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Feng Shui for the Beginner – What is Feng Shui?

By Marie Schoonover

“How to Apply Feng Shui to 26 Areas Of Your Life & Home!” Click Here!

The two questions I seem to get asked by new people the most are “What is Feng Shui?” and “How can Feng Shui benefit me?” After more than 17 years of working with Feng Shui you’d think I could spit out an answer to those two questions like a tape recording, but in fact I stumble around for an answer as much now as I did the first time I was asked. The reason is there’s no single, simple, answer; it depends a lot on how much the other person understands about Feng Shui. You have to give a little more explanation to a person who has just heard the term Feng Shui for the first time vs. somebody who has read an article or maybe even a book on the subject and still has some questions. So lets proceed with the first question, “What is Feng Shui?” assuming you are the person hearing about Feng Shui for the very first time.

 

Feng Shui is an environmental science, it is not a religion, and it is not a cult. Feng Shui is 30 centuries old, yes, that’s 3000 years, a thousand years before Christ, 1000 BC, originating in ancient China and has at least 9 know schools, or disciplines, that are being practiced today around the world. Feng Shui is a tool that you can use to bring balance and harmony into your life, it is not magic or voodoo or witchcraft. Feng Shui has evolved from eons of observation of the environment and how it relates to your life or life events. It connects the intentions you have to your surroundings and hence to your higher power. It allows you a better control over your life through your environment and helps you to achieve balance and happiness.

Feng Shui is relatively easy to understand and easy to apply, it is not mysterious or restricted or unavailable. Feng Shui is more spiritual in nature than intellectual or physical, although both physical and intellectual “cures” are used to connect you to the power behind Feng Shui. Feng Shui is not tied to a religion or really even to a culture; it is connected to universal principals and the laws of cause and effect that govern the universe. Feng Shui is not affiliated to any religious philosophy but relies on the same principles that underlie all of the great religions of the world. It allows us to connect to our inner self and to the higher power that governs us all.

It allows you to manifest the intentions you have for your life. Using your higher power can be as personal to you as you want it to be. Feng Shui does not care what your convictions are, only what your intentions are, and in this sense Feng Shui it is a very equal-opportunity, opportunity.

With that said lets give a little more explanation of the structure of Feng Shui. Feng Shui cures are applied in nine “life event” categories, and uses your physical surrounds to gain control and achieve your intentions or goals in these categories. Your physical surroundings are most commonly your house, but you can Feng Shui a room, a desk, a work area, even your garden. The nine categories are organized in a certain pattern or map known as a Bagua and include Health, Prosperity, Knowledge, and six others. Each category or Bagua area has definite supportive and destructive symbols associated with it such as colors, shapes and the elements. The Feng Shui Practitioner uses these symbols in conjunction with the Bagua Map to balance a person’s environment thereby balancing their lives. The key to accomplishing this is to understand the relationships of the nine Bagua areas and properly apply the Feng Shui cures to clarify you intentions. In a sense, Feng Shui could be described as the ultimate goal-setting tool, with some extra bonuses attached.

So that’s kind of the tip of the iceberg so to speak of the Feng Shui world. There are numerous details and processes and practices that go along with these concepts. The new person can easily become overwhelmed when they first start to explore Feng Shui. But with a little patience and some good instruction it begins to clear up and become useful fairly rapidly. I have been associated with Feng Shui over 17 years now. I was initially expose to it at a two hour adult education seminar and since then have read many books and articles, communicated with countless other practitioners, achieved a Masters Rating and used Feng Shui as a source of income for about the last 15 years.

About author:

I initially used the techniques for myself and then shared the knowledge with some friends and family and then transitioned into becoming a Feng Shui Practitioner and Instructor. I now devote a good deal of my time to training new people to become Practitioners and Obtain a Feng Shui Masters Certificate so they can use their Feng Shui skills to help others and develop an income. You can find out more about Feng Shui and how it can benefit you on my website. Order the Free Report on what you should know before becoming a Feng Shui Master.

I am a 4th generation healer and intuitive, who has earned Practitioner Level Certification in Yeun’s Energetics Academy as well as gaining the level of Feng Shui Master. I am a level 3 Reiki practitioner, an animal communicator, and intuitive reader. I have also spent over 20 years in corporate America as a Chassis, Occupant & Mechanical Packaging Designer and Supplier Support Specialist for the “Big 3” domestic auto makers. All these gifts combined, allow me to offer many services utilizing my intuitive and healing gifts, as well as my design and organizational skills.

By Janarrdhana Guptha

Numbers and Vibrations have fascinated Man for a very long time. Thousands of people have changed or tuned their Birth Names hoping to benefit from it. Whatever the Numerology Method – whether it’s Kabbalah or Pythagorean or Chaldean, does Numerology really work ? If No, Why ? If Yes, then How ? Read on for some real life, practical FAQs.

The FAQs (Frequently Asked Questions and Answers) listed below are the most important and the most practical ones that are being asked around, more than anything else. If you wish to tune your Birth Name Vibrations, you should read them, to get guidance and clear your doubts. If you have already undergone Name Energy Correction or Numerological Correction, then you too must read them, to understand why it has not worked out to your expections.

QUESTION 1 :

Everybody told me about numbers and their Vibrations. I had the spelling in my name changed by an Expert Numerologist. But nothing much seems to have changed. Why ?

ANSWER :

(1) You are right about the numbers : they do have vibrations. But have all the vibration inputs been taken into account ? Not all Numerologists consider all the right factors. The parameters to be considered are : Birth Name; Date, Month & Year of Birth; Day of Birth & the Time of Birth. All of them are equally important. Even if one of these parameters are not included, the input system itself will be incomplete. If any of these factors (say, the time of birth) is not available, there are Clairvoyant methods to see through this.

(2) There is an even important contributing input that eventually influences the name : the person’s Karma. Without accessing the Karmic Vibrations nothing can be decided. This is another reason why the Numerologist should also be an Advanced Level Clairvoyant.

(3) Assuming you have changed your name into right vibrations (after rightly analysing all the correct inputs) how much will the changed vibrations bring you what you desire ?

Let us look at this logically. When YOU pronounce your name (with the corrected spelling), your name vibrations are activated and REACH OUT to the person/persons you are talking to. I agree.

(1) But what about other people you are linked with ?

(2) Can you talk with every other person about your changed name ?

(3) What about people whom you knew in the past but are not in speaking terms now ?

(4) What about people whom you have no knowledge of, but are going to get involved with you in your future ?

How will your altered personal vibrations reach them ?

The conclusion is that you need an Energy Tool (which has been exclusively programmed for you) to keep transmitting your changed personal name vibrations 24/7 to all those who are currently involved with you, involved with you in your past and going to be involved with you in future. Then and only then you can reap the benefits of the corrected name vibrations.

That is exactly what I do for you when I implement my method of NewAge Kabbalah Numerology. After diagonising the full range of inputs and scanning your karmic vibrations, I arrive at the primary objectives to be achieved and the negativites to be shed. These steps are then Programmed into a Crystal (after selecting the size, shape and colour of the Crystal most suitable for you) and then Energised. Now this Crystal will be broadcasting 24/7 the customised vibrations that will reach all the persons you need to deal with, to your terms. It could be an estranged business partner, a dear friend who had misunderstood you, a good old customer who had disappeared, a relative who hates you or a person who had felt blocks in reaching out to you.

In the NewAge Kabbalah Numerology, the word Kabbalah is spelt in many ways : kabala, kabbalah, kabbala, kabalah, qabala, qabalah, qabbalah, cabala, cabbala, cabbalah, cabalah.

QUESTION 2 :

I had my birth name tuned with a popular Numerologist. When I complained to him after an year that there had been no positive results, he advised me to write and rewrite my tuned name 48 times a day, for atleast the next 10 years – for empowerment, he said. I find it labourious and it also eats into my precious time. Is it worth it ?

ANSWER :

It simply is not worth it. The concept that the name vibrations should be empowered is very correct. I agree. But how do you do it ? Definitely not by writing and rewriting it daily. I mean, how can you empower vibrations by just repeatedly rewriting it ? It is merely wasting the time and energy and nothing else.

There are dedicated tools and methods for creating, empowering, amplifying and broadcasting the name vibrations, to bring about sustained results. The best way of doing this is to dedicate the ideal crystal for this job, program it for solving the problem or meeting the purpose and activate it. These energy techniques are of very advanced level and have no similarities with energy healing methods like Reiki.

QUESTION 3 :

I have changed my name as per Numerology. Accordingly, I have changed my signature too. Shall I have to change my name in government documents, share certificates, gazette, etc. ?

ANSWER :

Yes, because you are forced to announce the name change and it will have it’s own definite legal implications. You have to go through all the red tape and spend time and money in these procedures.

But not in my method of NewAge Kabbalah Numerology. Because the converted vibrations reach and attract all those who have to be reached and informed – in your personal life and professional life, permanently.

In fact, what is nice about this whole system is that you need not announce the name change itself to anybodyelse. Whether you announce or not, you fully get to have all the benefits of the newly tuned name.

Which means there is no necessity whatsoever to change your signature or go through tedius red tape procedures with governmental agencies, etc. and waste both your time and money. Fantastic, isn’t it ?

QUESTION 4 :

I had my Company’s name changed as per Numerology, after a heavy slump in it’s fortunes. Now I am forced to readvertise massively the newly tuned name and my advertising bills are becoming very heavy. Not only that, I have lost a lot of good will and reputation that was identified with the previous name. My Numerologist says you can’t eat the cake and have it too. Is there a way out ?

ANSWER :

Yes, there is. I can custom build a Crystal Energy Field for your re-tuned Company name which will be transmitting positive vibrations 24/7, so that your original purpose is fully solved.No need to relaunch expensive media campaigns in the new name/brand. You can continue to display your old and trusted Company name but still enjoy all the new benefits ! Yes, you can eat the cake and have it too !

In fact, in my method of NewAge Kabbalah Numerology, there is absolutely no need to announce the name change at all. That way, you get to save a lot of good money wasted on re-advertising.

QUESTION 5 :

Is it possible to do Name Energy Correction for my whole family through a single Crystal Energy Field ?

ANSWER :

Yes, it is possible to undertake the Name Energy Correction of a whole family in a single Crystal Energy Field through the Advanced Versions of NewAge Kabbalah Numerology. For example, in Advanced Version II, it is possible to accomodate 8 members of the same family whereas in Advanced Version III, as many as 12 members can be counted in. In fact in these Advanced Versions, what is being done is much more than Name Correction, it is Personal Energy Correction itself.

So now, does Numerology really work ?

Yes, but only if properly Custom Programmed Energy Tools (like Crystal Energy Fields) are used to transmit the Name Vibrations.

About author:

Janarrdhana Guptha is an Energy Consultant, Kabbalah Energy Numerologist, Crystal Master, Fengshui & Vaastu Researcher & Clairvoyant Karma Reader. His speciality is permanent Karma Energy Correction through custom-built Crystal Energy Fields. His E-Mail : cr***********@***oo.com. His website :http://www.crystal-vaastu.com/home.htm & http://www.newage-kabbalah-numerology.com

The Truth About Numerology and Why It Works

By Jon Weaver

Numerology is a system of numbers for measuring the vibration of the letters of the alphabet, so that human personality, desire, thought, action and experience may be easily understood in accurate mathematical values.

Numerology is not new, except as a new phase is always added to any subject by its revival from the past and its adaptation to modern needs. The philosophy of numbers condenses the wisdom and knowledge of seven thousand years, for in ancient times the same numerical values which we are using today were associated with the languages long since discarded.

 

 

As human intelligence expands and comprehends larger possibilities for the present and future, it gropes for and adopts new words through which to make its comprehension apparent. While dictionaries become larger, alphabets remain much the same and the exact values of the numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 are not at all affected from generation to generation. Any alphabet is just a scale of letters capable of being collected and arranged into many different combinations, just as the keys of a musical scale can be adapted to express varying moods in composition; the letters and keys themselves however remain the same.

Letters considered apart from words describing a thought or from a name attached to an animate or inanimate object, are found to be sounds of a definite vibratory frequency which can be measured by number. Anything then that has a name has a number and this number found by the addition of the numerical value of the letters which are used to construct the word, is an exact key to the character of the thing named. By this same number can be found the proper relationship to all other words, all other names, all other personalities.

Numerology is so immediately useful as well as a fascinating pastime, that it has fallen into disrepute as merely a fad for choosing lucky numbers and changing names. There is much more than these elementary uses, in fact if the subject is seriously studied and applied it will be found a livable, workable science psychology and philosophy of life.

Every form of modern engineering is a method for analyzing, reconstructing, building, transmuting or reclaiming material and for accomplishing this according to some system of calculation, measurement or deduction erected from a mathematical premise. Numerology in its true sense is also an extension of mathematical principles, erected for the purpose of Human Engineering whereby human material may be analyzed, reclaimed, improved, character built and human experience understood.

The social philosophy of Numerology addresses the moral and spiritual limitations of unaided approach the problems of human living. Life must be understood in its character and living relationship to the individual, and each life-time must be seen as containing experiences not necessarily common to all other humans, and with the aid of numerology, you can be shown more of that unique path.

About author:

FREE information and articles on all aspects of Numerology!Discover your personal numbers and what they really mean. It’s FREE! Click here: http://www.NumerologyRevealed.com

By Vitae Bergman

Every year offers you a new vibration for your work or play. According to the numerology system of rhythms, we humans journey through cycles that are nine years in duration. Each year you enter a new vibration pattern for the cycle you are in. Knowing your major energy expression for a particular year, you are more likely to govern your life more effectively. You only need your Birthday Numbers you can play this game.

 

THIS IS HOW IT WORKS Combine the numbers of your month and day.

An example: Oct 25 – translates into 10 + 25, which adds up to
35. Reduce this to a single digit and you get 8.

Now add up the number of the present year, 2006. 2006 adds up to
8.

So, 8 + 8 = 16 = 7. If Oct 25 were your actual birthday, your
number for 2006 would be 7. This would be your seventh year in
the nine-year cycle.

WHAT IS 2006 LIKE FOR YOU?

If this is a #1 year for you, you are beginning a whole new
cycle. Before launching into your new cycle, be sure no loose
ends are carried over from the previous nine-year cycle.

It may take all of January to rehearse what the previous nine
years have been for you. What major life lessons were you
grappling with and did you resolve those issues?

Next get a sense of what is before you to address in terms of  personal growth. What will you want to accomplish for yourself in the next nine-year cycle? This is your year to focus on you.

These are big questions. Might mean a full year, this 1st year of the nine years, devoted to this kind of self-examination.

Important to recognize the key features of your particular nine-year cycle, which are based on the nine stages of life. A person in her 20’s will be at a different stage of development compared to one in her 30’s or 40’s…and so on.

If this is a #2 year for you, in terms of your major theme for this nine-year cycle, you will do well to cultivate your

cooperative style. Arriving at a more balanced place with yourself, and becoming more harmonious with your fellows could be your major accomplishment for this year.

If this is a #3 year for you, then this is your year for making big strides with your interactions with self and with others. This means: become more creative, more flexible, more daring. Don’t hang on to the tried and true mannerisms and ways that have become ruts in your repertoire.

If this is a #4 year for you, then this year is best spent in stabilizing and integrating the newly grasped accomplishments of the previous three years. Get yourself ready for the big action coming up in the next year. This can be viewed as your quiet period. Your friends might wonder if you’ve buried yourself in a cave because you were so expressive the year before. But in actuality you are establishing more firmly the foundation from which you will be operating during the remaining years of the cycle.

If this is a #5 year for you, then it’s the best year to be fully active in your work or play. Your energy is high. This is a pivotal point as well. You stand at the midpoint and can see where you have come from and where you are going in terms of this cycle of personal growth. You can clearly see how much you have improved your way of being. You are ready to plunge into the world with your new sense of the inner power that has mad
you more sturdy.

If this is a #6 year for you, now you are fully able to reach out and be of service to others, more effectively than duringthe previous years of this cycle. Your heart has matured to a more meaningful depth of feeling. And you are able to bring your inner power to the fore and apply it in all that you do, in your professional calling and in your personal relationships. And in the way you regard yourself as well.

If this is a #7 year for you, you find that your energy for learning new things is quite high. You can afford to be more inquisitive than ever. You feel as if you’ve returned to your school years, all there is to learn and discover excites you. Wisdom will seem to be more accessible to you.

If this is a #8 year for you, then your leadership qualities want to have expression. You are approaching the end of this cycle. You may be in your 30’s and have come to a better understanding of your power to lead. Your urge to take charge of things will be ineluctable. You just know what needs doing and how to get things moving. Obstacles are easily and creatively dealt with. You can do what needs to be done with sensitivity and with a caring heart.

AND FINALLY

If this is a #9 year for you, then you’ve reached a new level of wisdom. Your thoughts and actions reveal a beneficent heart. There’s a mellowness in your Style and others take notice. They want to benefit from your insights and support. You find yourself able to be more caring than ever. It’s been a good nine years.

Next time, I will focus on the how each day brings with it a different mood, or emotional pitch, out of which you operate, and what you can do to avoid pitfalls.

About author:
Vitae Bergman has been a numerologist for over 25 years. He offers a course for beginners who wish to practice the art of numerology and become professional numerologists. You can find him at http://www.joyfulnumerology.com

By Teresa Michelsen

Essays on Numerology and the Tarot ACES What I believe about the Aces is that they require consciousness. In other words, especially in the context of a reading, they are not just raw powers, unfertilized seeds, hidden gifts. The Aces represent the point of conception and conceptualization. Their number is one, which represents consciousness of self – “I am”, and is related to the conscious mind of the Magician. They represent the point at which an idea, thought, feeling, gift, or energy becomes known in our lives. It is not yet acted upon, manifested, or maybe even thought about, but it identifies itself and its potential.

 

Here are some examples from life, that I associate with Aces: Wands: the moment of conception (for a man), the moment you realize what direction you want your career to take, the flash of inspiration that eventually gives rise to a creative work of art or writing, a moment of personal revelation about yourself and your life, the moment when you realize that you need to a take a life-altering course of action. Cups: a rush of unexpected emotion that wakes you up to something you’re subconsciously feeling, the moment you realize who your life partner may be, a gift of a something beautiful or aesthetic that brings peace or calm, a spiritual vision, a creative inspiration, also the moment of conception (for a woman).

Swords: the first idea or emergent concept that gives rise to a line of philosophical inquiry or research, a flash of insight into how to solve a problem, any “first thought” that leads you in a new direction, the moment when the pieces of the puzzle suddenly click together. Pentacles: conceptualization in the mind’s eye of a thing or creation – a visualization of a garden, woodworking project, house, or anything you create with your own hands. A moment when you realize you can build or create something tangible, such as your own business, or writing a novel. The day you decide you want to own a home or have a family.

A sudden gift of funds that changes your life – a grant, scholarship, inheritance – or even the idea to seek such funds and what you want to do with them. The moment when you first realize you want to change something about your body, health, or physical surroundings. What these all have in common is *consciousness* of an emergent idea – a seed yes, but visible, germinated, and ready to put down roots (the twos) and then flower (the threes). Almost by definition, the minute you turn over an Ace in a tarot reading, the client will become conscious (if they are not already) of the potential of that energy to manifest in their life. This is the moment when some elemental power in the Universe manifests itself in a *particular form* in your life and says “I am” or perhaps “I can be if you will it so”. TWOS The Aces represent a generative energy that identifies the potential for some new opportunity in our lives. The Aces are associated with the Magician, conscious thought, and masculine energy. In the Twos, we find the next step in manifestation of this new idea. The Twos are associated with the High Priestess, and represent a reflective, thoughtful, feminine energy stage. Here we take our new idea and we ponder it, plan for it, start the preparations, and begin weighing the possibilities. Choice between two alternatives is a key aspect of the Twos – to keep what we have or try for something new – to evaluate our new idea and decide whether to actually do it or not. Here we must look at our new idea, lover, emotion, etc., and make a choice about committing to it or setting it aside and waiting for the next possibility to arise. In the Twos, there is interaction with others – the self vs. the not-self – and decisions to be made that have long-term implications. Here are some real-life examples of the Twos: Swords: The first time we take our new idea and tell it to someone else. We perceive their reaction (good or bad). We try to decide if it really is a good idea and should be acted upon, or just a wild imagining. We do some research to see whether others have already had this idea and what they thought about it. We hold actual activity in abeyance until we have thought our idea through some more and decide whether to pursue it. Cups: Our rush of feeling for someone else has turned into a real relationship. This is the stage where we get to know each other closely, and decide whether or not to commit to this relationship over the long-term. We learn each others good points and bad points, compatibilities and incompatibilities, and as yet have not made any decisions, just enjoying the ride. In the meantime, we begin to think about what a future with this person might be like, even if we have not yet spoken of it. Wands: We are considering starting a new life. We have something stable already built, but are considering leaving it and heading out into a new direction, to become a new person. We are weighing the risks against the potential gain of expansion of our horizons, but have not yet left the security of our homes. This could be an adolescent considering moving out of his parent’s home, a person deciding whether or not to leave their marriage, or a businesswoman considering moving to a new country to take a new job. At this time, all the considerations are weighed and any planning or preparation is done that is needed. Disks: Here we are faced with a physical or material decision that has emotional undertones. We are keeping our options open by juggling more things than we can really handle over the long-term. Meanwhile we struggle with the internal process of deciding which of these things to keep and which to let go. A new opportunity (Ace) has entered our life, but to take advantage of it, other things must be dropped. An example might be working long hours to build a consulting business while still holding a full-time job, knowing that eventually either the consulting business will take off and you can quit your job, or it will fail and you will go back to your first job without the extra hours of work. Here we try to determine if this new financial or material opportunity is really viable and worthy of our full attention and investment. THREES The Threes can be associated with the Empress, and are the productive and fertile union of the pure male principle (embodied in the Magician) and the pure female principle (embodied in the High Priestess), and are considered balanced and harmonious for this reason (all the multiples of three are). The Threes therefore represent the traditional associations of fertility and abundance, but also the first earthly manifestation of the new gift or potential that came with the Aces, which has been pondered, planned for, evaluated, and decided upon in the Twos. Even at this point, the journey is by no means finished. In fact, it is just getting started – but the first actual steps toward making it a reality have been taken. Another aspect of the Threes is the intervention or involvement of three people. Just as the Twos deal with duality, which often involves another person, so the Threes take this one step further – leading to even greater productivity or greater difficulty, joy or pain. Here are some card associations corresponding to these aspects of the Threes: Pentacles: The first actual use of a newly learned skill to make something. A project moves from blueprints to construction. A family moves into its new home after deciding to move across the country and start a new life. A financial investment pays off with dividends. Working in teams to accomplish something practical. Cups: Friends or family celebrate a commitment to a relationship, such as a betrothal – this is the stage when the relationship has been publicly announced and celebrated, but the marriage has not yet taken place. A pregnancy or adoption. The first harvest of the season, celebration and sharing these fruits with others. Swords: The moment that a new direction of thought is manifested, for example, a person writes the first chapter of a new book. A grant is received and a scientific research program begun. A person presents their ideas at a conference and gets public or professional feedback and criticism. The intervention of a third party into a previously stable relationship, resulting in jealousy or heartbreak. Wands: After long planning, a person starts a new business and gets their first contract. A person makes a decision to change their lifestyle and begins to take the actions required to achieve this change. A person takes their first independent steps out into the world and goes exploring. A new job offer is accepted that reflects a change of career. The expansion of a business to include employees or a new partner. All of these situations lead to growth, sometimes painful, sometimes joyful. FOURS Fours are identified with consolidation, security, stability, building foundations for the future, resting, and regeenerating. Just as the Three are expansive and creative, the Fours represent consolidation, contraction, and conservation of energy. They are the natural counterbalancing force to the Threes, and a restful stop before continuing on to the unstable energy of the Fives. We can liken the first four numbers to the seasons of the year. Aces are springtime – the germination of the seed, the first shoots of the plants, the thawing and beginning of a new cycle. Twos are summer – putting down roots and sending up stems and leaves – the potential of the plant beginning to be realized. Threes are autumn – the fruiting, ripening, and harvest of the plant and celebration of the harvest. And Fours are winter – resting, conserving energy, established plants putting down deeper roots during dormancy, preparing for the next cycle. Here are some real-life examples of fours: Swords: Restful contemplation after a painful experience which has expanded our understanding of ourselves, others, or the world. Time is needed to heal our mental wounds and to integrate what we have learned in a positive manner. During this time, we try to fit what we have experienced into a mental framework and make sense of it. This could be a solitary vacation or retreat to try to sort out your direction in life, rehabilitation after surgery, a mental illness or drug addiction, or as simple as taking some time off after completion of a particularly demanding or difficult project at work. Wands: In this card there is celebration, but also a formalization of a business or romantic relationship into a partnership that lays the foundations for the future. Here we are making a final commitment and agreeing to live by certain promises, rules, or ethical standards freely given to one another, that will set some limits on future activities but also provide a solid and stable foundation for growth together with our chosen partner. A marriage or formation of a business partnership are good examples. Cups: Here we begin to see that all is not love and perfection in our relationships with others. We have gotten past the breathless excitement, romance, and passion of our early relationships, and reality and familiarity is setting in. This is a test of our ability to see things as they really are, to establish a deeper relationship with someone that is not based on transient pleasures. Or else, we may discover that there is nothing really solid there and we are bored. This could be likened to a mid-life or mid-marriage crisis. If a couple gets through this stage together, then their marriage nearly always comes out the better or stronger for it. Or, they may do something they bitterly regret later (5 of cups). Disks: This card represents consolidation of our finances or material possessions. In a positive light, after the expansion and risk-taking of the Threes, we pull back a bit and make sure we are providing for our future. We may focus on building our assets carefully, rather than investing in dot.coms. We establish bank accounts for our kids’ future college expenses and for retirement. We protect our investments through insurance and careful money management, and put a hold on any risky activities. We pay attention to our diet and exercise, trying to hold on to our youth and good health. FIVES Fives are an interesting dichotomy in tarot – in traditional decks they are painful, negative cards, and yet in some more modern and feminist decks they are cards of spirituality, magick, and womanhood. The same duality can be seen in their associated trump, the Hierophant. On the one hand, he represents in some decks and to some readers all that is wrong with organized religion – corruption, greed, and intolerance. On the other hand, he represents the link between the divine and the mundane, the Word of Spirit brought to earth. Some decks assign the Hierophant to the element of earth, in his association with Taurus. To other minds, he is best represented by Spirit rather than one of the four earthly elements. In traditional numerology, Fives represent instability and change. After the highly stable (and some might say rigid) Fours, a fair amount of destabilizing energy is needed to push oneself out of this stable or stagnant situation to allow further growth. One characteristic of the Fives is that the change is generally not voluntary or expected – therefore, it can be frightening and there may be a real or perceived lack of control over the situation and one’s reactions to it. Hence the traditional associations of the Fives in tarot with the most negative situations in life. The movement from the Fives to the more harmonious Sixes can be brought about through a personal or spiritual transformation or through the grace of God/dess – and this is where the other side of the Fives can be seen, even in the traditional decks. The number 5 is also associated with women, and with magick. These associations may have been frightening to some originally, and added to the negative associations with the Fives (as in the fifth sephiroth of the kabalah). However, some newer decks, such as Wheel of Change, have begun to celebrate these as positive associations. The symbol of the upward-pointing pentagram is one that often appears, as well as four elements or directions integrated into central white energy in a ritual circle. I have been playing with a Tree of Life that encompasses the scientific aspects of creation, as well as spirituality, and some of the ideas that are coming out relate to the trumps numbered 0-5 – they can be likened to the natural creation of the earth, as follows: 0 – The Fool – spirit, nothingness, the origin of the universe 1 – The Magician – air, coalescing of swirling gases and elements into matter and molecules 2 – The High Priestess – water, the formation of the earth’s oceans and atmospheres, the creation of the necessary conditions for life 3 – The Empress – earth, the abundance of plant and animal life that arose next 4 – The Emperor – fire, the spark of consciousness and self-awareness that arises in humans and organization of the humans into civilization and the arts of agriculture, trade, law, government 5 – The Hierophant – spirit, the reaching out of human civilization for something greater than itself, a return to our connection with the origin, but filtered through our perception of the material world Notice that the trumps 0-5 comprise the four elements, bracketed on either side by Spirit. The trumps 1-4 are known as the “heavenly and earthly parents”, and this is quite interesting in this context :-). Some real-life examples of the Fives: Wands: Intense competition at work or in the marketplace, a clash of wills while the argument is still going on and no-one is sure who will come out on top, internal conflict caused by uncertainty about one’s identity or a challenge to deeply held ideals, instability that threatens a marriage or business partnership, scattering of energies due to lack of focus. Swords: Being confronted with new ideas that feel threatening to the established order of things, rampant idealism overriding calm reason, facing a harsh reality, mental instability resulting in cruelty or victimization, verbal battles or contests, a period of revolutionary change. Pentacles: Financial instability, loss or sudden change of job or living situation, being physically out of balance or ill, facing a period of hardship, rejection or isolation, physical violence or accidents, stress. Cups: Loss of a relationship, coping with death or illness of a family member or friend, grieving, emotional instability (positive or negative), self-doubt, fluctuating self-esteem, creative change. SIXES After the instability and stress of the Fives, the Sixes bring a welcome feeling of success and having overcome difficulties and obstacles. After sorrows and travails, joys taste even sweeter, especially since we have worked hard to reach this point. Now we enter a time of relative stability, but unlike the rigid stability of the Fours, this is a stability in which there is flow and interaction. I think of the Sixes as being in harmony with the world around us, letting energy flow through, into, and out of us. Here we understand the rewards of giving and are open to the blessings as they return to us in equal measure. We are no longer rigidly afraid of change nor so unstable that we are out of control, but somewhere in the middle, and the light shines on us in this happy state. This centered existence is the pivot around which our soul turns, and having once experienced this, we can climb to even greater achievements. The Fives and the Sevens both have their challenges, but to me the difference is that Fives are often thrust on us when we are not prepared and are not willing to let go of the Fours. Sevens, on the other hand, are challenges we choose freely, that will lead us to greater maturity and mastery in the end. Without our successful and centered time in the Sixes, we would not be ready to take up the challenge of the Sevens. Indeed, the Sixes are so wonderful there may be many times when we wish to just stop at this point in the cycle and not move on :). We cannot really do this, but we can stop and rest for a while, and use this time to recharge, energize, and enjoy life. Real-life examples of the Sixes: Wands: getting that job you always wanted and finding that it’s a perfect match for your abilities, getting a promotion, receiving recognition for something you deserve and can feel good about, winning through skill or ability, achieving a goal, being a good role model. Swords: overcoming fears and looking ahead, seeing the light at the end of the tunnel, moving steadily toward a destination of your choice, having your plans in order and the means to carry them out, making good progress after a period of intense difficulty, enjoying the journey. Cups: being in harmony with a friend, sibling, or lover, finding a safe and relaxing place, enjoying simple everyday pleasures like gardening or walking, feeling protected, spending quality time with your children, being on vacation, feeling at peace, simplifying your life. Pentacles: feeling relaxed about your money, believing and experiencing that the universe will provide for you, feeling the pleasure of sharing your wealth with others, enjoying your possessions without being overly attached to them, being in good health. SEVENS One concept of Sevens centers around the idea of challenges, chosen by and for ourselves as part of our path toward personal mastery (the Eights). After the harmonious existence of the Sixes, if we are completely satisfied there, we might never choose to move above that level. Indeed, for many people who achieve success in life, however they choose to define it, they may stay happily in the Sixes and never think of looking beyond their good fortune and where their hard work has brought them. Others feel an urge, a tug to go beyond anything they have achieved so far and meet a personal challenge. In life from the Ones through the Sixes, we have been learning to live successfully in the world and reach a harmonious balance with it. From this point on, any further we go is a more personal journey. In the Sevens, we choose our next challenge to focus on. The concept of personal choice here is critical. In the Fives, we are faced with difficulties and challenges that were not of our own choosing and which we are forced to deal with in order to reach the Sixes. We are often unprepared for the Fives, clinging to the stability of the Fours and refusing to look ahead. In the Sixes, we are prepared and we can see. We have reached a point of maturity and capability that allows us to look ahead without fear to new horizons and challenges. If we think of the primary 7 card in the Major Arcana, we can clearly see this concept. Here the driver of the Chariot carries with him all the forces he learned to balance in the Sixes – positive/negative, the four elements, the 12 astrological signs, etc. He starts out with the tools he needs for success, and he chooses to leave his familiar city and go forth on a journey of self-adventure (one can think of the great heroes of Greek mythology and their quests). This is what the Sevens are about for me. If he succeeds, he will reach new levels of self-knowledge and mastery in the Eights (Strength) and Nines (Hermit). Some real-life examples of the Sevens: Wands: A challenge of personal identity or beliefs. Coming out of the closet. Deciding to live according to a personal philosophy that runs against the mainstream. Defending a doctoral thesis. Taking on a career that is not well-paid but is important to your belief structure. Working for change when outnumbered by the system. Quietly explaining to your Catholic family that you are a Pagan and you plan to read tarot cards for a living. 🙂 Swords: A challenge of ingenuity or ethics. Taking a calculated risk with a possible significant gain or loss. Thinking out of the box, coming up with a creative and unorthodox solution to a difficult problem. Taking a stand on ethical issues in the company or institution that you work for. Knowing when to walk away, even if it means taking a loss, and calmly and maturely making the best of what remains. Learning to make do with less in order to reach a longer-term goal. Cups: A challenge of values, emotions, dreams, or desires. Reaching a point in your life where you feel you can set your own goals and trying to work out what those should be. Questioning the values you were raised with and deciding for yourself what you believe in. Beginning to understand what drives your response to other people and your relationships, and learning how to choose positive life partners. Working through a childhood issue that has been blocking your progress in life. Giving up unproductive fantasies or dreams and replacing them with dreams and hopes that are realistic and achievable. Pentacles: A challenge of long-term planning and practicality. Setting long-term goals for your life and working steadily to achieve them. Learning to value incremental progress over instant gratification. Learning to have patience with yourself and others. Saving money for retirement, college fund, or other important purchase. Buying a home and remodeling it little by little. Planting a garden that will take 20 years to reach maturity, and taking enjoyment in each small change. Making a 5-year plan to get an important promotion at work. EIGHTS The tarot is grouped numerologically into three groups of three, plus the Ten, which is a transitional number. Each group culminates with a multiple of three – 3, 6, 9. The Eight is midway through the third group, starting with the Sevens and culminating with the Nines. Recapping a bit on the Sixes and Sevens – the Sixes are where we find our first real successes in life, and feel in harmony with ourselves, our relationships, and our environment – the pinnacle of the second group of three. In the Sevens, we set ourselves a higher challenge – we choose to work on some aspect of our self or a major project that will take us to a higher level. Unlike some of the earlier challenges we face in the numerological journey, the Sevens are consciously chosen. They represent a graduation or initiation and a step forward in determining our individuality and life purpose, similar to the concepts associated with the Chariot. The Eights represent the mastery and accomplishments for which we are aiming. Once we have defended our ideas, made mature choices about our values and relationships, evaluated our ethical boundaries and willingness to take risks, and established a long-term plan (all Sevens), we begin to see these steps create results. In the Eights, we have reached a position of strength and maturity. Eights are a doubling of the Fours, almost like building another story on top of a firm foundation – very stable and solid (hopefully not too much like a Tower!). At this point, we do not only live in the world, we begin to shape our environment and our reality to resemble our personal vision. The Eights can be associated with the Strength card in the Major Arcana. After passing the tests, breaking free and moving forward on sheer will alone (Chariot), we come to exist with a deep personal strength that arises from setting and meeting our own challenges, facing our fears and darker side, and becoming a master of ourselves. In the Eights, we are not resting on our laurels or enjoying the fruits of our accomplishments (that would be the Nines), but we are still actively engaged in the exciting project that we began in the Sevens. Right now our world revolves around what we are doing and we are reaching new heights and depths. We may be acknowledged as an expert or master by the outside world, or it may be entirely internal, but in the Eights, we know who we are and what we are doing. Some examples of the specific cards: Wands: Here we have successfully defended our ideas or concept and it is all coming together for us. The resources are flying in to do what we need to do, communication is building, activity is bustling to make happen what we believe in and have envisioned. Any minute now, these ideas will come down to earth and be materialized into something substantial that can be presented to others. Imagine a business-man putting together a deal that will create a new company or launch a new product, or perhaps an architect who sees her revolutionary design for a bridge or building rise into the skyline. An artist gathers musicians from all over the world and launches a successful album that crosses over into new markets. A woman joins the Peace Corps and finds a way to bring together resources that provide water to an impoverished African village. Pentacles: A person reaches a deep level of mastery in a particular talent or area. In this card, I see the master-craftsman, the woodworker, the musician. A talent honed by long practice, a deep love of the tools and materials with which he/she works, and a level of earned ability that goes beyond what they have been taught by others. Whether a brick-layer, a tailor or a senior engineer, this person is rock-solid in their ability and sense of self-worth and their identity strongly resonates with their hands and how they use them. They may teach, but more often serve as a quiet role model for others who learn by doing and apprenticing. Cups: A person, having decided what they truly value in the Sevens, begins to actually live their values and takes steps to change their life. Many things may have to be left behind and few taken, even friends and family on occasion, but the journey into self under the Moon of the subconscious is paramount. This is the person who walks the walk and talks the talk, and leaves behind hypocrisy or half-formed, equivocal values systems. Perhaps he gives up his automobile and heats his home solely on renewable energy sources. Perhaps she leaves behind a husband she no longer loves or shares values with and looks for new companions in life. Perhaps after many long years of soul-searching, a person changes their religion to one they truly believe in. After the change, the person lives much more comfortably in the world, without the constant pressure of a lifestyle that doesn’t match one’s beliefs. Swords: This is probably the hardest card to fit into the Eight concept, based on the picture alone. If the Sevens present an ethical or risk-based challenge to your ideas or attitudes, in the Eights we are struggling to throw off the last bit of doubt, hesitation, or obstacles. All of these are in our minds, and here at least all Eight Swords are within easy reach – not falling out of our hands as they were in the Sevens. The mastery in this card is in realizing that we can – it is mastery over our minds and self-doubts. We do have the mental tools to accomplish our objectives, they are gathered all around and are even relatively well-organized. We just need to believe in ourselves enough to see it. The minute we do this, we will be able to use our minds as we wish to, make the connections we have been searching for, solve problems, and generate new ideas. The Eight of Swords once the obstacles are passed represents the senior scientist who runs his lab with confidence that new discoveries will be made each year, the author who now has several books published and can feel secure that she really has a career in writing, or the free-lance consultant who no longer needs to advertise because his talents are well-known in his field and doesn’t lack for business. NINES After setting a new challenge for ourselves in the Sevens, and rising to meet it with maturity and skill in the Eights, the Nines represent completion of this 3-card triad, as well as the entire 1-9 numerological cycle (tens don’t count in numerology – they are considered ones). As such, the Nines are associated with culmination, completion, finalization, wrapping up, winding down, enjoying the fruits of our labors, and reflection on our accomplishments. Being 3 x 3, the third cycle of three, they also represent the abundance and contentment that results from successfully reaching the end of a complete cycle. Alternatively, the cycle may have been a negative one, if things haven’t worked out as we planned. Always, they represent an abundance and the final culmination of whatever we have reaped or created during the cycle – good or bad, loving or angry, joyful or sad. Some ideas on how these concepts relate to the Nines: Pentacles: Retirement, enjoyment of one’s hard-earned possessions, living in the surroundings one has chosen for oneself, being a self-made person, a mature and beautiful garden but with no room to plant new things, the completion of a major project, financial reward for one’s efforts. Cups: Enjoyment of pleasures after a long day’s work, taking a well-deserved vacation or retirement, basking in the enjoyment of having completed all tasks and having no more responsibilities at the moment, a sense of contentment and fulfillment from finishing a creative project, celebration of an accomplishment, a return to childlike enjoyment of life in old age. Wands: Protection of accumulated resources, defending one’s position at the top but being a little past one’s prime, receiving recognition for lifelong career achievements, having a well-developed sense of self-identity and ego, being president of a company or having nowhere higher to go in one’s chosen field. Swords: Completion of an important thought process, publication of a major work, conscious realization of an issue that has been hidden or buried in the subconscious, the point at which a final decision is made and action must be taken, overwhelming thoughts that effect a transformation in the psyche, the culmination of a long and gradual shift in attitudes or beliefs. TENS Tens are the transitional number, the end of one cycle and the beginning of the next. Numerologically, tens are not stand-alone numbers, but reduce to 1 (1+0=1). In association with the Trumps, 10 corresponds to the Wheel of Fortune, which is also all about cycles, endings, and new beginnings. However, the number 10 can be looked at in many other ways – associated with Capricorn, it could be considered a number of great responsibility and solidity – like 4+4+2 – a two-storied tower with a peaked roof (now our Tower is complete – ready to be struck down and rebuilt). Associated with Malkuth on the Tree of Life, it is the number of manifestation, the only number that corresponds to the material world in which we experience our lifetimes – in this association, it is thought of as 3+3+3+1 – the one sphere in the realm of Earth. 10 is a magickal number, produced by the addition of the first four numbers, 1+2+3+4, important in Pythagorean and alchemical philosophy. With all this, what does the number 10 really mean? We can see in it elements of solidity and stability, as well as transition and change. These apparent contradictions are key to the 10s – in the Wheel of Fortune, we have the stable hub and the unchanging elements, as well as a continuous cycle of change around the rim. In the material world, we also have a central core that remains as we cycle through many lifetimes or cycles within a lifetime. The material world we build remains even as we ourselves are transitory through it. The 10s are about how we experience these transitions, what we take with us as well as what we leave behind, what we have built and what we allow to dissolve into the sands of time. It is interesting that the passive suits depict more positive transitions, while the active suits show more difficult transitions – this may have to do with the issues of control and resistance to the turning of the Wheel. Here are some examples of the Tens: Cups: The card of happy endings, yet in real life we don’t live happily ever after, unchanging. A moment of supreme happiness, when all that we have wished for is manifested. We cannot remain long here, because emotions and the water element are fluid and ever-changing. In order to keep this relationship alive, we must look for new sources of inspiration and emotion. This card may also represent the completion of an artistic endeavor – the moment when we frame the canvass and put it on the wall unchanging, only to be gazed at from now on. We ourselves must move on to the next project or risk stagnation and living in suspension. Pentacles: Here we see 10s in their natural element of Earth, representing all that we build in the material world and pass down from generation to generation. This may be the next generation of parents and children in the family, it can be material possessions such as homes or inheritance, cultural knowledge and traditions, or what we leave behind in our work to society to be built on by others. This card represents the time when we pass on what we have held to the next person or generation to hold and use it. While we pass on, what we have created endures and makes up the fabric of family and society. Wands: Wands are integrally associated with our self, our ego, our ideas, and our career. Because we initiate Wands cycles, it is that much harder to let go of them when the time comes – so we carry them around as a burden, unable to see that it is time to release them and go on to the next idea. Giving them up is bittersweet – both a welcome release and a regret. This may represent the moment when a CEO passes the company he built onto his successor and goes into retirement, or when a woman realizes she can no longer personally run every aspect of the department she has built from scratch, or when a family member realizes she does not have to take responsibility for solving everyone else’s problems and she can just live her own life. A person’s ego and self-identity may be quite wrapped up in the previous cycle, and he has to make the transition to investing in a new cycle before the burdens can be willingly laid down. Swords: A transition relating to ideas and attitudes, often more difficult or painful than others. Ideas, habits, and attitudes have a way of getting very strong hold of us and our minds, and when it comes time that it is necessary for a change to occur, it can be very difficult. We may struggle and struggle through the 8s and 9s before we are willing to do whatever is necessary to make the change, and even then, we may have to beat the old attitudes down hard before they finally lie down and give up the ghost. Or, it may come in a rush of surrender to the inevitable, giving ourselves up to the pain in a cathartic release that frees us to experience new ideas and ways of living our life.

About author:
Teresa Michelsen is a tarot reader, author, and teacher with more than 25 years of experience reading tarot. She is well-known on tarot e-mail discussion lists, and has published many articles on tarot on the worldwide web. Teresa teaches on-line tarot courses for beginning and intermediate tarot readers, published her first book on Designing your Own Tarot Spreads in 2003, and published The Complete Tarot Reader in 2005. Her award-winning tarot website, www.tarotmoon.com, is a favorite destination of tarot readers who come for her lessons and articles on tarot, her examples of completed tarot readings, and beautifully laid-out pages on tarot cards and readings. Teresa lives near Tacoma, Washington, and in addition to her tarot work, has home-based businesses in environmental consulting and mediation.
http://www.tarotmoon.com

TAROT AND ASTROLOGY

When we first study tarot, we learn astrological associations with the cards that may or may not come with much explanation. At first we are just focused on learning everything we can, and memorizing meanings and associations. Later we start questioning what these associations mean and what we can do with them. As we learn more about astrology, other questions may arise, including whether or not the associations learned are a good fit, and the differences and similarities between astrology and tarot. Both methods have been used for centuries. What are their strengths and weaknesses?

Does it make sense to use them together, or for different kinds of questions? There are many similarities between tarot and astrology that fascinate practitioners of both disciplines, and have led to many attempts to associate the two practices. Both can be used to create a snapshot in time – a chart or a tarot reading – and answer questions both spiritual and mundane about the past, present, or future. Certain structural elements suggest relationships between astrology and tarot – for example, the four elements are important attributes of the suits in tarot and the houses and signs in astrology.

The 22 major arcana cards can be related easily to the 10 planets plus the 12 signs of the zodiac in astrology (although it must be recognized that when tarot was first developed, only 7 planets were known). These relationships have been used to develop the correspondences between tarot and astrology that most of us learn as part of our tarot studies. However, it is important to recognize that correspondences do not necessarily imply identical or even similar meanings between elements of the two systems.

The Moon in tarot can have a very different meaning from the Moon in astrology, for example. Learning the similarities and differences between these archetypes in the two practices broadens our understanding of both, and I am developing a series of articles that explores these archetypes in depth, the first of which is provided below. Each astrological planet and sign is discussed in terms of how it is similar to and different from the tarot cards with which it is associated in both modern and Renaissance systems. In addition to similarities, there are many ways in which the two practices are different. Tarot is largely a visual medium. Although we may read books and learn keywords for the cards, the concepts and images we relate to tarot are largely based in our visual memory, which is in turn linked to the collective unconscious. Astrology is a much more mathematical practice, in which precision and analytical skills are necessary. It could almost be described as spatial and temporal, while tarot is symbolic and conceptual. These attributes influence the strengths and weaknesses of each method, and suggest their complementary nature. One interesting area to explore is how each method deals with time. Tarot is very fluid with respect to time. One can ask questions regarding the past, present, or future, but the nature of the reading will be strongly influenced by how the question is asked, and issues from different time periods may blend seamlessly together. Alternative futures can be evaluated and explored, and the concept of free will to affect one’s future (at least in part) is often a key feature of the tarot reader’s philosophy. Many readers find that predicting timeframes with tarot is extremely difficult, though there are systems available for doing so. Astrology, on the other hand, is all about time, with a high degree of precision. One of its primary purposes is to lay out the cycles corresponding to the movements of planets that affect our lives. Unlike most anything in tarot, these cycles are what they are – there is no changing them. The key in doing a chart reading is to understand what challenges and opportunities these cycles present, and how the energies of the different planets interact with each other and the houses they are in. Astrology can be thought of as presenting a vast backdrop of energies and cycles that affect our lives. These energies are different for each person, but are somewhat general. Each person is born with a certain set of potentials, which he then uses in different ways during his lifetime. As the planets cycle over time, different energies come into play, with different qualities. Some may complement those that the person is best able to use, and others may be very difficult to experience. Certain combinations may tend to precipitate a crisis or learning opportunity, but how these potentials are used and whether anything significant happens is up to the person and the set of circumstances he finds himself in. Understanding these energies and cycles is often helpful in understanding why we feel the way we do or feel motivated to work on something or make changes. Sometimes just knowing that a particular issue or timeframe is likely to be difficult or challenging helps us prepare and get through it successfully. Tarot, on the other hand, is good at looking at the specifics of any situation, and not as good at looking at the long-term cycles and timing of a situation. For example, an astrological chart might suggest that during a certain month, a person could experience an emotional challenge involving the sixth house, which includes issues relating to health, duty, work, service, and pets, among other things. As a person gets close to that month, he is in the best position to know which of these areas is most likely to be the actual issue (if any – astrological energies do not always manifest as would be indicated by their potential). Tarot can be used to explore exactly what is going on, what that person’s options are, and what course of action might help this person deal with the challenges he is facing. The chart could then be consulted once again to indicate specific times when these actions would likely be most successful, or when a problem is likely to be alleviated if the person takes appropriate action. The combination of tarot and astrology provides a powerful and insightful set of tools to use in exploring almost any question. From the most basic method of looking at a birthdate to evaluate how a person might typically approach a problem, to an in-depth combination of chart and tarot reading analysis, astrology has much to offer tarot readers at every level. Stay tuned for more on tarot and astrology, including a new area of the website which will be devoted to combined tarot/astrology readings…

About author:
Teresa Michelsen is a tarot reader, author, and teacher with more than 25 years of experience reading tarot. She is well-known on tarot e-mail discussion lists, and has published many articles on tarot on the worldwide web. Teresa teaches on-line tarot courses for beginning and intermediate tarot readers, published her first book on Designing your Own Tarot Spreads in 2003, and published The Complete Tarot Reader in 2005. Her award-winning tarot website, www.tarotmoon.com, is a favorite destination of tarot readers who come for her lessons and articles on tarot, her examples of completed tarot readings, and beautifully laid-out pages on tarot cards and readings. Teresa lives near Tacoma, Washington, and in addition to her tarot work, has home-based businesses in environmental consulting and mediation.
http://www.tarotmoon.com

By Dianne Hardwick

Professionals have their regulatory bodies and codes of practice, but individuals involved in mystical work are often self taught. This can leave them feeling they are in something of a black hole when it comes to dealing with the public appropriately. From the point of view of the client, it makes it difficult to know who to choose for a reading. Ethical principles should guide all practitioners of the divinatory arts, whatever their field.

Talking with a group of astrologers confirmed for me that the same types of problems face all “readers” whose clients have come seeking advice: dealing with difficult questions; the possibility of tragic events; what to do when people have depression or issues they cannot handle alone, and especially, avoiding dependency and the pressure it places on the practitioner.

It is dependency on the reader that I will discuss here and how readers and their clients can avoid the problem. Initially, I would say, be clear about motives. As a practitioner, I think the best position is to have a set of strong values with regard to your work that accord with your spiritual perspective. Being a person who tries to live her life by Buddhist teachings I ask myself, “What is my motivation in doing this kind of work?” The answer that initially springs to mind is to help others by giving them the insights gleaned from a reading, but it is more than that. It is to empower others to choose for themselves how to deal more effectively with problems in their lives by giving them information.

Encouraging clients to become dependent on more and more readings is not ethical. Client dependency usually occurs when people have a simplistic view of divination. They believe that a reading reveals “Fate” – a future written in tablets of stone that cannot be avoided. They see themselves in the role of puppets on a stage where larger forces are pulling the strings. If they get the “wrong answer” to their queries then real stress can result and clients can pressure readers to tell them what they want to hear by asking the same question again and again, until they get the “right” answer. It’s easy to forget how much the client invests in what a reader says and how careful readers need to be when faced with someone overwhelmed by life problems. The Tarot cards show potentials, trends and possibilities for a person at any one time. At no stage does that person lose their free will. Readers need to show clients how they have choices and need to be proactive in their lives. “If you follow this path, then X may occur. If you follow that path then Y is more likely”. Does anybody get a new job or a new romance if they don’t make some moves towards their goal? A good reading should show ways of making desirable changes. If you are a client looking for a reader who can give you real insight into your possibilities then you should be looking for someone who has the insight to explain things in this way. At no time should you feel you have lost control of your choices. The purpose of divination is to seek guidance not intimidation. Both “seers” and clients need to adopt an exploratory frame of mind in a reading rather than a predictive one and clients should ask, when they book a reading, “How do you work? Is there only one answer to a problem or am I free to explore the possibilities open to me?”

About author:
Dianne Hardwick has been reading tarot for over 30 years. For a free astrology forecast visit her website at http://www.diannehardwick.com Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Dianne_Hardwick
http://www.diannehardwick.com

By Mary Shadow

Over the years I have used Tarot cards as a tool to gain insight, clarity and achieve greater control over issues in life. 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.

It is believed that Tarot Cards originated in the 14th-15th centuries. There are many possibilities as to where tarot cards come from including Egypt, France, Italy, Spain, China and India.

The type of Tarot Card Deck used is based upon personal preference. I have used the Rider Waite Tarot Deck and and Robin Wood Tarot Card Deck in the past. More recently, I have experimented using the Goddess Tarot Deck. Many beginners like to use the Rider Waite Tarot Deck. One piece of advice I shall give to you regarding chosing a deck, is to use a NEW deck of cards. A used deck of cards may be carrying the energy of the previous owner and will interfere with your reading.

Traditionally, there are 78 cards in a Tarot Card deck and is separated into two parts; the Major Arcana and Minor Arcana. The 22 Major Arcana Cards of the Tarot deck symbolise the universal patterns of human nature. The 56 Minor Arcana cards of the Tarot deck is further divided into 4 suits- Pentacles, Cups, Swords & Wands. They represent the energy, emotions and activities of our daily lives.[/fusion_text][/fusion_builder_column][fusion_builder_column type=”1_1″ layout=”1_1″ spacing=”” center_content=”no” hover_type=”none” link=”” min_height=”” hide_on_mobile=”small-visibility,medium-visibility,large-visibility” class=”” id=”” background_color=”” background_image=”” background_position=”left top” background_repeat=”no-repeat” border_size=”0″ border_color=”” border_style=”solid” border_position=”all” padding=”” dimension_margin=”” animation_type=”” animation_direction=”left” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_offset=”” last=”no”][fusion_text]As each tarot card has a unique astrological meaning and numeric significance, the cards can be used to gain insight, clarity, and achieve greater control over issues involving relationships, life changes, work and career, health, spirituality, dreams, and family.

Whilst, anyone can do a tarot reading, it takes commitment to be able to truly understand the cards.

May the Guides be with you always,

About author:
Mary Shadow has been performing psychic readings for over 10 years. Her and her team are renowned for reuniting lost lovers and showing the way to happy long lasting relationships. She has become an expert in online and phone psychic readings. Visit Mary Shadow at http://www.MaryShadow.com.
http://www.MaryShadow.com

By All About Tarot.com

Getting the most from a Tarot card reading relies on the reader’s ability to perceive not only the symbolic meaning from the spread, but also the mystical significance. Although every card of both the Major and the Minor Arcana possesses its own individual symbolism within the representative images on the cards, it is the deeper, spiritual enlightenment of the cards that leads to a greater understanding. Attaining this type of perception is the key to making Tarot a truly valid part of life.

The 76 cards of a Tarot deck each have a specific, external meaning. These are specified by the positive and negative characteristics governing the chief aspects of our lives (Major Arcana), as well as the day-to-day import reflected in the suits and by each card within the suits (Minor Arcana).

The representative images, however, go much deeper than what they portray at first glance. These images address the part of the psyche beyond our ability to control. They touch our inner selves, our subconscious, that part of ourselves that encompasses our innermost core.

And this core provides the basis for all the influences that affect our character, that send both positive and negative energy, that govern the directional path in which our lives proceed – or stall.

With the Seven of Cups, for example, the surface meaning implies material wealth. However, when the theme of the card, which includes delusional thoughts of acquiring wealth, becomes known to the reader, the Seven of Cups represents something else altogether. If the asker wants to know, for instance, when he or she will when the lottery, this card – by itself – shows the futility of such a pursuit.

However, depending upon the position of the card in the spread, other cards surrounding that Seven of Cups, the events that have previously occurred in the questioner’s life, and the very deepest driving forces within that person, the card could very well imply tremendous riches on the horizon.

The mystical and symbolic meanings of Tarot cards become intertwined as the practitioner of this “secret and closed” art becomes more adept at his or her readings. With experience and the earnest searching for the deeper meanings found in the spread of a Tarot deck, the reader eventually comes to understand how and why this art has persevered over the centuries as an indicator of the human condition – past, present, and with skill and patience, the future.

Our psyches reach out to instruct, warn, comfort, and console us in many ways. Throughout the history of mankind, people have striven to understand their deeper selves, and Tarot remains, after hundreds of years, as one more tool to do so. So whether one is just beginning the journey toward understanding or has been a voyager on the path for many years, the Tarot persists because it calls to searchers of enlightenment. Tarot beckons like a siren’s song to teach the secret things of the universe. Will you be one who answers that call?

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