Showing posts with label tarot. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tarot. Show all posts

Sunday, 12 February 2023

Tarot Year Card 2023 - Strength/Justice

  

Last year my Tarot Year Card was Key10 the Wheel of Fortune, and it definitely ended up being a year that turned my life upside down. There was a big part of last year that was, for me, the worst I had ever experienced. There was also a house move and a shake-up in our working lives. After all that we are now mostly settled and in a better place, both physically and emotionally.

    

This year according to the book Archetypal Tarot by Mary K. Greer, my Tarot Year Card is Key11, which for the Marseille and Thoth is Force and Lust. These would equal the Strength card in the RWS however the RWS has Justice not Strength at Key11, as it switched these two. Even after reading the entries for these card positions in Archetypal Tarot I am not sure which card should be this years card. So I guess I will re-evaluate at the end of the year to see whether this turns out to be a Strength or Justice year for me.

    

This years card was found using the formula below, you add your birth day, birth month and current year together, then add the numbers from that sum together until you end up with the highest number under 23, with the number 22 representing The Fool.

Hopefully this example given should help to clarify this.
    month of birth            8
    dayof birth        +     26
    current year       + 2014
    total                      2048

The total number is then added together to give your year card, 2 + 0 + 4 + 8 = 14 (Temperance)

  

Some interesting notes in Archetypal Tarot talk about the positioning of Strength and Justice historically with one source speculating that these cards at one time were the one card, as both represent the two aspects of a single power. That power being Law, with Strength as the natural law of nature and Justice as society's law. Even S. L. MacGregor Mathers talks about Strength as "power not arrested" and Justice as "Strength and Force, but arrested, as in the act of Judgement".

       

Other sources also note the similarities of these cards with a Golden Dawn cipher manuscript describing the astrological correlation's of Justice as Leo and Strength as Libra. This was due to the sword of Justice being linked to the Egyptian knife symbol of the sickle of Leo and the scales as showing the Sun from the point of the summer solstice. For the Strength card, the female and lion represented Venus, Lady of Libra and the fire of Vulcan, which is Saturn in Libra. 

    

However another part of this same cipher manuscript stated the Lion Goddess, being Strength, was related to Leo and the goddess Ma'at with her scales, being Justice, related to Libra. Showing that I am not the only one to be somewhat unsure of the placement of these two cards in the positions of Key8 and Key11.

Friday, 30 September 2022

Embrace The Magical

Last year I decided to join in #embracethemagical for the first time and loved it. Despite living in the southern hemisphere where we are moving into Spring while it seems everyone else is getting excited for Samhain and Halloween, I still felt able to embrace the magic that is found in every season.

For several years now the month of October has been #embracethemagical month, thanks to Kelly from The Truth In Story, who has provided a daily keyword or prompt and/or weekly spread to celebrate this magical time of year.

Still being fairly new to tarot myself, when I joined last year I found these daily keywords a great way to dive into a single card. Previously I had been pulling a card a day and finding the meaning for that card, but it was very general as meaning can be broad and relate to any number of things. However, I found the daily keywords were a wonderful way of looking into each card with a fresh perspective and purpose.

For this year I am starting week one with the Pagan Otherworlds Tarot, this is a new deck for me and  actually the first time I have used this deck which is quite exciting. I don't have the big book so I will just be going with the meanings as I know them. For day one I pulled the Ace of Cups, to follow along with my card pulls for the prompts visit my instagram.

Thursday, 10 March 2022

Tarot Year Card 2022 - Wheel of Fortune

At the end of last year Benebell Wen posted about her Tarot Year Card and that got me inspired to find out my own Tarot Year Card. In the book Archetypal Tarot by Mary K. Greer the formula for discovering your Tarot Year Card is to add your birth day, birth month and current year together, then to add the numbers from that sum together until you end up with the highest number under 23, with the number 22 representing The Fool.

Hopefully this example given should help to clarify this.
    month of birth            8
    day of birth       +     26
    current year       + 2014
    total                      2048

The total number is then added together to give your year card, 2 + 0 + 4 + 8 = 14 (Temperance)

After completing this with my own details I found that 2022 for me is a Wheel of Fortune year. After reading about what this may mean for the coming year in Archetypal Tarot I was a bit apprehensive. Like a lot of people, I don't like change, but as a Wheel of Fortune year, I'm about to experience it whether I'm ready for it or not.

To find out more insight I started to pull the Wheel of Fortune card from a few different decks I own to see what else their meanings may offer. The Wheel cards from DruidCraft Tarot and Wildwood Tarot both spoke of the changing of seasons, of the passing of time and the natural cycles in nature. The Wildwood card with its eight spoked wheel for the turning of the seasons, the presence of both the sun and moon and the three herons as the three fates was beautiful. However, I was particularly draw to the DruidCraft card with its depiction of Arianrhod on the liminal place of the beach, between land and sea, with the cave representing both womb and tomb behind her.


Other cards I looked at speak more to the Wheel of Fortune as being related to luck and fortune, with the Halloween Tarot depicting a man on a roulette wheel being spun by an elephant who is being spooked by a mouse. The Vacchetta Tarot, on the other hand, depicts the classic "wheel" and features the goddess Fortuna herself at the top where she is able to see all, and at the bottom a misfortunate woman is being crushed by life's circumstances. Hopefully that woman does not turn out to be me.

Being tarot key 10, The Wheel of Fortune is numerologically related to the Aces and 10's of the minor arcana, meaning this will be a year of beginnings and completions. Basically from all these cards there is the sense that there is no fighting change and what is to come. So as a wise person once said "No good sittin' worryin' abou' it," ... "What's comin' will come, an' we'll meet it when it does."- J. K. Rowling

Sunday, 3 October 2021

Embrace The Magical

So in my last post I explained about living in the southern hemisphere and how here, October is not autumn and the lead up to Samhain or Halloween, but is instead the lead up to Beltane. I also mentioned how I prefer to celebrate the season as I experience them and not how the other side of the world may be experiencing them. And I stand my this, I do. But I just couldn't help but join in #embracethemagical.

Kelly from The Truth In Story started #embracethemagical on instagram, something she has done for a few years now to celebrate the magical and spooky month of October. Initially I wasn't going to join, as I said, I prefer to celebrate the seasons as I experience them, but then I thought that embracing the magical didn't have to mean October or Halloween. 'Embracing The Magical' was something that could be done any time of the year.

So for each week in October The Truth In Story will have weekly Tarot spreads available as well as daily keyword prompts for single card Tarot draws. These will be available on her instagram and also on her community tab on her youtube. If your interest in Tarot or other divination methods I recommend watching some of her videos. 

For this first week of #embracethemagical I am using the Deviant Moon Tarot, I know it leans more towards spooky Samhain then it does bright Beltane, but I only recently got the big book for this deck and really wanted to use it. To follow along with my 'Embracing the Magical' journey, visit my instagram.

The Tower card below from the Deviant Moon Tarot was the first card I pulled, a day before #embracethemagical officially began. A sign that, although I am experiencing Spring, it is fine to shake things up a bit with a dark and strange deck, for as surreal as the imagery might be, the insights found are quite positive and affirming.

Saturday, 28 August 2021

Harmony Tarot Key 0 - The Goldfinch (The Fool)

The Goldfinch keywords (from the book)
Simplicity ~ Travel ~ Freedom

The Fool keywords (general)
Beginnings ~ Innocence ~ Purity ~ Spontaneity ~ Free Spirit ~ Potential


The Goldfinch meaning (my summary from the book)
Freedom, adventure and new experiences are the main themes of this card. There is an emphasis on simplifying your life and finding order in an effort to achieve more freedom and to allow new experiences and opportunities into your life.

The Fool meaning (general)
The Fool represents unlimited potential and carries with him everything he truly needs, which in reality is very little. Being numbered 0 and standing outside of the major arcane, or on cliff edge, The Fool is able to embody the freedoms found in breaking away from social norms and conventions. The Fool is also representative of the beginnings of an adventure, or the possibilities for new beginnings that are present within each moment to bring fresh energy to any given situation. There is also an element of wisdom and enlightenment found within The Fool that comes from obtaining a sense of innocence and being unburdened with material matters.


The Goldfinch imagery (meanings I found in the image)
GOLDFINCH ~ represents infinite possibilities and foreknowledge and is an emblem of endurance, fruitfulness and persistence.
THIRD EYE ~ represents a state of enlightenment, mystical intuition and insight.
LADYBUG ~ represents good fortune, happy resolutions, true love, innocence and the need to make the right choices. They also promise positive transformations.

 

Harmony Tarot Home


The card meanings and associations found here are my own and make sense to me. While being heavily influenced from the accompanying guidebook, they have been further developed through research and study, as well as personal experiences and workings with the cards. Your own associations and opinions about these card meanings may differ.

Thursday, 20 May 2021

Harmony Tarot by Harmony Nice - A Review

illustrated by Laura Shelley

Harmony Tarot Rider/Penguin

I made the decision to purchase this deck after it had been published and I had had an opportunity to see all the cards. Even with half the reviews I have seen for this deck talking about using this as more of an oracle then a tarot deck. At first I shared this sentiment about the Harmony Tarot being not so much a tarot deck but more of an oracle deck that happens to have 78 cards with majors and minors in 4 suits. But looking deeper into this deck I am now not so sure this is the case.

major arcana

The reason so may have decided that this deck is more oracle then tarot, in my opinion, comes down to the major arcana cards which have been altered to represent magical elements and the natural world. These major cards are not instantly recognisable which has thrown most tarot readers who have come to expect some sort of visual recognition within each card, no mater how diverse and altered the art may be.

So most reviews I have seen for this deck fall into two categories, either they are massive fans of Harmony Nice, the author, and her deck because she created it, or they are somewhat disappointed that it's not more 'traditional' and will use it as an oracle. There were also a lot of people who seemed disappointed that this was a pip deck, but most of these people seemed to be the ones who pre-ordered this deck without knowing exactly what they were buying.

knight's of the minor arcana

If you have seen a few of Harmony Nice's videos on YouTube about tarot, then you may be able to see some of the influences that went into the creation of this deck. The guidebook actually mentions that she stared out with a Rider-Waite deck before being given her great-grandmothers tarot deck, which in one of her videos is shown to be the 1JJ Swiss Tarot, a Marseille tarot deck.

suit of spring court

A lot of people, from what I have seen, have assumed that the 'traditional' tarot the Harmony Tarot is based on, or not based on, is the Rider Waite Smith tarot. However I believe that she has instead used her great-grandmothers Marseille deck, the 1JJ Swiss Tarot, as inspiration and bases for her deck. This can be seen in the Star, Moon and Sun cards having French titles in her Harmony Tarot as they do in her 1JJ Swiss Tarot, and in both decks being pip decks.

suit of spring minor arcana

There was also some talk about people not liking the numbered pip cards having no suit names but just the numbers alone, but this too is seen in both the Rider Waite Smith tarot and the 1JJ Swiss Tarot. As she associates her suits with the 4 seasons and each season is represented by a plant, I have found it easier to remember the sun placement in the minor cards for each season and associated that to a suit/element, so for me Spring is wands/fire with the sun on the right, Summer is cups/water with the sun at the top, Autumn is swords/air with the sun on the left, Winter is coins/earth with the sun at the bottom.

aces of the minor arcana

As mentioned, I believe that this deck does follow a traditional tarot structure, it is just going to take some time working with it to see clearly how the majors do, in their own unique way, represent the 'traditional' major tarot cards. Only here these cards have an emphasis on growth and healing, in much the same way other decks focus on themes of love or shadow. I plan to write more about this and each individual card in future posts, links to each to be found HERE.

major arcana

One thing that I would have found more helpful was if the majors had been numbered, I am tempted to just write the numbers on these myself but I don't really want to spoil the beauty of these cards. The card stock seems to be ok, if a bit stiff, although I am no expert on this. However they are not cut cleanly as you can feel the roughness along the sides of these cards. When shuffling, they overhand fine enough, but I find it a little difficult to riffle shuffle these due to their stiffness and when I do they clump together a bit.

The box for this deck is beautiful, it's sturdy and solid but it is not something I am going to be using to store this deck in. The cards and guidebook are set side by side in this box, with a bit of cardboard used to balance out the hight of the guidebook with the cards next to it. But there is too much room for the cards to move about and get damaged, so I will be finding a new home for these cards. However I may just use the box to store crystals or other such items.

Harmony Tarot U.S. Games

Before I purchased this deck by Rider/Penguin, I did see that U.S. Games was also releasing a copy of the Harmony Tarot. When I looked into what the differences between the two decks might be I was torn as to which copy I should buy. The U.S Games copy had the deck and guidebook on top of each other in a box, which I much preferred to keep the cards stored more safely. I assumed it would also have the standard U.S. Games card stock which would be decent.

On the left is Rider/Penguin, on the right is U.S. Games

Also, I saw that the U.S. Games minor pip cards would have full titles on them, for example 'four of summer' or 'nine of autumn', as opposed to this Rider/Penguin copy just having the 'IV' or 'IX' on the same cards. But after working with this deck a bit I have found that this does not really bother me so much, as I said both the RWS and Marseille decks already use this numbering and I have now memorised the seasons of each card.

On the left is Rider/Penguin, on the right is U.S. Games

Ultimately I decided against the U.S. Games copy because they numbered the major cards. Actually, as I said I would have liked the major cards to be numbered, however the U.S. Games copy has numbered the cards '1 The Goldfinch' through to '22 The Orchard'. So because I can see the traditional majors in this tarot deck, this way of numbering has thrown me. I would have numbered 'The Goldfinch' as 0 and putting 'The Lovers' as card 7 and 'The Orchard' that is to me clearly 'The World' as card 22 does not make sense to me.  This may be another reason for people to dismiss this deck as non-tarot and more oracle.

U.S. Games major arcana

Both copies include the same guidebook, I know because I asked. There is quite a bit of information in the little guide book, a section for beginners, though I do not personally believe this to be a beginners tarot deck, a section on using the cards, about reversals but not reversal meanings, a number of spreads, and the card meanings themselves. Being a pip deck I would have liked to have seen numerological associations and possibly also court associations, however suit associations are given at the beginning of each suits chapter which is nice.

U.S. Games major arcana

The one other thing I wish was included but is clearly missing in both copies is more information in the guidebook about each card, especially for the major arcana. Although each card has keywords followed by about a page of information about the meaning, there is nothing more about the cards image. I would have loved it if there was included why each image was what it was and the symbolism behind it. For example what the Goldfinch symbolised, or why the plant forget-me-not was used for the High Priestess.

I was so tempted to purchase both the Rider/Penguin copy as well as the U.S. Games copy in order to do a more thorough comparative review, but with a price tag of AU$35 and AU$40 respectively, that was just not going to happen. Overall I have found this to be a beautifully unique tarot deck whose art work just calls to me. Laura Shelley did a wondrous job illustrating these cards but I know I will have to spend some time studying the meanings given as well as in further study before I become more comfortable with this tarot deck.


This review reflects my personal thoughts and opinions. Your opinions and experiences may differ to my own.