What We Need to Know...we can discover in the Tarot

Every week, I'll be writing about a different tarot card. I'll start by going over the basic meaning of the card, then going a bit deeper by reading the tarot card to provide information about what we (myself and anyone reading this) would be useful to know for that particular week.
Every week, I'll be writing about a different tarot card. I'll start by going over the basic meaning of the card, then going a bit deeper by reading the tarot card to provide information about what we (myself and anyone reading this) would be useful to know for that particular week.

***update: these posts have been taken down, and now can only be found as individual videos on my YouTube channel or compiled in my book, A Personal Interpretation of the Holy Tarot. The book is available here.****

Every week, I'll be writing about a different tarot card. I'll start by going over the basic meaning of the card, then going a bit deeper by reading the tarot card to provide information about what we (myself and anyone reading this) would be useful to know for that particular week. The really cool thing about Tarot (as well as Astrology and Numerology) is that it is a complete, cut and dried system. There's a set of rules, meanings assigned to each tarot card, etc. When someone fully understands how to use the Tarot, they can throw down a spread and present a solid reading with fairly accurate results...all without using a flicker of psychic intuition. Of course, when intuition is added and the tarot reading becomes a psychic reading, the results are insightful and empowering as well as accurate.  In this way, tarot is like musical composition: alone it is mathematical, but with talent (intuition) it becomes divine. Another factor in the Tarot that makes it such a strong psychic tool is the images themselves. I am referring here to the original images and not more modern or artistic interpretations.  These images were specifically designed to speak directly to the subconscious. This is why anyone can pick up a tarot card and glean something of the original meaning even without any formal training in the system.All in all, a lot of information and ways to use it! Come explore with me.

Related

Tarot
Celtic Oracle Card of the Week: Eala

The swan has a strong connection in Celtic mythology to Tir Na n'Og, the "land of the forever young."

Tarot
Celtic Oracle Card of the Week: Nion

Nion is the fifth letter in the Ogham alphabet, meaning "fork." Here, it represents the ash tree

Tarot
Celtic Oracle Card of the Week: Ullice

One of the words used to describe mistletoe also means "to heal or make whole."