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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, we’ve got the four Hebrew
letters YHVH for Yahweh, God, inscribed
into the wheel. Temperance is the “Time” card.
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. They’re 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 you’re 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
horsemen…sorry, 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 painting “The
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, titled “Endymion and
Selene” and 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.