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  • As classical tarot readers, we begin

  • our craft by inheriting a body of

  • knowledge and wisdom accrued through the ages,

  • by renowned occultists who transformed

  • tarot from an entertaining card game for

  • the nobles to an indispensable tool for

  • exercising intuition, for divination, and

  • for connecting to your Higher Self,

  • or higher consciousness. When we honor legacy,

  • we learn facets of tarot symbolism we might

  • not have arrived at on our own. The Fool, we

  • are told, carries with him the tools of

  • the Magician. The Wheel of Fortune

  • depicts the four Fixed signs of the Western

  • zodiac, the signs symbolic of the four

  • seasons, four elements, four directions, and

  • also that of the Divine Order. Speaking of

  • the Divine, weve got the four Hebrew

  • letters YHVH for Yahweh, God, inscribed

  • into the wheel. Temperance is theTimecard.

  • The name of the angel is Time. Who is

  • that pictured on The World card? Is it

  • relevant that masters of old tell us

  • that the person featured is a

  • hermaphrodite? And there we have

  • symbolism for the four fixed zodiac

  • signs again. How might background

  • knowledge of Hermetic symbolism inform

  • the way you read the cards? Leaves from

  • the Kabbalistic Tree of Life are a

  • recurring imagery in the Rider-Waite

  • Smith tarot, the deck my book focuses on.

  • Here I’m only showing four examples. Sift

  • through your cards to see if you can

  • spot them all. Leaves from the Tree of

  • Life are for the healing of nations.

  • The leaves collect strength. How might that

  • inform the omens prognosticated by cards

  • that show up in a reading featuring

  • these leaves? Here are the tombstones of

  • royalty and the religiously pious from

  • medieval Europe. Theyre exhibited at

  • the Louvre in Paris. The symbolism here

  • connects with the imagery on the Four of

  • Swords. My appreciation for the card’s

  • undertone of seeking faith, despite

  • overtones of physical challenges, gives

  • me much more to draw on as a tarot

  • reader. By the way fun fact: in 1911

  • around the time this tarot deck was

  • published, its artist, Pamela Colman

  • Smith, converted to Catholicism. Knowing

  • historic and cultural context gives me,

  • the tarot reader, a much stronger, more

  • powerful connection with the collective

  • consciousness, to the metaphysical

  • compendium of space-time.

  • In the mundane physical world, education

  • advances innovation. It’s the same in the

  • metaphysical and spirit world. Education

  • advances your ability to operate

  • esoteric technologies. The more you know

  • about history, the cultural context for

  • the tarot deck youre working with,

  • science, religious mythos, human

  • psychology, and the hierarchies of spirit

  • realms, the more patterns and divine

  • omens you can spot in the cards. Every

  • single form of divination is about

  • spotting patterns and knowing how to

  • interpret those patterns. I can teach you

  • how to spot patterns, but the knowing

  • part comes from wisdom and experience.

  • For instance, let's spot the Four

  • Horsemen of the Apocalypse among the

  • four knights in tarot. The Knight of Swords

  • rides a white horse and he is Conquest;

  • Victory; Pestilence. The Knight of Wands

  • rides a red horse and he is War;

  • Slaughter; Sacrifice. The Knight of

  • Pentacles rides of black horse and he

  • is Famine; Oppression. The Knight of Cups

  • rides a pale horse and he is Death. Does

  • the Knight of Cups remind you a bit of

  • another Horseman, say, Key 13: The Death

  • Card? 13…1 plus 3 is 4…4

  • horsemensorry, nevermind. Back to tarot.

  • Do you need to be a history buff to

  • read tarot competently? No. When you walk

  • into the Louvre, the National Gallery, or

  • the Metropolitan Museum, you don’t need a

  • degree in art history to appreciate the

  • masterpieces. But just a little

  • background on those works of art can

  • take you to new depths of appreciation.

  • In John Waterhouse’s 1902 paintingThe

  • Crystal Ball,” the original work features

  • a skull. However, when the painting was

  • sold, its owner was unnerved by the skull,

  • so had another painter paint over that

  • skull to conceal it within the blue

  • curtain. Calling upon a common theme from

  • the Pre-Raphaelite era, Waterhouse

  • depicts a woman in an enclosed space,

  • physically able to see the world only

  • through a small window, but that doesn't

  • limit her experiences. As we see from her

  • crystal ball gazing, presumably able to

  • see all the world through scrying and

  • her psychic connections. We also see what

  • appears to be a grimoire and magician's

  • wand before her. The dark trees in the

  • background

  • suggests a sinister or supernatural tone,

  • but if you didn't know the origins of

  • the painting and looked upon the revised

  • work without the skull, that sinister or

  • supernatural tone might not have been as

  • apparent. With the skull, now the complete

  • range of symbolism the artist intended,

  • we get a much stronger sense of who this

  • woman is... and what she is capable of. In

  • William-Adolphe Bouguereau’s 1891 painting

  • The Broken Pitcher,” we see a young

  • pre-pubescent girl and by her feet is a

  • cracked pitcher hearkening to the title

  • of the painting. What does it mean? You

  • don't need a background in art history

  • to appreciate the mastery of this work, to

  • find it evocative, to appreciate the

  • emotional value of Bouguereau’s art. But

  • just a little bit of knowledge and the

  • implications of this painting go to

  • very different depths. The cracked

  • pitcher was a familiar trope in

  • Bougeareau’s historic era, symbolic of taking a

  • young girl's virginity. This painting

  • references the hyper-sexualization of an

  • underage peasant girl. Wait a minute, are

  • we still talking about tarot? Yes, we are

  • still talking about tarot. Bear with me

  • here. Ride out my train of thought. I'm

  • going somewhere with all of this. Here in

  • this painting, we see a sensual woman,

  • most likely celestial in nature, given

  • the way she leans on clouds and the

  • cherubs around her, gazing down

  • lovingly, at a nude man. Do you need to

  • know the Greek myths that inspired this

  • painting? Selene, the goddess of the moon,

  • fell in love with and Endymion and more

  • specifically, loved the way he looked

  • when he was asleep, so she asked Zeus to

  • grant Endymion eternal sleep, that way

  • she could visit every night and admire

  • him. Do you need to know the allegory of

  • the dog? How the Greeks believed the dog

  • symbolized faith and love? Perhaps the

  • emotions of love and admiration are

  • evident to all who study this Sebastiano

  • Ricci painting, titledEndymion and

  • Seleneand you don’t need to know the

  • artist’s intent, or popular cultural

  • symbolism at that time, or history, or

  • mythology to derive meaning from the

  • work. But for some of us, that

  • mythological background and the study of art

  • history helps deepen our love and

  • understanding of art. We can be more

  • attuned to the nuances, the undertones,

  • and the subtext. The tarot, especially as

  • tarot is often presented today and the

  • many deck productions availed to us, is 78

  • works of art. Its art. Stripping away all

  • of the esoteric, divinatory, or even

  • psychological mumbo jumbo, a tarot

  • reading is interpretation of art. And

  • just a bit of background knowledge will

  • deepen your appreciation of tarot. What is

  • that background knowledge? It's

  • understanding of the four elements,

  • numerology, astrology, it's Hermetic

  • symbolism, and even the intentions of the

  • tarot deck creators. The personal alchemy

  • of science, religion, history, philosophy,

  • and culture that drive your perceptions

  • of tarot symbolism is how you develop

  • wisdom, insight, and how intuition becomes

  • psychic ability. Tarot analytics, then, is

  • how you deepen prophetic technology.

  • Logic does not hinder intuition, not if

  • you're doing it right. Logic unveils

  • intuition.

As classical tarot readers, we begin

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