Your compass navigating the tarot

Month: April 2022

WHY THE WISDOM OF THE MIDDLE WAY IS THE BEST WAY IN THE TEMPERANCE TAROT CARD

Tarot cards Number 14, Temperance.  
An angel, wings outspread, stands at the edge of a body of water, one foot in, one out. Around the pool grow yellow irises. In his hands he is pouring from one chalice into the other.  The center of his forehead Has a symbol, a circle with a dot in the middle, and his head is surrounded by a nimbus of light. At the center of his chest, is a square containing a triangle within.  A path meanders away from the water in the direction of two mountains with a sun rising in the middle
Temperance

Overview and common meanings of The Temperance Tarot Card

Temperance is about balance and harmony, about not choosing either extreme, but rather finding a way to blend both to create your own unique solutions. Temperance is also a sign that you are connecting with higher forces, the divine – or angels, if you will.  You have a clear, long-term vision for what you want to achieve, and are determined to take the balanced approach in order to see this come to fruition.  Alternative names in various decks – Art, Integration, Balance, Harmony, The Weaver.

The Middle path is the way to wisdom

Rumi

Common Meanings

When Temperance shows up, it is a good reminder to pay attention to help that will come from unexpected directions and in unusual ways, such as advice from a friend or even strangers that have been put in your path to help you through this time.  It is a good time to drop in and listen to your inner voice and the guidance that can be found there. It may herald the beginning of a sacred voyage of your own.  In regard to home, temperance says that you have the balance to succeed in all aspects.  In Love/relationships it can show new depths of faith in each other, and that the synergy in your existing relationship works well.  If you are seeking a relationship, it can indicate that you are ready for one that has the potential for marriage and long-term commitment. Stay true to this vision and trust that the right person will show up at the right time.  In a career situation it cautions to be diplomatic and pay attention to income and expenses.  As always, the middle way is the best way. 

The Many Faces of Temperance

You know that feeling in January after the excess of the holidays?  I often joke that is the one time of the year that I crave kale salad.  That is temperance showing up and gently warning you that you have created an Imbalance and the need to find that balance again through diet, exercise, spiritual practice, etc.  Other things to pay attention to with the shadow side of temperance:  feelings of unfairness, feeling like you are putting in more than you are receiving in many areas.  In any event, the shadow side of temperance Indicates a need for self-healing in order to progress.

The Journey of Temperance

The final card of the second septenary, which as you will recall is about social and moral understandings; and the separation of the ego and transformation of the Self toward spiritual equilibrium. We saw a death of the old with last weeks card, death, and now we are seeing abstract ideas becoming reality.  This is actual behavior, not conceptual, and is the integration of the balance and wisdom regained after tearing the world down in death. The energy of life after ego’s death.

Description

An angel, wings outspread, stands at the edge of a body of water, one foot in, one out. Around the pool grow yellow irises. In his hands he is pouring from one chalice into the other.  The center of his forehead Has a symbol, a circle with a dot in the middle, and his head is surrounded by a nimbus of light. At the center of his chest, is a square containing a triangle within.  A path meanders away from the water in the direction of two mountains with a sun rising in the middle.

Themes of Temperance

  • Balance
  • Cooperation
  • Duality
  • Equilibrium
  • Patience
  • Purpose
  • Yin/Yang
  • The middle path that Buddha strove for on his quest for enlightenment

The Number 14

Double of the prime number 7, the number of creation, the number 14 is an indication of the need to find that balance in life, so as not to overindulge, overspend, or become codependent.  The need expressed in the number 14 is that of the card it represents – temperance.

Elements of the temperance Card and Associated Symbolism

  • Angel – archangel Michael, protector to help facilitate moving past fear and letting go of the past. 
  • One foot in water, one out – needing to be in the flow while staying grounded
  • Chalices – one for past, one for present.  The water flowing between them is symbolic of how we blend past and the present experiences together to create our future. 
  • Circle with dot in center – sun symbol, spiritual enlightenment
  • Square with triangle – masculine energy (square) integrating with and protecting feminine energy (triangle)
  • Pool of water – purification and rejuvenation, emotions, and unconscious mind
  • Irises – Hope
  • Path – the meandering path that life takes us on
  • Mountains and sun – new dawn of hope after period of stress

Herbs for Temperance   

  • Agrimony – conquering anxiety and adverse obstacles
  • Angelica – promotes temperance; strengthens one’s connection with the physical world by bringing balance to the spirit
  • Chervil – inner wisdom, connecting with the divine
  • Cinquefoil – Balance; The five points of the leaf represent love, money, health, power, and wisdom
  • Foxglove – protection and vision
  • Valerian – clarity of dreams, reconciliation, love, and harmony

Questions that Temperance asks us

  • What area of your life is out of balance and into extreme, and how can you bring it back to center?
  • What does temperance mean for you, in finding that way to blend two extremes into something that is uniquely yours?

That is Temperance!  Wishing you a week in which the wisdom of the middle path manifests in large and small ways.  Please leave comments, or ask questions, and join me next week for:  The Devil!

WHY DEATH OF OLD FORCES REBIRTH OF NEW IN THE DEATH TAROT CARD

Tarot cards Death
A figure in black armor, face that of a skeleton, rides a white horse with glowing red eyes. A red feather wilts from the peak of his helm. The chest stall of the horse is decorated with skull and crossbones. In his left hand is a black standard bearing the image of a white flower and five ears of corn, or wheat.  There is a king lying dead beneath the hooves of his horse, his crown fallen to the ground, and his scepter lying next to him.  The land is barren, there is a tiny ship on the seas in the distance.  On the ground is a baby in blue, and a maiden in white, both kneeling in supplication.  At the head of the horse stands a pope, hands clasped in prayer, with dark shadows stretching out from him.  In the distance we see two towers, with the sun setting or rising between them
Death Tarot Card

Overview and common meanings of The Death Tarot Card

The Death card is about rebirth; of eliminating the dead weight of old habits that no longer serve us; of letting go of relationships that no longer fit into who we are; of releasing old belief systems that are keeping us from living our best life.  This is, to many, the scariest card in the Tarot deck.  People immediately think that they, or a loved one will die.  This is rarely the case.  This card is about the little deaths in our life that enable us to transition to newer and better things.  Try to let it happen and remember that swift change brings new beginnings.

Other names in alternating decks are Transformation, Transition, Liberation.

When you are transitioning to a new season of life, the people and situations that no longer fit you will fall away.

Mandy Hale

Common Meanings

The Death Tarot card, which almost always indicates the death of one thing so that another can begin, rarely comes as a true surprise.  You knew, even if you didn’t want to admit it to yourself that the thing, relationship, season of life, was over.  It is perfectly acceptable to mourn the ending of something, even as you are looking forward with great joy and eagerness to the beginning of something new. This is the card of endings and beginnings, often both at once; fast and deep transformation.  Rebirth is what it is all about.  It could mean that the place you are living no longer meets your needs and you need to find a new home.  It could indicate that new circumstances may offer an opportunity to relocate. The death card can speak to your current job situation – that change is coming there, and, like all change, it might be scary and feel unstable for a time.  It can also be the ending or a necessary time apart in a friendship or relationship.  Sometimes this is temporary, unless these have run their course and they no longer fit into the life you see for yourself going forward. Try to remember that it is natural and normal to grieve all endings, while keeping in mind that in every ending is a beginning, and that something better is waiting for you just over the horizon. 

The Many Faces of Death

The shadow side, or reversal of death is often the same as the upright meanings.  It can be an indication of fear of transformation, grieving loss, figurative deaths, sentimental attachments that outlive the reality of the situation.  This is one of those cards where both the upright and the reversal or shadow side tell you to embrace the change that is inevitable, but also that it is ok to grieve what you are leaving behind.  That knot of fear in your stomach while you are also deeply excited:  its perfectly natural and normal.

The Journey of Death in the Tarot

We are coming very close to the end of the second septenary, which as you will recall is about social and moral understandings, the separation of the ego and transformation of the Self toward spiritual equilibrium. This kind of true transformation can only truly take place when a death occurs – a death of who you were as you transform into who you are becoming. 

Description

A figure in black armor, face that of a skeleton, rides a white horse with glowing red eyes. A red feather wilts from the peak of his helm. The chest stall of the horse is decorated with skull and crossbones. In his left hand is a black standard bearing the image of a white flower and five ears of corn, or wheat.  There is a king lying dead beneath the hooves of his horse, his crown fallen to the ground, and his scepter lying next to him.  The land is barren, there is a tiny ship on the seas in the distance.  On the ground is a baby in blue, and a maiden in white, both kneeling in supplication.  At the head of the horse stands a pope, hands clasped in prayer, with dark shadows stretching out from him.  In the distance we see two towers, with the sun setting or rising between them. 

Themes of Death

  • Transformation
  • Endings
  • Rebirth
  • Transition
  • Change
  • New cycles
  • Awakening
  • End of an era
  • Letting go

The Number 13

The number 13 brings the assessment, the agony, and the loss. It symbolizes the end to the issue or to the ego and alignment with the spiritual. 

Elements of the Death Card and Associated Symbolism

  • The skeleton- what survives after life has left.
  • The standard – black with a white rose, symbolizing renewal, and the corn or wheat, the harvest.  The message being that death takes his harvest of souls and leaves the grain, or the truth, behind. 
  • Black Armor – black is about endings
  • Pale horse – representative of the four horsemen of the apocalypse
  • Wilted Red feather – life force ebbing
  • Maiden looking away– fear of the death of innocence
  • Child – innocence and unafraid
  • Pope – Piety in the face of uncertainty; faith
  • Dead king – death, or endings, does not spare those of high caste; like justice, it is blind to all.
  • Ship – represents the ship carrying souls across the river Styx
  • Two towers, or city gates – Traditionally, the dead were buried outside of the city.  The city gates can also be seen as the gates to heaven.  The symbolism here is about stepping outside of your own fortress and exposing yourself to the elements so that you can be born anew into whatever comes next.
  • Sun rising or setting – the perpetual cycle of death and rebirth

Herbs for The Death Card

  • Hawthorn – protection and openness
  • Linden – calming heart tonic; protective, comforting, through times of grief
  • Milky Oat tops – nourishment and calm.  Helps overcome feelings of being overwhelmed and out of control when life is throwing transformation at you fast and hard.
  • Mimosa – Sadness, loss, heartache, grief. 
  • Sage – wisdom; esteem; resolving spiritual issues; to feel more linked with day-to-day existence, i.e., grasping and allowing reality to be what it is, rather than what we wish it were.

Questions that the Death Tarot card asks us

  • What in my life needs to “die” in order for me to live my very best life?
  • What areas of my life that I once thought long dead, are experiencing a rebirth?

Thank you for reading.  Wishing you a week in which you accept with grace the endings that are taking place in your life and look eagerly to the new beginnings that spring from every ending. It Please leave comments or ask questions, and join me next week for Temperance!

THE HANGED MAN OF THE TAROT IS ABOUT ULTIMATE SURRENDER

Tarot Cards - The Hanged Man
The Hanged Man

Learning how to be still, to really be still and let life happen – that stillness becomes a radiance

Morgan Freeman

Overview and Meaning of The Hanged Man Tarot card

The Hanged Man often shows up in a reading when we are feeling stuck (or just needing to sit still) and is a call to look at things from a new perspective and work on getting freed.  Sometimes you can’t go through but must look at ways of going over or around. This is the card of the ultimate surrender, telling you to take your hands off the wheel and just pause.  Alternative names in various decks:  The traitor, Vision Quest, Sundance.

Common Meanings of The Hanged Man

If you are paying attention to your inner wisdom, you know when these times of feeling stuck arise and you can allow that pause to take place.  If, however, you are not in alignment with your inner voice, the universe may put you in a holding pattern for now.  This can show up in the form of a health or financial issue. Pay attention to this and realize that this is a tactic to slow you down and make you look at your own inner landscape.  When it is time to hit the gas and start moving again, the universe will let you know! The important piece of going into this holding pattern is that it is your opportunity to assess your life and to do so with the idea of change.  What is working and what is not?  This is an opportunity for you to see things in a whole new way, and even to shift focus and direction.  Sometimes the Hanged Man just shows up to remind you to meditate! In our society, we are so hardwired to move, change, make things happen.  The Hanged man shows up to tell you to take that pause, breathe, be quiet and let the things that need to happen, happen.  The pause that brings the Hanged man is a blessing; the change that occurs from sitting still for a minute is a blessing.  Life is a blessing. 

The Many Faces of the Tarot Card the Hanged Man

The shadow – or reversal – side of the hanged man can show up to indicate that you are experiencing Inertia, self-sabotage, and could be holding onto things that aren’t for you.  It is important in this time to take an objective look at what this means for you personally.  Just because you want something, doesn’t mean that it is for you. 

The Journey of The Hanged Man

We are drawing close to the end of the second septenary of the Major Arcana, which you may recall is about social and moral understandings; the separation of the ego and transformation of the Self toward spiritual equilibrium. The Hanged man is the call for our protagonist (The Fool) to pause and go inwards for the lessons already learned and those still to come in that journey towards the death of ego and self.

Description of The Hanged Man Tarot Card

Hanging upside down on a T shaped tree, is a man wearing a blue shirt and red pants.  His hands are on his hips and his right leg is cocked and folded under the left, creating a triangle.  Although hanging, if you were to turn the card upside down, he appears to be very much at ease.  Surrounding his head is a halo, nimbus, or sun. 

Themes of The Hanged Man

  • Surrendering to the will of the cosmos (let go and let God)
  • Enlightenment
  • Intentional pause
  • Spiritual teachings
  • Realigning with your soul purpose
  • Meditation

The Number 12

Just as the Hanged Man is about holding where you are, the number 12 is here to remind us to stay positive about the future, as you are likely on the threshold of some encouraging changes soon.

Elements of the Hanged Man Card and Associated Symbolism

  • Tree – represents the tree of life, alive with possibility
  • T-shaped cross – represents the cross upon which Christ was crucified
  • Left leg bent – an early Christian symbol fylfot cross
  • Halo – enlightenment
  • Hanging upside down –a different perspective
  • Red pants – human passions
  • Blue top – knowledge, learning, wisdom

Herbs for The Hanged Man

  • Chamomile – soothing and calming
  • Danshen – alleviate anger and aggression
  • Gotu Kola – stimulates the crown chakra and balances brain hemispheres, helps with stress.
  • Hawthorn – healing the heart
  • Kava – anxiety relief, good for accepting where you are

Questions that the Hanged Man Asks Us

  • If you were to consciously choose to be the Hanged Man and take a big pause from the world, relationship, job, etc., how would that look for you?
  • Are you holding on to situations, people, habits that are not yours, and if so, why and how can you learn to release and surrender to what is rather than what you want?

That is the Hanged Man!  Wishing you a week filled with acceptance and peace when faced with any seeming lack of momentum. Remember that wisdom is often gained in the times when it appears that you are standing still.  Thank you for reading.  Please leave comments or ask questions.

Please join me next week for: Death!

WHY THE JUSTICE TAROT CARD IS IMPORTANT

tarot Cards - Justice
Justice Tarot Card

Justice is the sum of all moral duty

William Godwin

Overview and meanings of the JUSTICE tarot card

When Justice shows up in a reading, it is a strong call for you to weigh the situation and act fairly.  This may mean becoming a champion for injustice, or it may just be an indication that the scales of justice will balance.  This card also shows up to indicate an actual legal proceeding.  Trust that the Universe has your back. 

Alternative names in varying decks are Adjustment, breakthrough, Life Force.

Common Meanings of the Justice tarot card

The Justice card is about, well, Justice, but it is also a call to look at your life and your actions and how the law of karma plays into that.  Sometimes – especially if we have acted in a way that is not entirely honorable – it is easy to play the victim card. However, Justice is here to strip that away.  Justice is not “Fair,” it is JUST.  There is no favoritism here…just facts.  So, if you feel you have been unjustly treated, this is a great time to take a long hard look at that and determine what part is yours.

The Many Faces of Justice

The shadow side – or reversal- of this card shows up as a reminder that if things have been out of balance and truly unfair in your life, just like the scales that Justice holds, things WILL even out, so have faith.  Try to learn from the experience and have compassion for those going through it.  It may be a great time to investigate becoming a victim’s right advocate or similar so that you can give back.  That experience you had is valuable.  Share it with the world! Justice is calling you to do the right thing.  So, do the right thing.. Things that show up on the shadow side:  Intolerance, bias, extreme severity, past actions coming back to haunt you. 

The Journey of Justice  

The Fool is making his journey towards the end of the arc of the second septenary, which you may recall is about social and moral understandings; the separation of the ego and transformation of the Self toward spiritual equilibrium. In that arc, the fool cannot truly begin on his path towards spiritual enlightenment until he understands that the scales of justice – or law of Karma if you will – must maintain balance. 

Description of the Justice Tarot Card

A crowned woman sits on a throne between two pillars of stone.  In her right hand is a sword pointing up and, in her left, scales.  She is robed in red with a mantle of green settled on her shoulders and clasped by a square clasp enclosing a circle.  Behind her and attached to the pillars, is a curtain or veil. 

Themes of Justice 

  • Justice
  • Balance
  • Accountability
  • Truth
  • Principle
  • Legal Matters
  • Karma

The Number 11

The Number 11, two 1’s, indicates the duality of justice – to each act there is a reaction, to each cause, an effect.

Elements of the justice Card and Associated Symbolism

  • Stone Pillars – stability and balance
  • Sword – Victory; action resulting from judgement- double edged to show actions having consequences
  • Scales – the balancing and weighing of all information to make a judgement
  • Crown – authority. 
  • Square clasp – square shields the sphere of communal unity held within
  • Veil or curtain – boundary between court and the outside world while evidence is given
  • Yellow background – awareness, clear picture

Herbs for Justice

  • Amaranth – defense and invisibility, help prevent aggression.
  •  Bergamot – protection from evil and illness, stopping interference.
  • Buckthorn – helpful for safety and legal problem
  • Celandine – legal matters, good will of a jury, avoid unwarranted incarceration.
  • Calendula – protection, legal matters, and psychic/spiritual powers

Questions that the Justice Tarot card asks us

  • Are you behaving in a way that is wholly honorable in all your dealings in life, and if not, are you tuned into how this behavior has consequences?
  • Have you felt compelled to fight for justice for the underdog and if so – what are you waiting for?  The causes are right there waiting for you to pick up the flaming sword and wade in. 

Thank you for reading.  Wishing you a week of acting and reaping justice. 

Please leave comments or ask questions.

Next week: The Hanged Man! 

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