|
tarot class london, traot clairvoyant, tarot teacher london, How to read the tarot cards, tarot awareness, tarot readings workshops courses london, London based courses, classes workshops, training seminars in Intuition, Psychic awareness channelling, Channeling Course, seminars school tuition, London UK, tarot workshop seminars
How to read the tarot cards - a history of Tarot. Link to the tarot course we offer here This course is about learing tarot, how to read tarot london tarot tuition tarot classes, tarot courses
The origin of the tarot is a mystery. We do know for sure
that the cards were used in Italy in the fifteenth century
as a popular card game. Wealthy patrons commissioned beautiful
decks, some of which have survived. The Visconti-Sforza, created
in 1450 or shortly thereafter, is one of the earliest and
most complete. learn how to read tarot cards london UK, developing your intuition uk, develop intuition london, how to develop your intuition, classes courses workshop seminar, course, in london, psychic development, psychic guides, intuition, developing intuition tarot, tarot card reading, developing clairvoyance, clairaudience class course london.
Later in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the cards
were discovered by a number of influential scholars of the
occult. These gentleman were fascinated by the tarot and recognized
that the images on the cards were more powerful than a simple
game would suggest. They revealed (or created!) the "true"
history of the tarot by connecting the cards to Egyptian mysteries,
Hermetic philosophy, the Kabbalah, alchemy, and other mystical
systems. These pursuits continued into the early part of the
twentieth century when the tarot was incorporated into the
practices of several secret societie.
Although the roots of the tarot are in the occult tradition,
interest in the cards has expanded in the last few decades
to include many different perspectives. New decks have been
created that reflect these interests. There are Native American,
herbal, dragon and Japanese decks, among others.
The tarot is most commonly viewed as a tool for divination.
A traditional tarot reading involves a seeker - someone who
is looking for answers to personal questions - and a reader
- someone who knows how to interpret the cards. After the
seeker has shuffled and cut the deck, the reader lays out
the chosen cards in a pattern called a spread. Each position
in the spread has a meaning, and each card has a meaning as
well. The reader combines these two meanings to shed light
on the seeker's question.
This aura of darkness clings to the tarot cards, even now.
Some religions shun the cards, and the scientific establishment
condemns them as symbols of unreason, a holdover from an unenlightened
past. Let us set aside these shadowy images for now and consider
the tarot simply for what it is - a deck of picture cards.
The question becomes - what can we do with them?
The answer lies with the unconscious - that deep level of
memory and awareness that resides within each of us, but outside
our everyday experience. Even though we ignore the action
of the unconscious most of the time, it profoundly affects
everything we do. In his writings, Sigmund Freud stressed
the irrational, primitive aspect of the unconscious. He thought
that it was the home of our most unacceptable desires and
urges. His contemporary Carl Jung emphasized the positive,
creative aspect of the unconscious. He tried to show that
it has a collective component that touches universal qualities.
We may never know the full range and power of the unconscious,
but there are ways to explore its landscape. Many techniques
have been developed for this purpose - psychotherapy, dream
interpretation, visualization and meditation. The tarot is
another such tool.
Projection is one reason why the tarot cards are valuable.
Their intriguing pictures and patterns are effective in tapping
the unconscious. This is the personal aspect of the tarot,
but the cards also have a collective component. As humans,
we all have certain common needs and experiences. The images
on the tarot cards capture these universal moments and draw
them out consistently. People tend to react to the cards in
similar ways because they represent archetypes. Over many
centuries, the tarot has evolved into a collection of the
most basic patterns of human thought and emotion.
The power of the tarot comes from this combination of the
personal and the universal. You can see each card in your
own way, but, at the same time, you are supported by understandings
that others have found meaningful. The tarot is a mirror that
reflects back to you the hidden aspects of your own unique
awareness.
When we do a tarot reading, we select certain cards by shuffling,
cutting and dealing the deck. Although this process seems
random, we still assume the cards we pick are special. This
is the point of a tarot reading after all - to choose the
cards we are meant to see. Now, common sense tells us that
cards chosen by chance can't hold any special meaning, or
can they?
To answer this question, let's look at randomness more closely.
Usually we say that an event is random when it appears to
be the result of the chance interaction of mechanical forces.
From a set of possible outcomes - all equally likely - one
occurs, but for no particular reason.
This definition includes two key assumptions about random
events: they are the result of mechanical forces, and they
have no meaning. First, no tarot reading is solely the product
of mechanical forces. It is the result of a long series of
conscious actions. We decide to study the tarot. We buy a
deck and learn how to use it. We shuffle and cut the cards
in a certain way at a certain point. Finally, we use our perceptions
to interpret the cards.
At every step, we are actively involved. Why then are we
tempted to say a reading is "the chance interaction of
mechanical forces?" Because we can't explain just how
our consciousness is involved. We know our card choices aren't
deliberate, so we call them random. In fact, could there be
a deeper mechanism at work, one connected to the power of
our unconscious? Could our inner states be tied to outer events
in a way that we don't yet fully understand? I hold this possibility
out to you.
If there is a meaning in a reading, where does it come from?
I believe it comes from that part of ourselves that is aware
of the divine source of meaning. This is an aspect of the
unconscious, yet it is much more. It acts as a wise advisor
who knows us well. It understands what we need and leads us
in the direction we need to go. Some people call this advisor
the soul, the superconscious, or the higher self. I call it
the Inner Guide because that is the role it plays in connection
with the tarot.
Each of us has an Inner Guide that serves as a fountain of
meaning for us. Your Inner Guide is always with you because
it is a part of you. You can't destroy this connection, but
you can ignore it. When you reach for your tarot deck, you
signal to your Inner Guide that you are open to its wisdom.
This simple act of faith allows you to become aware of the
guidance that was always there for you.
We are meant by nature to rely on the wisdom of our Inner
Guide, but somehow we have forgotten how to access it. We
trust our conscious minds instead, and forget to look deeper.
Our conscious minds are clever, but unfortunately, they just
don't have the full awareness we need to make appropriate
choices day by day.
When we are operating from our conscious minds, we often
feel as if events are forced upon us by chance. Life seems
to have little purpose, and we suffer because we do not really
understand who we are and what we want. When we know how to
access our Inner Guide, we experience life differently. We
have the certainty and peace that comes from aligning our
conscious will with our inner purpose. Our path becomes more
joyous, and we see more clearly how we bring together the
scattered elements of our lives to fulfill our destinies. |