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Create your spread: Organize the cards that come out in a spread format of your choice. Feel free to tap into the three-card spread suggested above. Feel free to tap into the three-card spread ...
In the Rider-Waite Tarot; a well fed, self-satisfied individual sits with nine cups behind. Ten of Cups: Total completion of the suit, the full potency of the suits symbolism. In the Rider-Waite Tarot; a husband and wife join arms looking up at the rainbow over their house, two young children dance. Ten cups are seen among the rainbow.
They are all up on a cloud, which may reflect their ungrounded, impractical or transient nature and the over-imagination or confusion of the figure conjuring them. Accordingly, they have been associated with wishful thinking. There is some dispute as to what the 7 symbols in the cups mean, but tarotologists have some speculation as to the meanings.
“A tarot reader shuffles the cards, then lays them out in a pattern known as a ‘spread,’” Theresa Reed (AKA The Tarot Lady), tarot expert and author with over 40 years of experience in ...
Gray's books were adopted by members of the 1960s counter-culture as standard reference works on divinatory use of tarot cards, [83] and her 1970 book A Complete Guide to the Tarot was the first work to use the metaphor of the "Fool's Journey" to explain the meanings of the major arcana. [84] [85]
The High Priestess is the tarot’s powerful psychic and she turns up when your subconscious has something to say. This isn’t about navel-gazing, worrying, or overthinking.
A sense of powerlessness and apathy giving way to fear. If the other cards in the spread are favourable, then the Two of Swords can indicate lack of bias and even mindedness. The Three of Swords represents the aspect of the mind which is overly critical, especially of itself. The perverse impulse to dissect a problem beyond the point of usefulness.
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