives way to Spring, Rebirth will surely follow Death. Releasing that which no longer serves your best interests clears the space for new beginnings and an upsurge of vitality. When you are ready to let go of grief, you will find yourself emptied out and clean, and ready for the next stage of your journey.

— from the Gaian Tarot companion book.

How does the Death card speak to you, dear Readers?

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(This spread was created by Beth Owl’s Daughter and it’s included in the Gaian Tarot companion book. I love it because it empowers the person who seeks a reading to take charge and move in the direction of her dreams, instead of passively waiting to be told what her future might be. Thank you, Beth.)

Beth first separates the Major Arcana cards from the rest of the deck. From the Majors, she asks her client to look through them face up and choose two. One will represent how they feel about or would describe their current situation, and the other represents where they wish to be.

She says, “Because it can be hard to narrow down one’s favorites from all the beautiful possibilities, I’ve found that if they go through and first discard the ones that don’t fit at all, then make a subset of their ‘semi-finalists,’ it’s easier for them to finally settle on the ones they want. And they always amaze me with their wise, powerful choices! Even (sometimes especially) when they have no prior knowledge of the Tarot.”

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Why You Should Always Trust the Cards

by Joanna Powell Colbert on March 25, 2011 · 10 comments

in Healing, Tarot

Gaian Tarot Child of WaterDo you ever draw a complete blank when you turn up a card in a reading?  You might even think to yourself: “Well that card is just wrong. Let me put it back and pull another.” It happens to all of us . . .

A few weeks ago an artist friend of mine asked me to pull a card for her and do a short reading.  She had just been diagnosed with gout in her feet, a very painful condition.  She was distressed, not only because of the pain, but also because she wanted to treat it without allopathic medications. (She wasn’t, of course, asking for medical advice, which I would not have given in any case. She just wanted some comfort and a little spiritual direction.)

So I grounded and centered, shuffled my deck, and pulled . . . the Child of Water.  And my mind went blank.  What the heck? I thought to myself.  What can the Child of Water possibly have to do with gout?

Then I noticed the Child’s feet in the water. And I wrote this to my friend:

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Weekly Wisdom: Temperance

by Joanna Powell Colbert on March 21, 2011 · 3 comments

in Card of the Week, Spirituality, Tarot

At Equinox, the days and nights are of equal length, in perfect balance.  How might we hold this balance in our personal lives as well?  What wisdom does the Temperance card hold for us?

“I combine and blend opposites to create something beautiful and unique.”

How does this card speak to you, dear Reader?

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How Can We Respond to the Disaster in Japan?

March 15, 2011

Most of us are thinking about the epic disaster in Japan this week and wondering what we can possibly do to help. We’re also dealing with a flood of emotions or are putting up walls to keep the despair out. There must be a better way.  So this week I did a “wisdom reading” for [...]

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