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Tarot is one of the most powerful tools for self-discovery, divination, and magical practice. These 78 cards hold centuries of wisdom, offering guidance, clarity, and insight into any situation. Whether you're seeking answers about love, career, or spiritual growth, tarot can illuminate your path forward.
What is Tarot?
Tarot is a system of 78 illustrated cards used for divination, meditation, and self-reflection. Each card carries symbolic meaning that, when interpreted in context, provides insight into questions and situations.
Contrary to popular belief, tarot doesn't predict a fixed future. Rather, it reveals the energies and possibilities surrounding your current path, empowering you to make informed choices.
The Structure of a Tarot Deck
A standard tarot deck contains 78 cards divided into two sections:
Major Arcana (22 Cards)
The Major Arcana represents life's spiritual lessons and karmic influences. These cards depict the Fool's Journey—the path from innocence through experience to enlightenment. When Major Arcana cards appear, pay attention: they signal significant themes or turning points.
The Major Arcana includes:
- 0 The Fool — New beginnings, innocence, spontaneity
- I The Magician — Manifestation, willpower, skill
- II The High Priestess — Intuition, mystery, inner knowledge
- III The Empress — Abundance, nurturing, creativity
- IV The Emperor — Authority, structure, stability
- V The Hierophant — Tradition, spiritual guidance, conformity
- VI The Lovers — Love, harmony, choices
- VII The Chariot — Determination, willpower, victory
- VIII Strength — Courage, patience, inner strength
- IX The Hermit — Introspection, solitude, inner guidance
- X Wheel of Fortune — Cycles, fate, turning points
- XI Justice — Fairness, truth, karma
- XII The Hanged Man — Surrender, new perspective, pause
- XIII Death — Transformation, endings, rebirth
- XIV Temperance — Balance, moderation, patience
- XV The Devil — Shadow self, attachment, illusion
- XVI The Tower — Sudden change, revelation, upheaval
- XVII The Star — Hope, inspiration, serenity
- XVIII The Moon — Illusion, intuition, the subconscious
- XIX The Sun — Joy, success, vitality
- XX Judgement — Reflection, reckoning, awakening
- XXI The World — Completion, integration, accomplishment
Minor Arcana (56 Cards)
The Minor Arcana deals with daily life—the challenges, opportunities, and experiences we encounter regularly. These cards are divided into four suits:
Wands (Fire) — Passion, creativity, action, career, ambition
Cups (Water) — Emotions, relationships, intuition, love
Swords (Air) — Thoughts, communication, conflict, truth
Pentacles (Earth) — Material world, money, health, practical matters
Each suit contains cards Ace through Ten, plus four Court Cards: Page, Knight, Queen, and King.
Choosing Your First Deck
The myth that your first deck must be gifted is just that—a myth. Choose a deck that calls to you. For beginners, the Rider-Waite-Smith deck (or decks based on it) is ideal because:
Free Tarot Journal
Track your readings with printable journal pages, spread templates, and more.
Download Free PDF- Most tarot books and resources reference its imagery
- Every card is fully illustrated with symbolic scenes
- The imagery is intuitive and easy to read
Other beginner-friendly options include the Modern Witch Tarot, Light Seer's Tarot, and The Wild Unknown.
Preparing for a Reading
Cleansing Your Deck
Before your first reading (and periodically after), cleanse your deck:
- Knock on the deck three times to clear energy
- Pass through incense or sage smoke
- Leave under moonlight overnight
- Place a cleansing crystal (clear quartz, selenite) on top
Bonding With Your Deck
- Sleep with your deck under your pillow
- Carry it with you for a few days
- Look through each card, noting your reactions
- Do a daily one-card pull to get familiar with the cards
Creating Sacred Space
Before reading:
- Find a quiet, comfortable space
- Light a candle or incense if desired
- Take a few deep breaths to center yourself
- Clear your mind of distractions
- Hold your deck and focus on your question
How to Read Tarot
Asking Questions
The quality of your reading depends on the quality of your question. Avoid yes/no questions. Instead, ask open-ended questions that empower you:
- Instead of: “Will I get the job?”
- Ask: “What do I need to know about this job opportunity?”
- Instead of: “Does he love me?”
- Ask: “What energy surrounds my relationship with [name]?”
Shuffling
There's no wrong way to shuffle. Do what feels comfortable:
- Overhand shuffle
- Riffle shuffle
- Spread cards on the table and mix
- Cut the deck into piles and restack
Shuffle until it feels right to stop. Some readers stop when a card “jumps” out; others cut the deck and draw from the middle.
Reading the Cards
- Observe your first impression — What do you notice immediately?
- Study the imagery — What's happening in the card? What symbols appear?
- Consider the card's traditional meaning — But let your intuition guide you
- Apply it to your question — How does this card answer what you asked?
- Note the position — In a spread, position adds context
Essential Tarot Spreads
One-Card Pull
Perfect for daily guidance or quick answers. Ask a simple question and draw one card. Great for beginners building familiarity with the cards.
Three-Card Spread
Versatile and informative. Common variations:
- Past — Present — Future
- Situation — Action — Outcome
- Mind — Body — Spirit
- You — The Other Person — The Relationship
Celtic Cross
The classic 10-card spread for comprehensive readings. Positions typically cover: present situation, challenge, past, future, conscious, subconscious, advice, external influences, hopes/fears, and outcome.
Reversed Cards
When a card appears upside-down, it's “reversed.” You can choose whether to read reversals. If you do, reversed cards might indicate:
- Blocked or delayed energy
- Internal versus external expression
- The shadow side of the card's meaning
- A need to look deeper at the issue
Some readers never use reversals, reading all cards upright. Neither approach is wrong—do what resonates with you.
Developing Your Intuition
While learning traditional meanings is valuable, tarot is ultimately an intuitive practice. To develop your intuitive reading:
- Practice daily one-card pulls
- Journal your readings and check back later
- Meditate with individual cards
- Trust your gut reactions to imagery
- Read for yourself before consulting guidebooks
- Notice patterns across multiple readings
Tarot Ethics
- Get consent before reading for others
- Don't diagnose medical or mental health conditions
- Respect free will — Avoid reading on third parties without involvement
- Empower, don't frighten — Frame difficult cards constructively
- Know your limits — Refer serious issues to professionals
Caring for Your Deck
- Store in a cloth bag, wooden box, or wrapped in silk
- Keep a cleansing crystal with your deck
- Handle with respect and intention
- Cleanse regularly, especially after heavy readings
- Keep in a special place on your altar or dresser
Your Tarot Journey
Learning tarot is a lifelong journey. The cards will reveal new layers of meaning as you grow. Be patient with yourself, practice regularly, and trust that your relationship with the cards will deepen over time.
The wisdom you seek is already within you. Tarot simply helps you access it.
Happy reading! 🔮
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