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<!--Generated by Squarespace Site Server v5.0.0 (http://www.squarespace.com/) on Fri, 25 Jul 2008 06:08:36 GMT--><feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"><title>Tarot How-Tos and Tips from WISE TAROT Magazine</title><subtitle>Tarot How Tos and Tips</subtitle><id>http://www.wisetarot.com/tarot-how-tos-and-tips/</id><link rel="alternate" type="application/xhtml+xml" href="http://www.wisetarot.com/tarot-how-tos-and-tips/"/><link rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.wisetarot.com/tarot-how-tos-and-tips/atom.xml"/><updated>2007-10-09T17:11:23Z</updated><generator uri="http://www.squarespace.com/" version="Squarespace Site Server v5.0.0 (http://www.squarespace.com/)">Squarespace</generator><entry><title>Almost Certainly the Coolest Way to Read the Cards</title><id>http://www.wisetarot.com/tarot-how-tos-and-tips/almost-certainly-the-coolest-way-to-read-the-cards.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.wisetarot.com/tarot-how-tos-and-tips/almost-certainly-the-coolest-way-to-read-the-cards.html"/><author><name>Editor</name></author><published>2007-10-09T16:58:13Z</published><updated>2007-10-09T16:58:13Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<h3><em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1572812176?ie=UTF8&tag=filandboo-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=1572812176">Tarot As Your Companion: A Practical Guide to the Rider-Waite and Crowley Thoth Tarot Decks</a><img style="border: medium none  ! important; margin: 0px ! important; width: 1px; height: 1px;" alt="" src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=filandboo-20&l=as2&o=1&a=1572812176" /></em> Method by Hajo Banzhaf and Elia Hemmerlein</h3><br />  <strong>&mdash; Jennifer Cahill</strong><br />  <br /> <span class="full-image-float-left"><img alt="Tarot%20as%20your%20Companion.jpg" src="http://www.wisetarot.com/storage/Tarot%20as%20your%20Companion.jpg?__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION=1191949762133" /></span> Years and years of Celtic Cross readings. Who knew? I recently started using Banzhaf and Hemmerlein's innovative TARO reading method, and I've been just Wowed by the results. Four simple cards, mapping out the key things that I generally want to know, and so astonishingly &quot;accurate&quot; when combined with their interpretations. For querents I don't always use it, but for myself I certainly do.<br />  <br />  This isn't a book review. I've submitted this separately, and I do highly recommend the book. I hope to give enough for Tarot enthusiasts to work out the system on their own, while encouraging them (heartily) to actually buy the book. <br />  <br />  For daily reads, for deep guidance, or even for a quick look, it's a masterful method. Basically, you draw four cards in a layout spread of a cross or circle. The authors explain this is symbolic of TARO, the root of various combinations of important occult words: ROTA, TARO, ORAT, TORA, ATOR, which translates as &quot;The wheel of the Tarot proclaims the law of initiation.&quot; <br />  <br />  <h2>Direct and Companionable Feedback</h2>In my way of working Tarot, I believe I speak to my own &quot;Superconscious&quot; but others might call this God, or Goddess or Angel. The advice comes in the format of feedback you can act on without abdicating responsibility for the actual decision. <br />  <br />  &bull; Card 1 represents the &quot;Starting Point&quot;<br />  &bull; Card 2 &quot;This is NOT important right now.&quot;<br />  &bull; Card 3 &quot;This IS important right now.&quot;<br />  &bull; Card 4 &quot;This will be your next experience.<br />  <br />  I was stunned how effective this subtle language made the system. Cards 2 and 3 became utterly brilliant advisors. The NOT important card was particularly lucid for me. <br />  <br />  <h2>The Next Step</h2>This is meant to be a daily read. When the card 4 &quot;next experience&quot; happens &mdash; and it will &mdash; you're ready for your next follow on reading. Brilliant.<br />  <br />  <h2>Interpretations of Cards</h2>I would suggest readers still use their own &quot;methods&quot; of divining card meanings. The Fool, for example, means so many things to different people, often quite contradictory things. But whatever you read the Fool as is what matters. But now, your definition is modified by NOT and IS.<br />  <br />  So, if you read the FOOL as &quot;New Beginnings&quot;, then in the card 2 position this would NOT be a good time for a fresh start or a new beginning. On the other hand if it was in the Card 3 position it would be very important to get a fresh start or new beginning &mdash; if this is how you interpret this card.<br />  <br />  <h2>Banzhaf and Hemmerlein's Divination Meanings</h2>For the most part, I found their divination meanings quite right on, and they take the trouble of defining every card in the deck for each of the four positions. While this may seem to take away the visualizing and interpreting role from the reader, it really does the opposite. I found it quite empowering and they gave enough flexibility in interpretation to make it all work beautifully.<br />  <br /><strong><em>  Jennifer Cahill is a professional reader in Tampa, Florida. You can write to her care of <a href="http://www.wisetarot.com/letter-to-the-wise-tarot-edito/">Wise Tarot Magazine</a>.</em></strong><br /> <hr />]]></content></entry><entry><title>How Do the Tarot Cards Predict the Future?</title><id>http://www.wisetarot.com/tarot-how-tos-and-tips/how-do-the-tarot-cards-predict-the-future.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.wisetarot.com/tarot-how-tos-and-tips/how-do-the-tarot-cards-predict-the-future.html"/><author><name>Editor</name></author><published>2007-09-02T15:50:03Z</published><updated>2007-09-02T15:50:03Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p><strong><span class="full-image-float-left"><img src="http://www.wisetarot.com/storage/P1015978.jpg" alt="P1015978.jpg" /></span>Spiritual Growth or Seeing the Future?</strong></p><p>Ask this question, most will blush red, then admit they &quot;got into the cards&quot; to help them see the future. Yet, the cards started as a game in the late Middle Ages to early Renaissance and developed into archetypes for spiritual and occult meditation, became tools of magick, and finally, late in life, a tool for &quot;predicing the future.&quot; Still, the allure for millions lies in future gazing.</p><p><strong>How Can Randomized Cards Tell Futures?</strong></p><p>If they could, why aren't all tarot practitioners millionaires? If they can't, why are so many of us devotees who practice daily? How exactly can Tarot cards possibly work? </p><p>&nbsp;First, a distinction or definition. Tarot cards do not tell fortunes. Fortune-telling and divination are NOT the same thing. A tarot practitioner might use the cards to divine truth, divine influences or divine (listen to) the inner voice. We might divine the influences at &quot;play&quot; in our lives. But fortune-telling implies a fixed fate &mdash; and few tarot devotees support a belief in fixed fate. When a tarot devotee sets out to &quot;divine&quot; a future, they are referring to &quot;listening to the inner or higher voice to divine truths or to reveal influences.&quot;<br /></p><p><strong>Three Theories</strong></p><p>Three theories have been bandied about. Take your choice. One or all of these reasons must be the answer, or something we have not yet discerned, because millions are convinced the cards work. To many of us, it's more than fanciful games. Most practitioners believe all three theories are valid and contribute to results.</p><p><strong><span class="full-image-float-right"><img alt="P1015981.jpg" src="http://www.wisetarot.com/storage/P1015981.jpg" /></span>First, a Caution</strong><br /><br />If we are to believe the tarot cards can predict the future is this fate? NO! some would shout. The Tarot, as you'll note from the prevalent theories, focuses on influences. True, a major arcana card in a reading might be considered a strong influence -- but an influence nevertheless. This is why, in many spreads, there is some variation on an &quot;advice&quot; card (card 9 in some Celtic spreads, for example.) The outcome can be changed by taking an active role in the outcome. On the other hand, if the outcome is pleasing to you, the tarot may help focus the superconscious, subconscious and conscious minds to help you achieve the results. Free will is always in play.<br /><br /><strong>Random Odds</strong><br /><br />The randomized odds are staggering. You have a 1 in 78 chance of drawing a specific card for a one card read. However, when using three cards, you now have a staggering <strong>1 in 456,150</strong> chance of a specific card showing up in the first position, 405,160 to one for position two according to Robert Place's calculations in his excellent book The Tarot, History Symbolism and Divination. Care to calculate odds when you include reversals and a ten card Celtic spread (the most popular)? The vocabulary of the cards is staggering when you consider each position carries a different meaning. Just learning the &quot;language&quot; of the cards is a lifetime pursuit.<br /><br />So with these odds in play, how can so many millions believe in the power of the Tarot deck?<br /><br /><strong>Theory 1</strong><br />Books such as the popular Hajo Banzhaf/Elisa Hemmerlein <em>Tarot As Your Companion</em> (ISBN 971572812178) subtext their titles with claims such as &quot;The Reliable Adviser.&quot; If so, on what basis can we &quot;rely&quot; on the advice? Where are the answers coming from? <br /><br />&quot;Tarot can be a very valuable companion which directs our inner eye to what is decisive at the proper moment in all of life's situations&mdash;but particularly in times of crisis and profound change,&quot; writes Banzham/Hemmerlein in <em>Tarot As Your Companion</em> in the introduction. In our first theory, we are tapping into the &quot;higher self.&quot; &quot;The ego tends to hold on to the familiar.... in contrast, our Higher Self wants to lead us to further development.&quot; <br /><br />Theory 1 focuses on the clarity of the Higher Self, called by some the Super Conscious, a belief held by many faiths, from Doaism to Gnostic Christians to pagans, and even many scientists. The Super Conscious in this theory, is the Higher Self, in touch with the Collective Consciousness first outlined by Carl Jung. Which leads us to theory 2.<br /><br /><strong>Theory 2</strong><br />Carl Jung's familiar theories of universal archetypes and collective consciousness do not require faith or religion or magick. Jung's theories are far too complicated to delve into in this short article, but basically the eminent psychiatrist's theories are often used to explain divination. Jung placed four functions of consciousness on a cross, with &quot;Thinking&quot; and &quot;Feeling&quot; as north and south poles of one axis, called the &quot;Rational&quot;, while &quot;Intuition&quot; and &quot;Sensation&quot; are on the horizontal arm, called the &quot;Irrational Axis.&quot;&nbsp; It's important to note that intuition and sensation are used to &quot;investigate&quot; reality but not to make decisions. Only &quot;feelings&quot; and &quot;thinking&quot; is involved in the decision process (rational.) To shorten this theory to a manageable length, the two aspects of self converge and focus through various techniques (dreaming, meditation, tarot cards) in the center of the cross. Universal archetypes (the visual symbols on tarot card illustrations) are the language understood by both. In other words, again the self, albeit the &quot;total self&quot; is BOTH the investigator (using intuition and sensation) and the decision-maker (thinking and feeling). The cards simply open us to our total selves.<br /><br /><strong>Theory 3 </strong><br />Variations on faith believes that attribute the power of divination to a higher power. Angels, guardian angels, gods, spirits, super conscious (super self) linked to the collective consciousness, God, ancestors, demons, take your choice. Some can rationalize they are all the same thing, united as Jung proposed by the collective consciousness. In other words, we may not have the same name for these powers, but they're available to everyone.<br /><br /><strong>Collective Language</strong><br />The important element in all this is &quot;COMMUNICATION.&quot; The cards become the symbolic or visual language. In Jungian terms, archetypal language. No spoken words are required. The &quot;intuition&quot; of the super conscious and communicate with the &quot;thinking and feeling&quot; of the rational or ego conscious, the self. Whether you attribute this communication to super self or gods &mdash; some would argue they are the same thing &mdash; the communication is really the function of the cards. If you come to understand the visual symbols of the cards, which are universal &mdash; archetypes that decades and centuries have made common to us all &mdash; you can open the channel of communication between super-self and self, superconscious ad conscious, god and man, angel and ego. And by activating the awesome power of the unconscious, directly linked to this superconscious and the rest of the universe, things happen. Whether you explain this in the occultist way &mdash; &quot;As Above, So Below&quot; &mdash; or in the chaos scientist's theory of &quot;every atom in the universe is connected to every other atom and influences responses&quot; &mdash; the so called butterfly theory (where a butterfly in South America can cause a typhoon in Hong Kong) &mdash; either way, the Tarot cards have shown in millions of uses, to be a common language with an important story.</p>]]></content></entry></feed>