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"Tarot card reading" means a woman in flowing robes, leaning over a small table in a
candlelit room, foretelling impending doom.
But that's not really what Tarot cards are about. In fact, they're not even really meant to
tell your fortune or future. According to The most powerful sources of information come
from within; the Tarot aids in coming in contact with one's Higher Self."
But what does that mean? In this article, we'll look at the various ideas about where
Tarot cards come from, what they mean and how a deck of cards can possibly tell you
anything about yourself. You'll learn why it matters where the cards fall and why you
don't have to be a psychic to do a Tarot reading.
Types of Readings
There are actually two different types of Tarot readings: question readings and open
readings.
Question Readings
In question readings, you are addressing a specific question. Tarot is not intended to
answer specific yes or no questions. Most say it also shouldn't be used to make
decisions, but instead should be used as a guide to help you make the decision yourself.
For this reason, the way a question is stated is very important. According to Joan
Bunning, a Tarot reader and teacher, questions should:
Keep your options open: If you have the answer before the reading, then you're not
allowing the cards to guide your overall decision. Bunning gives this example: Asking
how you could encourage your mother-in-law to move out, as opposed to asking how
you can get along better with her, is narrowing the scope of the true question by
answering it before you even get started.
Find the best level of detail: Your question should be focused, but not overly detailed.
Rather than looking at one particular aspect of a problem, find a way to look more
broadly at it. For example, rather than asking how you can make your home life less
chaotic, ask how you can better balance kid schedules and adult schedules. That is a
focused question. But do not go so far as to ask how you can coordinate baseball,
soccer and Cub Scout schedules and still have family time -- that's too detailed. Only
include the minimum level of detail needed in order to express what you want to learn
from the cards.
Focus on yourself: If the reading is for yourself, make sure your question focuses on
you rather than on someone else who you think may be the root of your problem. For
example, asking why your son is experimenting with drugs is focusing on him, not you.
Asking what role you play in your son's decision to experiment with drugs brings the
focus of the question back to you.
Stay neutral: In order to stay open to other points of view, your question has to be
neutral and not convey a preconceived notion that your view is necessarily the right one.
The cards can give you guidance if you ask for it. For example, asking why you're doing
more work around the house than your spouse isn't neutral; asking how you can get
more cooperation from your spouse when it comes to housework is neutral.
Be positive: Make sure your question is stated in a positive rather than negative way.
Instead of asking why a specific event hasn't happened, ask what you can do to help
make that event happen.
Open Readings
Open readings address the larger aspects of your life rather than a specific problem
area or question. They're usually done when you're entering a new phase of life, such as
getting married, graduating from college or starting a family. You can somewhat direct
the reading if you have a general area you want to cover, such as your career or health,
but that's as specific as the direction gets.

The Tarot Deck
There are many varieties of Tarot decks, and there is no standard number of cards
across all decks. While the types of cards, the suits and their meanings are the same,
the illustrations vary greatly. Decks are based on various themes such as nature,
animals, fantasy, dragons, etc. The most common deck in the United States is theRider-
Waite deck, which was created in 1909 by A.E. Waite, a prominent member of the
occult group the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, and published by Rider &
Company. The artist was Pamela Colman Smith. This 78-card deck was the only readily
available deck in the United States for many years, which is why it is considered the
"definitive" tarot deck in the United States. According to The Hermitage: A Tarot History
Site, however, there is no "definitive" tarot deck.
The Tarot deck is made up of the Minor Arcana and the Major Arcana. Like regular
playing cards, the Minor Arcana of the Tarot deck includes four suits. Rather than
spades, hearts, diamonds and clubs, however, the suits are:
wands
swords
cups
circles or pentacles
Each suit has meaning regarding a specific approach to life. The cards within these suits
are numbered one through 10 and also include the court cards -- the king, queen, knight
and page. The Minor Arcana cards represent the more minor, practical daily ups and
downs in life.

Cards of the Minor Arcana: Aces of wands, swords, cups, and circles and pentacles
The Major Arcana are not associated with the suits. They include the picture cards that
represent principles, concepts and ideals. They are numbered one through 21, with the
22nd card (the "Fool") marked as zero. The Major Arcana cards represent strong, long-
term energy or big events in some area of life.

Cards of the Major Arcana: Temperance, Death, The Fool and The Hanged Man
Seeing a Major Arcana card about a particular subject in one reading and then getting a
Minor Arcana card about the same subject in the next reading would mean that this
subject is becoming less important in your life. To check out various explanations of
specific card meanings, see:
Golden Dawn Research Center: The Tarot
Paranormality.com: Tarot Card Meanings
The Mystic Eye: Basic Tarot Card Meanings

The Tarot Spread
Before a reading is performed, the cards are shuffled by the person receiving the
reading. Some say this transfers that person's energy to the deck. The person receiving
the reading should also be concentrating on the question or area for which they want
guidance while he or she shuffles the deck. In some more traditional circles, a more
elaborate sorting and separation of the cards is performed .Once the cards are shuffled
and the deck has been cut, the reader lays out the cards in a pattern called the spread.
Each position in the spread has a meaning, and there are many different types of
spreads, ranging from those that incorporate a single card to spreads that include all 78
cards of the deck. Which spread is used is up to the reader and the specific type of
question or reading. Some spreads focus more on a specific type of information. For
example, one spread might focus more on emotional matters, while another might bring
in more information about the influences of others. One of the most common spreads is
the Celtic Cross:
There are many more spreads for Tarot card reading, and readers can even make up
their own. For more Tarot card spreads, Below, using the Celtic Cross spread as an
example, you can see that there is an order in which the cards are laid down for the
spread and that each card position within the spread has a meaning. There are many
different meanings that each position can have -- it all depends on who you ask. This set
of meanings comes from the . The card) are combined with the position meanings. In
addition, combinations of cards or card pairings also affect meanings.

Reading the Cards
Once the cards are laid out, their meanings are interpreted based on their positions and
their neighboring cards. Let's look at the Celtic Cross spread:
Here is an approach for reading the Celtic Cross spread according to Tarot reader and
teacher Joan Bunning]. At the right, you can see how this tarot reader and teacher
interprets some of the Major Arcana cards.
1. Begin by looking at theCircle/Cross section. The cards in this position represent what is
happening in your life at the time of the reading.
2. Next, look at the first six cards in pairs. These cards paint a picture of your immediate
situation. The cards in position 1 (the central issue) and position 2 (the secondary issue
that can either be opposing or reinforcing) will identify the central theme of the reading.
The cards in position 3 (the root cause that can be an unconscious influence or deeper
meaning) and position 5 (your attitudes and beliefs, a conscious influence, your goal or
an alternate future) represent things that are going on within you at different levels. And,
the cards in position 4 (your past, a receding influence or something that has been
resolved) and position 6 (the future or an approaching influence or unresolved factor)
represent how people and events are flowing through your life.
3. Next, look at the Staff section of the spread, again considering cards in pairs. Looking at
the cards in position 7 (as you are, as you could be, as you present yourself and as you
see yourself) and position 8 (your outside environment, someone else's point of view
and you as others see you) tells you about your relationship with your environment.
4. Finally, look at the card in position 10 (the outcome-overall, your inner state, your actions
or effects) to see the projected outcome.
Joan Bunning suggests to then ask yourself how you feel about the projected outcome.
What does it say to you?
1. Go back and review the cards that led up to that outcome, and see if there is a card that
stands out as they key to that outcome. Then, look back at card 5 to see if the projected
outcome is also shown as an alternate outcome there. Look at the card representing the
near future in position 6 to see if it supports or contributes to the projected outcome.
Finally, look at the card in position 9 (guidance, key factors, hopes and fears or
overlooked factors) to see there is any relevance there.
Reversed Cards
Because Tarot cards each have one picture that faces in one direction, it is possible that
cards will be facing the opposite direction when dealt. According to most sources, this
doesn't change the meaning of the card, but simply weakens the impact of the meaning.
WHAT DO THEY MEAN?
Tarot cards have different meanings depending on where they fall in the spread. Here
are a few of the face cards and their various meanings:
Death: Ending; Transition; Elimination; Inexorable forces
The Fool: Beginning; Spontaneity; Faith; Apparent folly
The High Priestess: Nonaction; Unconscious awareness; Potential; Mystery
The Lovers: Relationship; Sexuality; Personal beliefs; Values
The Magician: Action; Conscious awareness; Concentration; Power

Tarot-card Philosophy
How can randomly drawn cards have any relevance to someone's life and what's
happening in it? What most readers say the Tarot can enlighten you about are
the choices you have. The cards don't tell you what you should do or what specifically is
going to happen in your future, but rather the possibilities depending on the path you
take. Let's look at some of the theories behind how Tarot cards could possibly work.
Synchronicity
Carl Jung believed that in addition to the repeatable cause-and-effect relationships on
which the scientific world is so strongly based, there is also another connecting principle
that does not share that cause-and-effect relationship. He called this
principle synchronicity. According to Jung, synchronicity explains the guiding forces in
the universe. Things we might see as coincidence are actually signs that can help us
make decisions and guide our lives -- if we recognize them.
Jung believed that quantum mechanics could be a possible explanation for the
phenomenon of synchronicity. (Quantum mechanics explains the relationships of
particles and their random interconnectivity, with behaviors being probabilities rather
than certainties.) There are those who believe that because the forces of quantum
mechanics affect the reality of physical objects, Tarot cards might play the role of
showing us paths and patterns and helping us understand the meaning in those guiding
energies. Although, according to the principles of quantum mechanics, once you see the
possible outcomes in the Tarot reading, you've changed the probabilities. While Jung did
not study Tarot, he was interested in I Ching (another divination tool) and suggested that
synchronicity could be an explanation for how I Ching might work for divination.

Projecting
Some say it all boils down to your subconscious mind. Arguably, how we perceive things
relies heavily on our subconscious, and there are those who believe that with Tarot, the
subconscious projects its own interpretations on the Tarot cards. As a person receiving a
Tarot reading, your interpretation of the cards is a result of the factors in your life that
shape who you are and what you are about. The questions you have about your life
(usually the reason for consulting the Tarot in the first place) are projected onto the
pictures, so you divine answers from what you see. In this way, the Tarot is useful in
helping us to tap into our subconscious to find answers that we might never consciously
think of. The Rorschach inkblot test uses a similar principle to look into the
subconscious. Whether you believe that Tarot cards hold any power or ability to shed
light on your life, your problems or your future might depend on how easily you can open
you mind to the idea of it. Many Tarot-card readers have differing ideas about how or
why the Tarot works. In fact, some say we only need the Tarot to help us until we learn
to get in touch with our "inner guide" on our own.

Tarot-card History: Are They Really That Ancient?
According to Tarot historian Tom Tadfor Little, traditional playing cards were first seen in
Europe in 1375, having been brought over from the Islamic societies where they had
been used for centuries before that. These cards were not, however, Tarot cards. At this
point, he says, there is no evidence to show that Tarot cards had yet been created,
which goes against many claims that ordinary playing cards evolved from the original
Tarot deck.
It wasn't until 1440 that the cards that were most likely the origin of Tarot cards were first
mentioned. In a letter from the Duke of Milan, there was a request for several decks of
"triumph" cards to be used at a special event. The letter differentiated triumph cards from
regular "playing" cards.
It does appear, however, that the first Tarot decks were created as a game. There were
four suits with cards numbered one through ten and also court cards that included a
queen, king, knight and page. The deck also included 22 symbolic picture cards that did
not belong to any suit. The decks were used to play a game called triumph that was
similar to bridge. In triumph, 21 of the 22 special picture cards were permanent trump
cards. The game spread quickly to all parts of Europe. People began referring to
as tarocchi, which is an Italian version of the French word tarot, around 1530.
In 1781, in France and England, followers of the occult discovered Tarot cards. They
saw the symbolic pictures of the cards as having more meaning than the simple trump
cards they were used for at the time. They used the cards as a divination tool, and occult
writers wrote about "the Tarot." After this, the Tarot became a part of occult philosophy.
There are also those who believe that Tarot cards originated in Egypt. In some circles,
they are thought to be the sole surviving "book" from the great fire that burned the
libraries of ancient Egypt. In this theory, the cards are considered to be the
hieroglyphical keys to life.

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