Tag: tarot court cards

  • Tarot Blog Hop | Ostara 2013 | Snowdrop Spread

    Welcome to the Ostara Tarot Blog Hop! You may have arrived here by hopping forward from Joanne’s blog or hopping backwards from Joanna’s – or maybe you’ve just alighted on the page by chance! 

    Whichever mossy path you have taken to reach me here at Tarot Thrones, you are most welcome *pulls out a chair and proffers a plate of chocolate biscuits. Really nice ‘spensive biscuits – nothing but the best*

    If you’ve never been here before, let me explain a little about life here at Tarot Thrones – this blog exists primarily to help people with their Court Card work.  I know.  Tricky! And that maybe makes it sound a bit boooooooring here, but I hope that it’s not 🙂

    This spread was inspired by the snowdrop.  By looking at the plant’s structure, I arrived at this 8-card spread.   Take your cards and begin to shuffle, all the while thinking of the snowdrop……

    THE SNOWDROP SPREAD


    The Snowdrop

    Card 1:  The bulb that sits patiently in the darkness of the earth asks:  what nourishes me?  Because the bulb is in the ground, this may turn out to be something that you don’t initially recognise as being nourishing.  It might be a shadow energy.  Can it nourish you?

    Card 2:  The green fuse (as Dylan Thomas most memorably wrote!) that emerges from the earth, spiking its way inexorably skywards asks:  what motivates me?


    Cards 3, 4 and 5 – These three cards represent the three outer petals and together ask: what flowers within me.  The cards may be read individually or as a trio.

    Cards 6, 7 and 8 – These are the three tiny inner petals that are difficult to see (unless you look!)  and together ask:  what hidden gifts do I have?  Again, these cards may be read individually or as a trio.

    Record your reading in your journal and refer to it whenever your energies flag or you could just do with a boost to renew yourself.

    There may be cards that arise within this spread that you don’t feel fit the questions – cards that you actively dislike or feel ambivalent about.  This is the perfect time of year, the Spring Equinox, to deal with any ambivalence that you might feel regarding the cards – see whether you can bring those energies from the dark and into the light 🙂

    Should any card be unclear, pull another card to clarify the meaning.  The spread works equally well with an Oracle or Tarot deck, I find.  Because my blog is about Court Cards, you can try this variation – For Card 1, you may prefer to take 16 Court Cards from a different deck to your main deck and select a Court to see whose energies nourish you?

    I hope that you find a little time to try the spread, but now I appreciate that you must be off – forwards or backwards – to my lovely neighbours on this blog hop *waves white hankie fondly at the departing reader*  Come back and visit us again, won’t you?

  • The Queen of Wands | Darkana Tarot | New Moon Draw

    Tarot Thrones, Dan Donche's Darkana Tarot

    So, what can you expect – the house is freezing cold, I am feeling like death warmed up, I have just had a huge nose-bleed and a mysterious bout of nausea – who else but the Tarot’s Queen of Wands to pop me right back on track!

    This Queen of Wands hails from Dan Donche’s Darkana Tarot, a 78-card deck project manifested by Kickstarter funding.

    I rather enjoy the anarchic, splattery ink feel that the cards have.

    Unfortunately, I’m feeling a bit anarchic and yes, splattery, myself today.


    Dan’s Queen of Wands is a complete HOTTIE – a sexy pole-dancing Queen – someone who is very much aware of her own power and confident about displaying it.   He includes some keywords for her ‘Allure’ and ‘Self Assurance’

    Lemme tell you, sitting here wrapped in many layers of wool, my poor nose throbbing, my throat aching…..the only hottie that I’m interested in is a hot water bottle.  I feel about as far from the Queen of Wands energy as it’s possible to be!  But maybe if I can pull on my gold high heels to go to my Calligraphy class this afternoon, it will make me feel better?….
    Does depicting the Queen of Wands as a pole dancer reduce her to a cypher that omits many of the Queen’s fine qualities? Or perhaps we should be thinking what other characteristics a Pole Dancer brings to our understanding of the Queen of Wands? 
    Any thoughts?

    *** from Twitter discussion with Kevin @Borntoroar – Dan’s Queen of Wands is showing us that her POLE is her Wand! Yeah, we were ON FIRE over there!

    Pass the box of paper hankies.  If someone could make me up a hot chocolate, that would be very nice *shuffles off to lie down and wonder how on EARTH she can become The Queen of Wands*
  • World Book Day | My Top Tarot Books

    Mary K Greer, Tarot Thrones, Tarot For Your Self,
    A favourite Tarot book

    I could not let World Book Day go past without sharing some Tarot book recommendations to help you   on your journey to understanding the Tarot.

    The books are listed in no particular order, but they are books that I return to again and again, amongst many bookcases of Tarot books.

    Joan Bunning: Learning The Tarot

    An excellent primer to get you started with confidence in your Tarot journey.  This book forms the basis of TABI’s massively popular free Tarot training course.

    Mary K Greer:  Tarot for Yourself – A Workbook for Personal Transformation

    First published in 1984, this book continues to be amongst the best-sellers – because it encourages you to work with the Tarot as a tool for personal transformation.

    Mary K Greer: Understanding The Tarot Court

    THE go-to book for getting to grips with the Tarot Court.  If it’s not in this book, it probably isn’t worth learning 🙂

    Corrine Kenner:  Tarot and Astrology

    If you plan to extend your Tarot knowledge to other disciplines, like Astrology – this is a comprehensive book to lead you through the Astrology maze.

    Liz Hazel:  Tarot Decoded

    A slender book crammed with useful information about numerology, elemental dignities, astrology, planetary associations – Excellent for Tarot students who want to add depth and complexity to their readings.

    Naomi Ozaniec – The Watkins Tarot Handbook

    For those wishing to take tentative steps into adding Kabbalistic layers to their Tarot work, I have found this book invaluable.

    Ruth Ann & Wald Amberstone: Tarot Tips

    Another great book for beginners – 78 techniques to enhance your reading skills.  From handling quiet querents to handling the Death card.  All delivered in brief, easy to read sections.

    Art Rosengarten Phd : Tarot and Psychology

    Bringing the Tarot into the Counsellor’s room and exploring how our 78 friends can be used as a therapeutic tool.

    Lon Milo DuQuette: Understanding Aleister Crowley’s Thoth Tarot 

    If you only buy ONE book to learn more about this beautiful deck and its highly individual creators, this is it.

    I have loads and loads of other books that I love…. like Tarot Reversals or 78 Degrees of Wisdom or Tarot Wisdom or Frank K Jensen’s Story of the Waite Smith Tarot …….*sigh*  but I have limited it to THESE ones because I’d love it if YOU would share your favourite books and make some recommendations for me.

    *** I want to amend this to include another book, 10b –  Paul Huson’s excellent book ‘Mystical Origins of The Tarot which I have been using a lot lately and recommend to the house!

  • Tarot Podcast | 4 February

    Tarot Thrones | Soundcloud

    Here is the podcast from the Tarot radio show that I broadcast on Radio Bute on 4 February.

    I can’t thank you enough for supporting me in this tarot podcast venture – with questions for me to use on the show, for ‘liking’ my show’s facebook page and just encouraging me along the winding path to a successful recording.  Well, as successful as my recording gets!

    https://soundcloud.com/alison-cross/radiobutetarotpodcast5a

  • 30 Day Tarot Challenge | Day 7

    Tarot Thrones:  3 Cups from Mystic Faerie Tarot by Linda RavenscroftQuestion 7: What is my favourite card (both in terms of the decks artwork and divination meaning)


    Ooooh this is a tricky one!  How can you select a favourite card from the 78 available? And then how can I pick one image from the hundreds of decks out there?!


    Initially, I was going to say that it must be Death that is my favourite card, because when I’m buying a new deck, Death is one of the cards that I go straight to, to see how the artist has rendered it.  If Death appeals to me, then the chances are all the other ones are looking good too!

    I have been very greatly enamoured with the DruidCraft Tarot since I first met it in Glastonbury….and also Alexander Daniloff’s Tarot…. but as far as artwork that I loved so much that I wanted to hang it on my wall, it had to be The Archer from The Wildwood Tarot, painted by Will Worthington.


    The Archer, Wildwood Tarot, Will Worthington, Tarot Thrones
    The Archer


    I loved the image so much that I begged Will Worthington to sell me the painting! Which he did!  The Archer was delivered to me at TABI’s Tarot Conference a couple of years ago in Birmingham where Will Worthington had agreed to be interviewed by me, and I unwrapped it with shaking hands and a thudding heart.  Mr W makes these magnificent Arts & Crafts frames for his work too – isn’t it stunning?


    Words can’t express how much I loved her when I saw her – and still do,  The Archer hangs where she can regularly remind me to focus all my strength on my target, just as she does.  Even when I am lying on the sofa with a Crunchie and a cup of tea I know that she’s willing me to Get OFF my arse and DO something!


    I am also deeply besotted by Igraine in the Camelot Oracle, also painted by Will Worthington.

    Tarot Thrones: Igraine - Camelot Oracle - Will Worthington



    Like I said in another post….*creepy Stephen King voice* I’m his biggest fan 😀




    As far as having a favourite with regard to divinatory meaning – I think that it might be 3 of Cups and Celebration – what’s not to like?!  But what I REALLY like is a card that you can have a lot of discussion about, like Death or The Tower.  Not a barrel of laughs, but something meaty to talk about.


    So, what about YOU? Tell me what your favourite cards are (artwork and divinatory meaning)







  • Page of Pentacles | Tarot Newsletter

    Tarot Thrones | Alexander Danlioff Page of Pentacles
    Me and my Tarot newsletter – minus the tights

    Yes, another Tarot goal for this year is struck off the first tee with a satisfying thwack! Sure, I’m still at the first hole (well, on the fairway somewhere!), but you know, Rome wasn’t built in a day 😀  and at least I’m not in the rough!

    Golfing metaphors aside – I sent out my first Tarot newsletter.  *toots party tooter. waves small flag*
    You can sign up for it over there on the right hand info bar *points* and I absolutely promise you that your details will remain with me and never be given to any strange men that profer me envelopes stuffed with money.  Or cake.  Mind you, who would want the sort of cake that can be stuffed in an envelope?
    I was all Page of Pentacles about the newsletter. I’ve been using Mailchimp for a while now, but actually creating something for yourself, as opposed to a client, is a little daunting.  That’s why it’s taken me soooooo long to get OFF THE BLOCKS! 
    Look, now I’m now mixing my sporting metaphors…..
    What to call it?! Jeez – you can stymie yourself at every single hurdle (more sport!) and I named and renamed my poor newsletter waif about a thousand times, eventually settling on The Little White Newsletter.  
    Which I then proceeded to place in a band of bright pink.
    Well, why not have a little fun with it all? And in Alexander Daniloff’s delightful little Page, we see him with a game tucked under his arm.  And hence all the sport metaphors – games and fun are the order of the day for the Page of Pents!
    It was also important to me that the newsletter was brief – I appreciate that there are lots of brilliant Tarot newsletters out there, but right now at the beginning, I just want to pass on information to you while you are checking your morning e-mails so as not to get on folks nerves when I hit their inbox.
    The long-winded chatty stuff I save for here * throws opens arms at Thrones Towers*.
    So, how did the Page o f Pentacles manifest for this project?
    * It was my FIRST newsletter and Pages often represent beginnings of things.
    * It was SMALL 🙂
    * It was a HANDS-ON learning experience 
       (how many times did I edit it before I sent it out – go on ask me! About a MILLION times!! <- total
       Page of Wands exaggeration there, methinks!
    * With the newsletter I’m trying to HELP and NURTURE people’s interest in Tarot in a PRACTICAL
       way.
    What else does the Page of Pentacles say to you? 
    Oh and if you missed the newsletter you can find it here.
    PS – now that I’m getting the statistics information for the newsletter (which I think are pretty decent), I’m morphing into the Swords family.  All of them 😀
  • Feeling like….The Knight of Wands…wayhay!

    Count Lilac – Matthew Bourne’s Sleeping Beauty

    It has been half term here – now over, thank goodness!

    School holidays are not my favourite time because I still have the same amount of work to do, but only now with a small boy hanging over my shoulder telling me how bored he is.

    I sometimes wish that I’d had more than one child – even if they didn’t play together well, they could have at least entertained themselves by fighting like cat and dog.

    Last week I did something that was entirely Knight of Wands….

    ….I was sitting at the computer, still fuzzy-headed and bejammied, nursing my morning cup of tea, idly speculating on something that I could do that day with Sonshine that would keep him entertained but that wouldn’t leave me stupified.  My gaze alighted on an advertisement for Matthew Bourne’s Sleeping Beauty ballet.

    I’m a big fan of Bourne’s Swan Lake (if you haven’t seen it – get yourself a DVD pronto! An all male corps de ballet was a BRILLIANT idea).

    That very afternoon, within travelling distance of me on the island, there was a matinee performance.

    Would my 12 year-old son be interested in a ballet?  Did I really care?!

    I looked at the price of the tickets – fairly ‘spensive.  Hmmm – it would be wonderful…..

    I threw caution to the wind and I booked two tickets AND a hotel for us.  And then realised that in order to make the performance, we would need to be on the NEXT FERRY!!!

    Reader, with less than an hour in hand, Sonshine was summoned from his position in front of the telly (I know, I’m a bad mother!) and we both hastily showered, changed and packed a bag.  And found ourselves, somewhat breathless, on the 11am ferry!

    Sonshine sat gazing around him, blinking in disbelief. ‘We did it!’

    Totally spontaneous behaviour! I secretly crow and congratulate myself on being the Knight of Wands – impulse, acting on desires, not considering the consequences of my actions too deeply…. ah yes, the work would just have to wait until the following day.

    Ah and there’s the other thing! I then had to tell my 12 year-old Warhammer-obsessed son that we were off to the BALLET.  Which he accepted with much better grace than I imagined. I think that he must have been working his inner Page of Pentacles – embracing a new experience!

    Review:  Get yourself some tickets to see this ballet – even if it’s just for the puppet! Sonshine was (on the whole) mesmerised (having a £1 pair of opera glasses helped!) and the fairies carry the perfect amount of gothic malice that I like to see.  Excellent – go and see it!

  • Mary K Greer | Interview

    I thought I’d give you something really lovely that doesn’t put a single inch on your hips for Valentine’s Day.  And here it is – my Tarot Court interview with Mary Greer! I hope that you enjoy it:

    I asked top Tarot author Mary K Greer whether she would like to answer some Court Card questions for Tarot Thrones and, ever gracious, she agreed:

    Mary – thank you so much for agreeing
    to answer questions for my Court Card blog.

    I endeavour NOT to use your ideas and
    exercises on my own Court Card blog here, but, more often than not,
    when I re-read your book, Understanding the Tarot Court (UTTC) I realise that you got there YEARS before
    me! I apologise for inadvertently using your work – you really have
    created the Go-To book for working with the Tarot Court.   There
    doesn’t seem to be any aspect of working with the Courtly characters
    that you have left unexplored, how did that book come about?

    Great minds think
    alike! Tom Little and I were on a Tarot discussion group way back and
    the court cards came up quite frequently as problematic. Because Tom
    worked with Marseilles-style decks and I work more with the
    Rider-Waite, some different perspectives were produced that started
    expanding the possibilities for everyone. Tom started his own group
    to specifically explore the older French and Italian decks and Court
    Cards. We found that people told really intriguing stories about the
    “families” they saw in each suit’s court. So, I proposed we
    work together on a book that would work well for any deck.
    Why do you think that people struggle
    with Court Cards more than the other sections of the deck?
    A Court Card, by
    itself, doesn’t tell a story in the same way other cards do – at
    least in most modern decks. Its meanings don’t usually describe
    events. There’s no action except sitting, standing or riding. Nor
    are we familiar with the classical references made to European
    playing cards. Once people get that it is more about a style,
    attitude or “way” of doing things then it becomes easier to
    understand their role in a reading. That’s why most people enjoy
    the learning games. It’s not that difficult to know what cars the
    four Knights would be driving, instead of riding a horse. But, we
    still don’t know where they are going in their cars or why—unless
    we ask them [more about that later].
    The esoteric organisation, The Golden
    Dawn did a great deal of work with the Tarot Court – what’s your
    favourite contribution of theirs to the understanding of the Tarot
    Court today?
    I don’t often
    pay attention to their correspondence with the last 10° of one Sign
    and the subsequent 20° of the next Sign. Primarily I focus on what
    element they are most aligned with—all of the Wands Court are Fire,
    and all Queens are somewhat Watery—so that the Queen of Wands is
    the “Watery part of Fire”. I like the GD use of elementals and
    other esoteric insignia in the designs. Mostly, I found that the
    reconceptualization of the Courts as Knight – Queen –
    Prince/Emperor – Princess was liberating. Oh, and I also like that
    the only use for reversals was to determine what direction the Court
    Cards were looking or moving
    .


    Preference – RWS court or Thoth court?!
    I feel really
    comfortable with both as long as I am clear on which one I am using
    in a particular situation.
    What makes a ‘good’ Tarot Court in your
    opinion? And when I say good, I mean ‘readily accessible for
    readers’!
    A well-designed
    Court Card cannot be confused with either a Major Arcana or a pip
    card, plus the ranks are each distinct. I don’t want to mistake a
    Page for a Queen or King. I want to be able to tell each apart
    immediately. I also want them depicted so that, when described by a
    person, it naturally goes with adjectives that are characteristic of
    their suit, element and rank. A Cups Knight can be anything from
    romantic to wishy-washy and yet slightly “fired up” (in a
    Knightly sort of way)—if you use those conventions. A Pentacles
    Page should definitely be earthy but young. The William
    Blake Tarot uses Angel, Man, Woman,
    and Child. Each can be clearly discerned, has distinct
    characteristics, and fits with its suit. Also, I generally don’t
    like them so personalized that they seem like real people as I can
    get too caught up in a specific personality. I prefer a “type”
    rather than an individual. The Gaian
    Tarot is an exception to this,
    although it was a hurdle I had to overcome.
    Tarot Thrones | William Blake Tarot - Ed Buryn
    William Blake Tarot:
    Trad: Page of Pentacles

    [Ali: Dear
    Reader, I promise to post about the Courts in the William Blake Tarot
    by Ed Buryn next week :-)]

    Given the huge swathe of decks you have
    come across in your career, which deck’s courts do you love best (and
    why!)
    That’s really
    hard to say. I have favorite individual Major Arcana cards from
    different decks, but not many Court Cards. When checking out a new
    deck, I often look at the Queen of Swords to see if the designers
    have conveyed her in a way I can appreciate. Maybe, Kat Black’s
    “Golden Tarot” comes closest to my favorite Court Cards, although
    the Thoth and RWS are so well known to me that they are like parts of
    myself.
    If you were to create the perfect Tarot
    court, what would it consist of? Would you choose the ranks and sexes
    of the RWS style deck, or a more 21st century
    representation of life?
    I’d probably
    stick fairly closely to the RWS. I really love the William
    Blake Tarot of the Creative Imagination with
    its Angel, Man, Woman, Child concept. It has, therefore, the higher
    self/superego/spirit messenger, the masculine, the feminine, and the
    inner-child. I like that.
    What’s your favourite deliberate use
    for a Court Card?
    For me, a Court
    Card always, always represents an aspect of myself—that I may or
    may not be giving away (projecting on) to someone else (having them
    play the role for me). I try to always “own” the role it is
    taking in a spread even if it is clearly also my mother coming to
    visit. In readings I often ask querents what each Court Card advises
    that they do (which helps them to see the projection). If the Court
    Card is in a past
    position, then I might say, “What would your father, if he was this
    card, have wanted you to do back then?”—given that we had
    perceived qualities of the father in that card. I might even ask a
    querent to dialog back-and-forth with a Court Card. A person doesn’t
    have to follow the advice, but they need to recognize the voice of
    that person (“the internalized father,” for instance) that they
    carry around in their own psyches and which may still be influencing
    them. The Court Cards are rather like a council of more or less
    helpful advisors and opinionated voices, arising from different parts
    of myself or externalized through individuals in my life. They urge
    us to take their perspective.

    Pages can indicate schooling or your receiving a message of some kind and Knights can indicate travel or represent rival lovers. A Queen can be your mother or friend and a King your father or boss. Try to not overlook the obvious.

    Which Courtly personality is your
    favourite, and why?
    The Queen of
    Swords. I like the contradiction of her being a Queen and therefore
    interpersonally-oriented, yet tending toward the rational and
    logical. She is deeply perceptive and clear about her boundaries and
    limits. She can be compassionate but without sentimentality. And she
    doesn’t take any nonsense from anyone.
    Amongst the array of exercises and
    approaches in your UTTC book you look at the Myers Briggs types and
    allocate them to the various Courtly personalities – do you think
    that there is more out there that contemporary Tarotists can take and
    ‘hang’ on the Courts?
    There probably
    is. Any system of 16 types might work, and even 12-type systems can
    work if one of the Courts can be assigned the “pure” type. The
    problem with the Myers-Briggs system is that a purely logical
    association of types to elements and ranks doesn’t perfectly match
    the characteristics of either. You end up having to skew a few types
    or cards to make them fit. Whenever you link correspondences this is
    always the case. For instance, Taurus and the Hierophant are not
    really a perfect match until you deliberately start making them look
    more and more like each other. As long as you don’t take them to be
    exactly equivalent (accepting that they are square pegs in round
    holes) you’re okay.
    At the moment you are deeply involved
    with the Lenormand Oracle, what are your thoughts about the
    personalities of ‘face cards’ as shown on the Lenormand and their
    relationship (with regard to interpretation, rather than historical
    links) with the Tarot court?
    In Lenormand I
    don’t attach much in the way of personality characteristics to the
    Court Cards except that the Queen of Clubs (Snake) is a rival, other
    woman, or wicked step-mother type, and occasionally a wise friend.
    The characteristics of other people, if I discern them in a Lenormand
    Court Card (rarely), are determined by the cards immediately around
    them. Their role as a specific person is usually secondary to the
    primary function of the card. For instance, the Child is most likely
    to be a child or something new, rather than a
    child-as-described-by-the-Jack of Spades. Bouquet is primarily a gift
    or invitation and only secondarily might have something to do with a
    female relative, but certainly it does not have any characteristics
    one would associate with the Queen of Spades. It needs to be
    remembered that the divinatory system associated with the original
    German suits is totally different than the English and French
    cartomantic meanings we usually associate with them. For example,
    Clubs is by far the worst suit and Spades, the best.

    Many thanks to Mary for answering my questions about the Tarot Court!  If you’d like to know more about Mary’s work:
    You can find Mary on Facebook here

    Mary’s blog is here:  http://marygreer.wordpress.com/
    Her latest book is:  Who Are You in the Tarot?  You can ‘like’ the page on Facebook here

    Her most complete work on
    reading techniques is found in 21 Ways to Read a Tarot Card.

    If you would like to know more about the William Blake Tarot, click here
  • Imbolc Tarot Blog Hop | Fire in the belly

    Tarot Thrones blog:  The Queen of Wands (Thoth Tarot)
    My inspiration!

     The theme for Imbolc’s Tarot bog hop is ‘what is in your belly’.

    If this is your first time to my blog, you are very welcome indeed.  This Game of Thrones (AKA Tarot Thrones) focuses on the Tarot court cards and aims to make them fun and accessible.  Come in and sit down *dusts down a comfy armchair and offers it*

    You may have hopped here from Chloe’s Celtic Lenormand or from Donna’s blog.

    So, what’s in my Tarot belly for 2013?

    So much!  Too much maybe!  Which Tarot Court has a lot of fire in her belly? The Queen of Wands!

    The Queen of Wands says:  It’s not enough to simply have fire in your belly, you must birth it too!  Set yourself – and the world! – on fire with your passions! She urges you to ignite, light and heat the world around you.  Will you do that?

    Here’s how I plan to!

    1  The Tarot Thrones blog!
    I started this blog in 2012 and really enjoy writing it – although writing solely about the Tarot Courts can be taxing! If you know anyone who would like a little help with how to use tarot cards (courts especially!), I’d love it if you could point them in my direction.  Also, if you have any questions that you would like me to tackle, just drop me a message and I’m happy to write something especially for you!

    2  The Glasgow Tarot Meet Up Group!
    I took over as Administrator for this group over a year ago and we have gone from an initial meeting of three people to 20+ regularly meeting up monthly to explore the wonderful world of Tarot.  I deliver all the 2 hour sessions at the moment, but it is part of the fire in my belly for 2013 to organise a whole weekend of Tarot for the membership – speakers, authors, the whole nine yards!   Now that we have found a spiritual home with the Glasgow Theosophical Society, I really feel that we can get something off the ground!  Is that something that you would like to be involved in? If so, I’d love to hear from you.

    3  Tarot website work
    I am very lucky to work with some wonderful Tarot authors and artists, running their websites and assisting with their on-line presence.  It would really stoke the creative fire in my belly to have some more Tarot or art orientated clients in 2013 as I love supporting their work and, of course, as a Tarotist I’m already in the zone as to what your requirements might be.

    4  Tarot work!
    I was the Chairman of the Tarot Association of The British Isles for over four years *twitches involuntarily* 🙂  Only joking, I loved it, of course, and always gave 110% effort – putting TABI’s needs above my own, as far as Tarot work (and heck, yes, even my family in some instances!).  In 2013 it’s time for me to focus on my own career.  Getting everything off the ground again isn’t easy, but the Queen of Wands is a useful woman for prodding me!

    I’m also booked to provide a session on Court Cards at Kim Arnold’s UK Tarot Conference in October – which will be very exciting! I’ve lectured in Business Studies at college before and run a few conferences for TABI, but never been asked to speak at Tarot Conference before – so I’m really looking forward to that!  Maybe even see you there?!

    5  Tarot e-books!
    Gone are the days when you had to have a publisher agree to take on your work – nowadays it’s all about e-commerce and self-publishing.  I’ve got lots of ideas for useful Tarot e-books, so that’s a fire in my belly for 2013 too!

    5  My own Oracle deck!
    This last point is what fires me up the most about 2013.  The greatest fire in my belly is to create my own Oracle deck.  I’ve been in the Tarot world for 10 years now – a great many of them have involved reviewing and writing about Tarot books and decks.  I’ve got pretty clear ideas about what makes a good working deck.  And so I’m creating my own.

    The research and writing part of the development is mostly done and I’m already blessed with an artist who is keen to be involved in the project – providing he can fit it in to his busy schedule! At the moment, the illustrations for the cards are just my own sketches, but a good artist will make it look a whole lot better!

    So, that’s the fire in my belly for Imbolc – what’s the fire in YOUR belly, this Spring?  Will you be able to do as the Queen of Wands commands?!

    Hop to the other blogs in the chain!

    Got lost? Here’s the master list: http://tarotwitchery.blogspot.co.uk/2013/02/tarot-blog-hop-master-list.html

  • 30 Day Tarot Challenge | Day 4

    You’re going on a journey……
    and acquiring an expensive habit

    Question 4: How long have you been reading the Tarot?

     Bought my first Tarot deck yonks ago – but couldn’t read with it without referring to the Little White Book, which is no way to read Tarot cards!

     I joined TABI (The Tarot Association of The British Isles) in, I think, 2003 and undertook their training course. I could read the cards competently after that.

    However, it’s an ongoing process – you are always learning and discovering something new to add to your knowledge about the cards.
    That’s what I love about them. I hate using the expression ‘it’s a journey’ *rolls her eyes* but hey, yanno, it IS a journey!

     Hey, it’s just dawned on me that I’m 10 years THIS YEAR in the Tarot world!!!

     A DECADE!! <- yes, shouting 😀

    *suddenly feels august, sage and yes, Mary-Beard-like*  That is, now that I think about it, longer than my marriage lasted.  Mind you I have stuff in the fridge that lasted longer than my marriage 😀

    So it’s my 10th Tarot birthday – anybody bring a party tooter? Bottle of sherry?

    So – now YOU tell ME how long you’ve been reading the Tarot! I also have a question for you – Do you think that knowing someone has been reading for decades makes them a better Tarot reader than someone who has been reading for a shorter period of time, but who’s studied until their eyes bled and their credit card squeaked for mercy?

    *pops open the Pringles crisps, pours self a small sherry, twangs the elastic on her party hat under her chin and waits for pals to turn up*