Archer Tarot

January 30, 2008

No time…

Filed under: Archer Tarot Readings Website, Decks, Random Tarotness — archertarot @ 9:01 pm

Here we are, not even a full month into the new year, and deadlines are already looming over me like nine heavy swords. And I’m very annoyed about it, because I haven’t had any time to blog and I seem to have so much I want to write about. In truth, keeping this blog going has been a touchstone for me over the last few months and I get quite antsy when I can’t get to it.

But here I am now, for a few short minutes anyway, so I will try to get a few things off my mind. The first and freshest is that I’ve got my eye on the Roots of Asia, which arrived yesterday for the store. I hadn’t paid this deck much attention before so I took a look at some scans to try to get a feel for it. It’s quite lovely. It doesn’t seem to be a far cry from the Haindl, as they’re both very calm, very sacred decks. The art is very different though, obviously, as the Roots of Asia is inspired by Buddhist teachings and strongly draws on Eastern art. Here are a few cards that have caught my eye (take a close look at that Death card):

asia.jpg

Another thing on my mind is what to do about my readings website. I haven’t sold a reading since October (or it may have been September, I’m not sure). That doesn’t bother me so much, because it’s been a busy time of year, but I am wondering where to go from here. I feel like I need to either abandon it altogether or give it a complete overhaul (or ‘rebrand’, as they say in the biz). I’d like to do a reading about it when I get some free time (ha ha).

What else? Oh yes, I’ve been wondering where to go with my personal tarot studies. There is so much more I want to study about the Haindl, but after using it almost exclusively for several months I’m feeling drawn to other decks. A lovely forum friend of mine is going to send me the Shining Tribe Tarot by Rachel Pollack, and I’ll also have the Alchemical Renewed on the way in February. I’ve hardly looked at the four new decks I got for Christmas, let alone read with them, and now I’m considering adding the Roots of Asia to my collection. Last night I got all my decks out of the drawer and gazed lovingly at them for a while. I would like to get to know them all a lot better but that can’t be done quickly. And I’m worried that if I jump from deck to deck, I’ll get all distracted and fragmented. Sticking to the Haindl has been very grounding for me. On the bright side, seeing as I have no time, I can’t really play with any of them, so that solves that problem.

I’ve also been wanting to mention another reader’s website: Tarot of the Three Moons. It belongs to Helen Howell, who gave me a very comforting and helpful reading a couple of weeks ago. If you’re looking for a competent and thoughtful reader, I highly recommend her.

January 21, 2008

Universal Fantasy

Filed under: Decks — archertarot @ 9:31 pm

I have been doing some readings over the last few weeks using the Universal Fantasy Tarot. This is a deck I got around the middle of last year and, until Christmas, had never used. I got it because I love love love Paolo Martinello’s art, which portrays an imaginary kingdom rich in swirling colours. The reason I didn’t bother trying to read with it is because I (mistakenly) believed it would be one of those decks which made sense only to its creator. The majority of cards depict highly unusual scenes. Here are a few of my favourites:

Universal Fantasy

In truth, it is surprisingly easy to read with and in many instances, very literal. The pictures seem to describe fairy tales or fables. What quest is the adventurer in the 7 of Swords on and what dangers await him? Who is the shadowy figure in the 9 of Swords and is he really as fearsome as he seems? What diabolical spell is the mage casting in the 3 of Cups? As a writer, I think this would be a very good deck to consult for story ideas and inspiration.

January 11, 2008

Tonight – on the Tarot Channel

Filed under: Tarot Stripped Bare DVD — archertarot @ 6:44 pm

The Tarot Channel has posted a review of Tarot Stripped Bare and, what’s more, it’s quite a good review. Plus, there’s a short interview I gave, which I was very, very nervous about doing. Fortunately, it turned out okay and it was actually fun to do, thanks to Gayla who was very nice to me and who didn’t ask me any difficult questions. 

The DVD was released back in October and we were finished with it long before then (so it could be sent off for manufacture). It was weird having to think back and talk about it and the reasons why I made it. It made me feel excited about it again, which I hadn’t been for a long time. I don’t know why, but there’s something about working continually and struggling to meet a deadline that can really take the shine off a project… Now all that’s over, I can look at it and think: “Huh, I made a DVD* and it turned out okay.”

*I should probably admit my husband did a lot of work on it too – just in case he reads this. ;-)

January 9, 2008

The Bad Day Spread

Filed under: Original Spreads — archertarot @ 8:17 pm

Today didn’t go particularly well and this evening I found myself pondering a spread which could help me reflect upon and let go of that bad day vibe. This is what I came up with.

Note: if you’ve had a really bad day, I recommend calming down first with a relaxing bath and a glass of something alcoholic (actually, that works for good days too).

 Bad Day Spread

1 – The overall energy that was at play today.

2 – What part did I play making it a bad day?

3 – What could I have done to improve things?

4 – What can I learn from this experience?

5 – How can I best get back on track tomorrow?

January 8, 2008

Thoughts on the Ace of Cups

Filed under: Card Meanings, Haindl Tarot Study — archertarot @ 8:33 pm

At my favourite tarot forum, we have just started a new study, sharing our thoughts on each card as we move through the deck. We’ve started with the Ace of Cups, and I thought I’d post my thoughts here as well. I’m studying the Haindl (no surprise there).

Haindl Ace of Cups

In the Haindl Tarot, the suit of Cups is associated with the North, Europe and the element of Water. The Ace of Cups represents the Holy Grail. This theme is repeated later in the suit, when Parsival adopts the role of the Son of Cups (similar to the Knight).

The cup seems to be forming before our eyes, with golden light and water spiralling upwards into the shape of a cup. Rachel Pollack says this symbolizes evolution, “the spirit rising through its experiences to a higher level”. As the Holy Grail, the Ace of Cups seems to me to represent both the end point as well as the beginning. It is both the thing that we seek and the call to seek it. It calls us to begin our own personal Grail quest.

Rachel Pollack goes on to say: “As the Grail turns, it gives off water mixed with light. This too symbolizes the idea of development. The emotions – water – become “enlightened”. A personal Grail quest shows us the truth in our lives.” In the Grail Legend, Parsival has to go through many trials before he can achieve the grail – when he first encounters it, he’s not ready because he hasn’t experienced enough for his spirit to have risen to a higher level.

I haven’t yet had much contact with this card – it hasn’t come up in any readings I’ve done. I think it is a thing of beauty, and it strikes me as very spiritual – very pure and holy (which of course, as the Holy Grail, it is). The cup seems like a vision, somehow not real. I imagine that if I could reach into the card and try to hold it, my hand would go straight through it. I can’t just take love (in the broadest sense of the word) for granted. I can’t expect to take it when I please. A true awareness of love comes only through sadness, loneliness, loss, friendship, joy – all the things found in the other cards of the suit which must be experienced first.

January 6, 2008

A Reading About Reading

Filed under: Haindl Tarot Study, Original Spreads, Personal Readings — archertarot @ 5:18 pm

A couple of weeks ago, I asked the question, “How can I make the readings I do more meaningful and beneficial to both myself and others?” I drew three cards from the Haindl, in a variation on the basic 3-card situation-advice-outcome spread. (This is a spread I am using more and more as it seems to make a reading less one-sided, and more like a conversation.)

1. Commentary – What do I need to understand?
DAUGHTER OF SWORDS IN THE SOUTH

2. Message – What do I need to hear?
2 OF SWORDS (PEACE)

3. Vision – What do I need to envision?
8 OF SWORDS (INTERFERENCE)

Haindl Daughter of Swords, 2 of Swords & 8 of Swords

In the first card, Isis wears a headband decorated with doorways. Rachel Pollack explains the significance of painted doors: “Since they were not real they could not open; only the dead spirits or the astral bodies of initiates could pass them.” This could suggest psychic development, or the kind of secret language that is involved in reading tarot. My first thought was, “doorways into the mind”. Isis has an open expression and she looks out of the card, towards some unseeable other. She listens rather than speaks; learns, rather than teaches. Without judgment or prejudice, she accepts the knowledge of others, soaks it up like a sponge. In the background of the card is Hathor. Rachel Pollack mentions how the Egyptians “tended to merge older deities into the current favourites, and some of Hathor’s attributes became associated with Isis.” This again could be seen as learning from those who have gone before and who have valuable experience. The equivalent of this card in conventional decks is the Page of Swords.

As Commentary, this card touches on several aspects. First, it shows that it is important to approach each reading (and tarot in general) with an open mind. It is not helpful to go into a reading with any pre-conceived ideas; it is far better to be a sponge or a blank slate, ready to receive the messages in the cards whatever they may be. Second, with Isis looking out of the card, it suggests the idea of an “other” which, in a reading, would be the querent. It is important therefore to listen to the querent, and to understand that any concept I have of what might be ”meaningful and beneficial” isn’t necessarily the same as what will be meaningful and beneficial to the querent. Finally, the card tells me it’s important to keep learning about the cards, from books, from other readers, and from ”older deities” whose experience and wisdom can help me grow. (I was going to add Rachel Pollack’s name as an example of an older deity but didn’t want to insult her by calling her old! Clearly though, the tarot world is full of these older deities, who have been reading and studying tarot for years longer than I have and from whom I can learn.)

The second card is the 2 of Swords, which in the Haindl Tarot is given the title ‘Peace’. I talked a little about this card in an earlier post. The position it occupies in this spread is “Message – What do I need to hear?” I think the answer is very simple: when I read for others or for myself I need to hear nothing or, rather, I need peace. It is no good finishing work and then doing a reading straight away. My mind needs time to find stillness, to quiet down. Likewise, I know there are many readers who can whip out their cards, give them a quick shuffle, get their answer and put them away again, all in the space of two minutes, but I’m not one of them. I need time and space to consider the cards, to let the reading come together as a whole.

I have done many readings over the last few years which have been meaningful and beneficial, but I have done many more which have been meaningless. Usually, those are the readings I rushed, or that I did when my mind was distracted by other things. It will help me to take time to do readings properly, to find a quiet space where I won’t be interrupted and take a few moments to calm my mind. Whatever is going on in my life has to be put aside - suspended like the swords in this card – so I can better achieve the ‘blank slate’ openness of the first card. 

The final card is the 8 of Swords, titled ‘Interference’.  It answers the question, “What do I need to envision?” The card shows the trunk of a tree, its branches stunted, with 8 swords criss-crossed in front and behind. It seems as if the swords are the reason for the tree’s restricted growth. The I Ching hexagram on this card resembles a mouth “biting through” the strong line in the middle. The hexagram can refer to the dogged persistance needed to get to the bare bones of a situation and also to reform. I believe (not being much of a gardener myself) that pruning some plants helps to shape or reform their growth. So the effect of the swords (and therefore the “interference) shown in this card could be beneficial as well as being restrictive. The card shows a difficult situation: too much interference can do more damage than good and kill the tree; not enough may lead to failure.

Tarot readers do quite a bit of interfering in the business of others so I think this card is reminding me to take care in this respect. Often those I’m reading for are complete strangers and I don’t know how they will be affected by what I tell them. I should make sure my words (swords) are beneficial rather than damaging. After opening my mind as shown by Isis, and finding the peace and stillness of the 2 of Swords, I must then “bite through” to get to the bare bones of the reading and use precision and careful judgement when explaining the messages of the cards. I need to envision myself in each reading helping the querent to reform their life – not through unnatural restriction of their free will to grow as they please but by pruning, shaping and guiding the growth in the direction they wish it to go. 

January 4, 2008

Lucky Girl

Filed under: Decks — archertarot @ 5:08 pm

For Christmas, I was given four new tarot decks: Robert Place’s Tarot of the Saints; Erin J McCauley’s Phantomwise Tarot; the Tarot of the Thousand and One Nights; and, surprisingly, the Necronomicon Tarot.

I have also received today the Haindl Rune Oracle AND I’ve just pre-ordered the Alchemical Tarot: Renewed.

I’m a very lucky girl.

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