• Animating the Tarot Pips: An Introduction

    This is a series born out of a book idea. Instead of going the book route, I will share most of what I had in mind here in pieces or parts. This is the introduction, as such, I’d like to keep it brief but with enough context to wet interest.

    Firstly, the intention for this series is to add ripples, however minor, to the sea of tarot voices. I am not all knowing and neither am I judge nor jury. Remember, that how you read tarot is your journey, what you receive from others should enrich your overall divining and tarot craft, giving depth, and bringing perspective to your experience with the cards. As I’ve heard stated elsewhere, take what resonates, leave the rest.

    My approach to reading the cards starts from an experiential position. It is a phenomenological approach rather than a symbolic one. In other words, my focus is on the individual experience of the image rather than on symbols that point toward abstract concepts. I prioritize what the individual, me or you as the card reader, sees and experiences in a lived sense.

    We might not all be emperors, popes, and charioteers, but we can approach the emperor, the pope, and the charioteer from a personal perspective, what you or I as readers have lived that approaches the gestures, the positions, the body posture, and the bearing of said characters. This approach favors the subjective within each of us, spurring us, as card readers, to contemplate questions of agency and function vis à vis the cards on the table. In other words, and always within the context of the question, the reader looks at what type of interactions are going on in the cards, reflective of the question and the context.

    What I’d like to explore with this series is the experiential and phenomenological within the tarot. In a sense it is a living the tarot approach. Attending to what within the dynamic played out in the cards in the spread mirrors the question posed and consequently life, and how. While also ruminating on the tarot as archetype, the cards and their embodiment outside of the question, not necessarily card meanings but the individual card’s essence, from my own experience and point of view, and also within the structure of the suits themselves. This includes elemental observations based on my particular approach.

    Moreover, the focus for the entire series will be the minors or pips within the framework of the full 78 cards within the tradition of decks with non-pictorial minors.

    After the exploration of the suits and their archetypal qualities, I will end on an oracular note taking the form of fluid verse. This is meant as an evocative encounter with the suits in general. Which would bring the journey full circle.

    What this series will not be is a plunge into the esoteric tarot, nodding towards the Lodge variety such as the Golden Dawn, and others from Continental Europe. Neither will it be a survey of the history of tarot. There are really great resources on the history of tarot, both esoteric and otherwise, excellent books that dive deep into the formation of tarot through the ages, leading up to the esoteric link.†

    Herein follow the content list:

    1. Encountering The Suits:
      1. Swords: Armed Force
      2. Cups: Heart of Life
      3. Batons: Accomplished Work
      4. Coins: Weight of Influence
    2. The Suits and Their Element
    3. The Oracular Incantation

    You can expect each part monthly. I hope you stick around for this series, and I also hope you find inspiration and insight along the way.

    † See the following:

    • Holistic Tarot, by Benebell Wen, 2015
    • Rachel Pollack’s Tarot Wisdom: Spiritual Teachings and Deeper Meaning, 2008
    • The Tarot: History, Symbolism, and Divination, by Robert M Place, 2005.
    • Mystical Origins of the Tarot: From Ancient Roots to Modern Usage, by Paul Huson, 2004.
    • A History of the Occult Tarot, by Ronald Decker & Michael Dummett, 2013.
    • There are plenty more options besides these as well.

     Creative Commons License
    Animating The Tarot Pips by Natalia L Forty is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
    Based on a work at mistandether.wordpress.com

    ~~~

    Mist and Aether La Maga Etsy mist and ether
  • Galloping with the winds of change

    by

    April is upon us then, sometimes it feels like months creep up on me. March was, well, better than February for me, and here is April already showing more force and initiative. Good.

    Fantarocco di Franco Anichini Modiano, Italy.
    Fantarocco di Franco Anichini, published by Modiano, Italy.

    The knight of cups has a desire, to hone his vision and commit in order to fortify that which he seeks to build, and which also requires hard work, trading the cup for the sword. The king looks apt and amenable to trading his sword, even if for a brief time. Take this as an indication to move forward with the plans that have been simmering under the surface. Now is the time to order that which needs ordering, to commit and apply labor to the task. Is there something that’s been left to the wayside too long? Lacking definition, order, or even purpose? Is there a goal you’ve been putting aside in favor of more flighty pursuits? Is there an aspect of your life that needs clarity and structure? An aspect you’ve been wanting to address for months? Well, this knight is turning his cup in in favor of what he’s lacking, decisive action, the clearing and ordering of his home, his affairs, and his goals. Consider the knight.

    Fantarocco Franco Anichini Knight of Cups.jpg
    Fantarocco di Franco Anichini, published by Modiano, Italy.

    April is the month of firm action, it is for being strong of mind and will so as to get and accomplish that which you’ve sought and negated for some time. The time is auspicious now. Even the horse spurs the knight to move his cup, to trade in his cup. No more over-indulgence, excess, and lack of restraint. Now we seize a resolute standard, firm and unyielding.

    Fantarocco di Franco Anichini Modiano, Italy.
    Fantarocco di Franco Anichini, published by Modiano, Italy.

    Just as those batons need holding up, so we should seek to hold up our goals and that which he have in our minds and hearts to accomplish. This month is about tending to the seedlings, about ordering the home, and organizing your goals, especially vis à vis the rest of the year. There is a far-seeing quality the this spread, as if what you feed now will in turn grow to reciprocate you in the long run. Attend to these seedlings, summon your dedication and attention to apply yourself with rigor to the task.

    First, because you will not regret the energy exerted in applying yourself to what is important to you, nurturing your goals and their minutiae. You will develop constancy and discipline.

    Second, because that which you put energy into will in turn feed your spirit, and feed your dreams.

    Stay centered, stay focused, and always keep going.

    ~~~

    Mist and Aether La Maga Etsy mist and ether

  • Healing is a rivulet

    Fantarocco Tarot Franco Anichini
    Fantarocco by Franco Anichini, published by Modiano, Italy.

    This post starts with the cards, where I went seeking to understand healing. As I had mentioned previously, I spent most of February sick, to my great disappointment since I love the month of February. All those weeks were filled with wallowing in bad health, unsure of what was really going on, deep in depression, sullen, and joyless, which made it all the more challenging to move beyond what was going on in my body, to move toward health. February was spent sick, March has been devoted healing. I had never before realized (consciously) that healing takes time. It is a slow process not a swift one.

    Thinking about this one night some some days ago, I decided to pull out my cards and ask them about healing. What turned up was very interesting. Those red wheels turning, conceding to the whims of fortune, cycling furiously with no space for rest, for catching one’s breath. Then the halt arrives with the 4 cups, evenly distributed, a wall whereon satiation can be found on the other side, recovery from anguish and anxiety. Healing is stabilizing erratic and rapidly changing shifts with a pause. Moving into a subtle flow of movement, almost imperceptible, like water trickling down a narrow stream following its own course, slight so as to be almost insignificant. Yet as we move along this trickle, we find that it leads to a small cascade, which in turn leads to a thick course running heavy with waters from other veins. Arriving at the artery where all rivulets converge. Healing is understanding and walking with this patience. There are deeper places of restoration to be found as the stream runs its course, places of replenishment, nourishment and succor.

    LXXXI The Magician's Deck Quareia Press
    LXXXI The Magician’s Deck created by Cassandra Beanland, Stuart LittleJohn, Josephine McCarthy, published by Quareia.

    The silence of March here has been me letting my body sway and move to the rhythm of this trickling stream, moving onward at a slower pace. This is my cadence of healing. I’m slowly getting back into the flux of things, definitely look forward to April’s augury.

    Meanwhile, my parting words for now are, in whichever stage of healing you are in your life, whether physical, emotional, or psychological, know first that it takes time, and second, that you’re not alone.

    Keep going.

    ~~~

    Mist and Ether Natalia Lee Forty Tarot Divinatrix

  • From the devil to the star

    I’ve been sick for most of the month of February, putting things into perspective for me. With being sick and reluctant to do many things as I’m pulled down by what my body is combating, I’ve kept coming back to a trio of cards that have been on my mind for months. The Devil, The Tower, and The Star. With this trio comes to my mind the act of re-enchanting our lives, of thriving and resilience. Weaving songs of hope along the way. The way from the devil to the star is the song for these times.

    Jean Dodal Marseille Tarot Flornoy
    Jean Dodal Tarot de Marseille reproduced by Jean-Claude Flornoy,editions le-tarot.com, 2009.

    The devil binds, ties, and obstructs. This half man, half beast figure stands upon a pedestal holding a wand, a scepter of authority as below the humans turned imps, enslaved with hands and necks tied, look on with sadness. Or is it contempt? In binding, the devil hinders the way forward as he stands formidable and seemingly indomitable, larger and more imposing than those beneath him.

    Jean Dodal Marseille Tarot Flornoy
    Jean Dodal Tarot de Marseille reproduced by Jean-Claude Flornoy,editions le-tarot.com, 2009.

    Catastrophe strikes, a sudden flash and the crown is toppled. What was once lofty has been torn asunder. Out of the binds we are thrust, it is sudden. This is the revealing moment, the apocalypse. The veils are torn and perspectives are reversed. Falling, falling, falling while the electrified sky intensifies the nightmare. Foundations are broken, what was solid crumbles. This image highlights vulnerability, our collective vulnerability as humans. Vulnerability because what we know, what we hold as foundation today, can change unexpectedly. Nothing is certain except change, except mutability. This is the moment when, just as those thrust out of the toppling tower illustrate, we move “outside.” It is an expulsion from constructs that forces our position to drastically change.

    Centennial Waite Smith Tarot Rider Waite Smith
    The Centennial Waite-Smith Tarot, US Games, 2009.

    Sans strictures and fortifications that keep us shackled, we are outside, vulnerable and naked, clearing the air to create for ourselves a life that is boundless and full of possibilities under the light of the stars. To a gentle stream we take our battered selves, there kneeling on the edge of a flowing river, with face turned towards the past in remembrance of the apocalyptic moment, we pour out from our vessels, we pour out our waters, and let them mix with the river. Emptying the anguish and agitations. The dark night has passed and transformed into a sky full of stars, and song, and birds. Then relief seizes us.

    The star is the initiator of a life outside the chains of the devil, a hand made life. A life that begins from what is boundless, rolling hills, the expanse of the sky, the distance of the stars, the song of birds, and flowing waters. Moreover, from the devil to the star is the road to resilience, and re-enchantment. Breaking bonds and surviving the terror of the apocalyptic moment. It is a story of strength, and a song of rejuvenation.

    I sat with these thoughts for most of the month, dwelling on what it means to be resilient. Taking a cue from the cards, resilience is about seeing possibilities within and without, boundless possibilities unchained from systems of belief and of perspectives. The lesson is in following the rhyme from the devil to the tower, ending with the star. This is how we re-enchant our lives, placing our sight and our selves in the midst of what is immeasurable as opposed to what confines. It is interesting to note that in the traditional Rider Waite Smith deck the background of both the devil and the tower is black, limiting the sight, not allowing our vision to pierce beyond. While the star is embraced by the blue sky and the green folds of the earth. In other words, what binds, does so until we step outside of that frame.

    The Centennial Waite-Smith Tarot Rider Waite Smith
    The Centennial Waite-Smith Tarot, US Games, 2009.

    ~~~

    Mist and Aether La Maga Etsy mist and ether