Let’s Get Started

Section One: Packing for the Journey

As with any journey, we need to first pack whatever we might need on the way. You won’t need any other equipment for this workbook other than the book itself and a pack of tarot cards. The workbook is structured around the standard deck of seventy-eight cards (twenty-two majors, forty minors, and sixteen court cards) so you will need to ensure you have this type of deck rather than an “Oracle” or variant deck. It doesn’t matter if the deck is illustrated or a “pips-only” deck, although you will probably find it easier with a deck such as the Waite-Smith Tarot or other “clone” deck based on that model.

You may like to use any of the following decks which illustrate this book:

  • Shadowscapes Tarot (Stephanie Pui-Mun Law & Barbara Moore, Llewellyn)
  • The Legacy of the Divine Tarot (Ciro Marchetti, Llewellyn)
  • The Universal Tarot (Roberto de Angelis, Lo Scarabeo)

We also refer to the Thoth Tarot deck by Aleister Crowley and Frieda Harris during our journey ahead. There are many online sites that provide images and reviews of decks for you.1 We also love the limited edition majors-only and other decks of our friends at:

  • Adam McLean Artwork Tarot (www.alchemywebsite.com/tarot/tarot_decks.html)
  • Beth Seilonen Tarot (www.catseyeart.com)

We refer to the Waite-Smith Tarot or its various versions as WST throughout this workbook.

You may wish to keep a journal of your tarot travels as you explore this workbook. We would highly recommend this recording of your experiences, particularly if you take the route of the ten gated spreads we have provided in the journey. A journal can be a simple notebook or a treasured handmade item; each traveller must decide what suits his or her style.

Having packed the bare essentials, let’s take a look now at the landscape we are about to explore, and then we can decide what else we might require before setting off.

Section Two: Your Tarot Mapbook

The Tarot Landscape

The incredible country in which you are about to travel is a place with which you already have familiarity. In fact, you already spend all of your time there; it’s just that you don’t notice. Tarot is a place of dreams, symbols, and the unconscious. When you see a red light and stop, when you see two doors with a male and female figure on them, when you say “life is like a box of chocolates” you are already living in the symbolic landscape of tarot.

You have practiced tarot your whole life—in dreams and in waking.

The tarot landscape of the unconscious mind is one that has been explored in many films, most recently The Matrix and Inception. Tarot, however, is a particular place. Whilst it follows dream rules, we can soon learn to find our way around using signposts and learning the language of the place.

The Landmark Cards (Major Arcana)

There are twenty-two significant landmarks in the landscape—these are the twenty-two major arcana. In our life these are always present at every moment; they are so big we can see them from anywhere and get our bearings. We are never lost when we use these landmarks to discover where we are. In fact in Kabbalah these twenty-two landmarks correspond to the twenty-two Hebrew letters which create the entire language. Each of them has its own path on the Tree of Life so we can discover our way along the spiritual journey.

At any time in your life journey you may be closer to some of these landmarks than others. You can guide yourself, as you will discover in this book, in any situation.

In this book we begin from the landscape of the last major arcana card, the World. We then move upwards through the cards, to the first card of the Magician. This symbolises our journey in the world to acquire the skill of tarot. Of course we will be accompanied by the Fool throughout our journey although he will only make an actual appearance when we are ready.

As an example, suppose you are in an experience or situation to which the Wheel (card X) is closest. This describes the ups and downs of life. We can see from the Wheel that the landmark cards closest one way and the other are the Hermit (IX) and Justice (XI). This tells us we can either move towards removing ourselves from the situation (Hermit) or balancing it to achieve some outcome (Justice).

Using the landmark cards to guide you is a first step to being confident as a navigator in the world of tarot. Over the years you may come to use this book and the cards as an invaluable guide to life, as they are the very map and GPS of our soul.

The Signpost Cards (Minor Arcana)

The minor arcana provide useful signposts in the realm of tarot. When we are working in any situation the minor arcana provide illustrations of all human activity. As they construct a matrix in four elements and in ten stages within each element, they also provide a logical progression, teaching us how to move from one state to another.

We call this the “next step” method.

As you travel over the next seventy-eight days and beyond, you can take any moment to identify the card in the minors that most sums up your present state and then consult the page in the workbook for that card. Your “next step” direction is to the following card, which indicates how you can look to move forwards—simply read the next page for the way ahead.

The Direction Cards (Court Cards)

The court cards provide us directions in our journey, as they represent the forces at play in the universe, either through people or through events themselves. We can turn to the court cards for assistance when we need to kickstart something in our lives or when we feel out of balance.

Again, as you make our way through a life lived with tarot, if you shuffle your sixteen court cards whilst considering your present imbalance, then lay them out in a circle, you can identify which card feels closest to your present state (or use your significator card, which you will choose here in this workbook) and look across the circle to find your “Kickstart” court card which is the one now placed opposite to your current state.

Consult the relevant court card page in this workbook, and this will give you the voice of advice from the card itself in the “[Card] Says” section.

Don’t be afraid to ask for directions if you find yourself a little lost in the world of tarot. The court cards are always around to assist you.

Pitstop Points

The major arcana can provide our journey and our readings with pitstop points, important moments when we can take heed and review the fundamental forces that shape our lives. They are like the deep current on which we sail, often unaware of the tides yet sometimes swept up in them. When we know the nature of these points we can quickly adjust our course to make the most of the flow.

Change Cards

There are several Change cards in the tarot. When these appear in the landscape, change is foretold, in one of a number of different manners. Whether this change is beneficial or malign is determined by the other cards in the vicinity.

  • High Priestess—The change is happening subtly and without your knowledge
  • Death—The change is happening by transforming the current situation
  • Blasted Tower—The change is sudden and brings new elements into play
  • Moon—The change is a slow cycle requiring a long journey

Teaching Cards

When any of the following cards appear in your view, there is a lesson to be learnt, as they are the main teaching cards of the tarot realm. Actually, all the major cards are lessons and teachers in some way or another (being images of “archetypes”), but these are most powerful:

  • Magician—Direct teaching by experiment and example
  • Hierophant—Traditional teaching, learning by rote, following a structure
    and code
  • Wheel—Teaching by life experience

Challenge Cards

There are a few cards which present you a challenge to overcome on the way through tarot. Their appearance in your area brings a call to action and requires response and energy.

  • Last Judgement—A calling which awakens a new state, if you answer quickly

Opportunity Cards

Whilst all cards present both a challenge and an opportunity, teachings and lessons alike, some cards open wide opportunities when they appear:

  • Sun—The opportunity to be open
  • Lovers—The opportunity to choose
  • Fool—The opportunity to be free

Initiation Cards

The Initiation cards of the majors are:

  • Strength—Engaging with the path of right relationship and appropriate response
  • Chariot—Being on the path with all energies harnessed
  • Hermit—Becoming the path itself as a living example of the way

Stop Cards

The Stop card of the majors is:

  • Hanged Man—When this card appears, you should take notice and realise that your values are being called into question. Make no progress and stop until you are truly manifesting what is most important to you at this time.

The position of the Hanged Man can show where you are suspended; for example, if in the past position of a spread, it shows you are still in need of reviewing an experience in memory. If in the outcome position, it indicates that your current route will take you to a full stop and review.

We will now take a look at a number of other ways of exploring this tarot landscape.

Going Beyond Spreads

Another manner in which you can use this journey is to provide an innovative way of working with tarot beyond your own spreads when you read for yourself. A three-card spread can be converted here to a series of activities or meditations, affirmations, or oracular advice from the card itself by selecting the “Days” for the cards you have dealt in answer to your question. This provides a real-life magical ritual to activate the forces of the cards in daily life.

Gated Spreads

You’ll also be given opportunity in this book to explore the concept of “Gated Spreads,” which is an intrinsic part of Tarosophy®—tarot to engage life, not escape it. A Gated Spread is a series of spreads which are linked together by the activities you undertake in response to each spread. They are designed by “reverse engineering” to ensure you are taken into a powerful experience if you follow the sequence of spreads and activities they request.

You can only perform a Gated Spread in the sequence it is given; without the activity between the linked spreads, there is no way in which the next gate will open properly.

Gated Spreads are also used here to teach specific aspects of tarot, Kabbalah, and magick.

The Titles of the Cards

As an intermediate method, once you have begun to learn the basics of each card, we have given each card two oracular titles that capture the essence of each stage of the journey as both an invitation and an engagement. Every card along the way presents you an invitation to learn from it—and a lesson which is experienced if you choose to engage with the card at that time.

These titles have been drawn from the experience of many hundreds of readers by asking them unusual questions about the cards which required them to unconsciously process their deep-seated meanings for the cards in practice rather than from books. In effect, we processed the cards through thousands of readings to see what they really mean in practice. Sometimes these were much the same as most accepted meanings in books, sometimes they were very different and yet insightful and relevant to the card.2

When we resolved the keywords from these unconscious responses, we then turned them into provocative card titles, such as turning “Resources” for the pentacles into “Finding Yourself … ” or “Ambition” for the wands into “Working Towards … ” These provide the invitation title.

Furthermore, we have simplified the concepts of Kabbalah in the four worlds of tarot so we can use the differences of the four suits to generate our engagement titles.

The wands become “expressions,” the cups “creation,” the swords “examination,” and the pentacles “a place.” These are lowering vibrations in four worlds, from the first emanation of the wands to the final manifestation of the pentacles. Again, you don’t need to understand Kabbalah to use the titles as a guide to interpreting the cards; we have simplified this whilst remaining true to the source. It also means if you plan to study Kabbalah further in tarot, you will have already picked up a useful background.3

The court card titles are also taken from this research, which shows the pages to be channelers, the knights to be responders, the queens to be connectors, and the kings to be demonstrators. Thus, the titles for the invitation/engagement aspects of these cards are:

  • Pages—Setting & Readiness
  • Knights—Proving & Responding
  • Queens—Caring & Being
  • Kings—Doing & Declaring

You will also see that the titles create your own story through the deck, from the “finding yourself returning” of the Ten of Pentacles to the “finding the beginning at the end” of the Fool. The titles for the major arcana are also modified from our earlier work asking hundreds of readers for unconscious keywords, such as “success” for the Magician and “revelation” for the High Priestess.

The Order of the Cards

Whilst it may be the usual format to learn the cards one at a time in numerical sequence, the strangest thing is that you will never get a reading—or only rarely—that follows a number sequence in order. It is like learning the alphabet and then expecting words to be created like “abc,” “defg,” “hi,” “jklm,” and so on. We have never found it very important to teach in number sequence. There are still discussions about the precise order of the majors, such as swapping the positions of Strength and Justice, and their original order was variable too because there were sometimes different cards in the early decks.

Similarly, occultists such as A. E. Waite listed the cards naturally from TEN to ACE in that order because of their background in esotericism and Kabbalah.

We have used a structure here in this workbook based on the soul’s journey on the Tree of Life. Although we do not cover this in detail, you will experience a trip from the lowest plane of matter, where we encounter the pages of the court cards and the tens of the minors, all the way up to the rarefied and abstract heights of the aces and the mysterious High Priestess, the Magician, and finally the Fool—who is often seen as unnumbered and outside of any sequence.

The major cards are introduced in order from the World, the highest numbered card, to the Magician, the lowest numbered card, throughout our journey according to their positions on the Tree of Life. This provides a good opportunity to learn some of the esoteric patterns in the tarot without getting too obscure.

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The Tarot Card Tree of Life

Connecting with the Cards

As you traverse the tarot, as a quick handbook, you can find for every card a brief connection sequence, with two levels:

  • Affirmation
  • Meditation

These are two progressive stages of connecting with the deeper meanings of each card, and can provide another “fast-track” route through learning tarot. By using an affirmation (you’ll learn how to create your own later) you can jolt the card into your life.

Once you have experienced a little of the flavour of the card, you can meditate regularly on a particular aspect of the symbolism or interpretation of the images. This allows the card to “sink into” your awareness.

As with most of the techniques in this workbook, it is intended that these practices benefit you in all areas of your life—spiritual and mundane—outside of your tarot practice. We aim to bring tarot into your life as an intrinsic spiritual system.

Resonances

The tarot has resonances with other Western esoteric systems, such as astrology, numerology, the Sabian Symbols, and Kabbalah. In this section for every card you will locate the resonances or correspondences which apply to that card. These magical correspondences can be used to make magic—and you’ll be learning a few techniques throughout the workbook!

Tarot as a Teacher

The occultist Eliphas Levi observed that a man in prison could learn everything he needed to know about the world through a tarot deck alone. In this workbook you will be presented a lesson from every card, as if you were meeting each one as your own personal tutor. These lessons will vary depending on the teacher! Some will be conceptual, some will be practical.

Tarot in Your Life

Whether you are applying the card and your interpretation in a reading to a general question, or a career, health, or relationship issue, we will discover how the card can apply to any aspect of life. It is often a limitation that books of interpretation will be too specific so that it becomes impossible to apply the meanings given to the particular question you are asking—this is a skill tarot readers have to learn over many years of experience.

We will find in this section for each card how to apply the card to a range of questions and learn that the cards are “multivalent”—they hold an infinite number of meanings, sometimes beyond the apparent simplicity of the card itself. You’ll soon unlock the secret of how to apply any card to any question in any position of any spread.

Better yet, you’ll come to see how the tarot teachers are present in your everyday life, until you become a living oracle able to interpret signs, symbols, portents, and secrets to guide your life.

Tarot Connect

Whilst everyone has a “full deck of possibilities” in life, we often find ourselves askew or blocking our natural flow into creativity, whether we are trying to create a life, career, relationship, family, or other project. We can use tarot to inform us as to how we are blocking the energies that make up life itself—depicted in the deck—and take corrective action. In this section for each card, you’ll discover how to use tarot as a GPS for your very soul.

One powerful method you may choose to adopt is to perform a three-card reading for any situation in which you are presently stuck. Take out the three cards and place them somewhere noticeable and then make a note of the “Connect to Your Card” activities appropriate to each card. Then perform those three activities on the same day, whilst you have the cards out, thus aligning the actions and energies of your life to the divination. You may be surprised how this breaks you out of old outworn patterns and behaviours, or even magically changes your situation.

The Cards Speak

Sometimes experienced tarot readers simply explain themselves by saying that the “cards just speak to me.” Here we will allow the cards to find their voice and speak to you! This section for each card can be used as an oracle for parties, brief readings, making snap decisions, or advising a friend. You’ll often find yourself listening to a card after doing a few of these readings—another new skill.

Getting to Know the Court Cards

We have provided two extra pages for page cards called “Where You Might Meet” and “What People Say About.” These give you contemporary places and statements about the character and energy embodied by these sixteen cards so you can get to know them in person. They will likely remind you immediately of people in your life.

At certain points in our seventy-eight-day journey into the world of tarot, we will provide Wayside Lessons. These are optional lessons for intermediate travellers in the realm.

Section Three: Your Tarot Phrasebook

Learning the Tarot Language

When we are thinking about travelling to a new place, particularly one quite far away, we usually try and learn a few things about the place, the culture, the people, and the language. Our seventy-eight-day tarot journey involves exactly the same considerations. We will first look at the peculiar language of tarot and discover a good way of learning the basics so we can at least ask for directions during our journey.

If we were to describe tarot as a language, it is a language by which we communicate the connections of life, seen and unseen. The big difference with tarot language is that it is not bound by the usual considerations of time, it is a-temporal. If you have given or received a tarot reading, you’ll have heard the reader talking about the past, present, and future all together.

Our first lesson in tarot language is to learn how to turn the present of the card into the future of the querent. This is something most students struggle to learn, as it is often something that only comes with practice. We will try and shortcut to this skill by teaching it first. We should also remember “it is not necessary to learn all the speech one is going to need: speech can be improvised, once the systems governing it have been mastered. A child learns its first language this way.”4

The Language of Tarot

The tarot is full of objects such as cups, swords, hats, windows, wheels, horses, and much more. Whilst each of these can be considered a symbol pointing to a meaning, such as “cup = emotion,” they are simply nouns, things. Nouns are objects and they are the first thing we learn as children, for example, “C” is for “cat.”

We have twenty-two main nouns in tarot language; these are the major cards such as the Devil, the Wheel, the Tower, and the Lovers. They require a little bit of rote-learning to study, and you can start by learning a single keyword/concept for each one, such as Devil=Attachment, Wheel = Cycles, Tower = Shock, etc. We have given keywords and a kaleidoscope so you can have fun generating your own personal words for each card, not only the majors!

So those of the main objects of tarot and our major landmarks are in our tarot journey too. We then tend to learn our verbs in tarot language. A verb is an action or a state of being; for example, running or sitting. It is a “doing” word that describes something happening or in process. We will imagine that in the language of tarot, the forty minor cards are the “verbs” of the language. They represent activities and events, situations, which can be summed up as a keyword, for the Three of Cups is the act of “celebration” and the Six of Swords is the act of “resting.” Again, every card in our language and journey is given a range of Keywords throughout this workbook.

So if we took the Blasted Tower (keyword = shock) and the Three of Cups (keyword =
“celebration”) together, what sentence would those two words make? Perhaps “a shock and a celebration,” “a celebrating shock,” or “a shocking celebration”? As we make sense of this, what arises in our mind is maybe “a surprise party” or a “sudden announcement leading to celebration,” both great ways of interpreting these two cards together.

Take a couple of major and minor cards out of your deck (if it is a court card, return it to the deck and choose another) and try reading them in your new language—which like any language will soon become second nature with practice. Now see if you are learning the language. If I asked for a two-card reading on my question, “What is the outcome of my date tonight,” shuffled the deck, and picked these two cards, what would tarot’s answer be in the Two of Cups and the Sun?

Finally, for our basic primer in tarot language, we have our adjectives. These are the descriptive words, which modify (by describing, identifying, or quantifying) a noun, such as “big” or “small.” In tarot these are the court cards. They represent influences and forces applying in the reading which change the speed, level, or magnitude of the situation. Whilst this is not always the case, it is enough for us to get to grips with the basics of the language of tarot for now.

In English, we put these three components together in a sentence, such as putting the noun “cat,” the verb “sitting,” and the adjective “small” together as: “The small cat is sitting.”

For more detail in our language you can also add an adverb, to further describe the verb, telling us “how” the “doing” is done; for example, “he sang loudly,” or “the door opened slowly.” If we added the adverb “quietly” (how the sitting is being done) to the sentence above, we get: “The small cat is sitting quietly.”

We can see these forms of language in tarot too, and start to make our first sentences using the Keywords for the cards selected in a spread. We’ll use a simple three-card spread for learning our language before we take to the air on our journey. This spread is simply the selection of three cards to answer a question, such as “What is the future of my new rock band?”

To recap, the major cards are the nouns, the minor cards are the verbs, and the court cards are the adjectives. We can add a word ourselves to describe how we interpret the sentence which becomes the adverb—a verb we have added ourselves.

To make it even easier, you can spend some time learning the basics of tarot language by splitting your deck into three piles; the majors, the minors (numbered), and the court cards (pages, knights, queens, and kings). Then shuffle each of the three decks, and select out one card from each, laying them face-up.

So if we shuffled our decks and got these three cards from each deck in order:

  • Blasted Tower (from the majors)
  • Three of Cups (from the minors)
  • King of Pentacles (from the court cards)

Referring to our Keywords and concepts in this workbook, we would read this sentence in the language of tarot as: The friendly group (Three of Cups) broke up (Tower) steadily (King of Pentacles).

You can see we have slightly rearranged the cards in our sentence to form a clear communication. This is fine when you are reading several cards together in a non-positional spread, and it is also a good way to practice powerful readings with just a few cards.

Now we must turn this into a “future” predictive or advisory sentence, by simply casting it into the future tense—no need to learn more language to do this, just do it in English. According to these cards, the friendly group will steadily break apart. That doesn’t sound too good for the rock band question, although usually one might not need a tarot card reading to predict that for most bands!

Suppose we had instead these three cards for the same question:

  • The Wheel
  • The Hermit
  • Six of Swords

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The Wheel, the Hermit, and the Six of Swords

Here we have two nouns—the major cards the Wheel and the Hermit—and a verb, the Six of Swords. If we look into our Keywords we could select: Luck (Wheel), Solitude (Hermit), and Recovery (Six of Swords).

Turning that into a tarot sentence we would say, “You will recover your luck by going solo.” Have another look at the actual images of the cards (a method which we will look at later) and see if that reading makes any more sense to you with those words, or if you can now see images in the cards that support or add to that interpretation. However we read it, it doesn’t bode very well for the forthcoming rock band.

We look forward to practising this new language of tarot in the best way possible—as we encounter the real situations and landscapes of the world in which the language is spoken. This is the world of the tarot, so our final preparation must be to grab a guidebook.

Section Four: Your Tarot Guidebook

In our preparation for our voyage into the world of tarot, a seventy-eight-day journey, we will need a good guidebook. Whilst the tarot is itself a map of the world, there are three triangulation points we can always use to get our bearings. These are time/space, values/beliefs/actions, and self-image.

Time/Space

Tarot arises out of the same universe as the stars, the planets, you and I, and even time and space itself. We hold that it is indivisibly connected to all events and that all events are connected likewise. As such, tarot can tell potential futures and define the mysteries of the past as well as providing a clear picture of the present, both known and unknown.

When we lay out the cards in a spread, it is a unique moment in space and time and should be treated as a small ritual separate from daily activity. Whilst it is possible to perform a reading at any time under any circumstances, take a moment to ensure that it is honoured and recognised as a divine moment.

Values, Beliefs, and Actions

No matter what beliefs people have about tarot, it is widely acknowledged as a means of connecting to the unseen, and some people fear that it may have an undue influence on their life. You should assure your client or anyone for whom you read that their life is in their hands and the advice the tarot offers should be considered as the advice of a close and personal friend. Whilst it usually insightful, it is still up to the person to take action.

Self-Image

Over time it is important to use the tarot to create a more comprehensive and consistent viewpoint of the universe and yourself as well as the relationship between these two. Tarot provides a bridge and mirror for that relationship. Our role as a living oracle becomes a central facet of our life the more we use tarot. Always ensure you maintain a good balance and approach to your tarot and treat it as a constant companion rather than an all-powerful dictator.

The Tarot Culture

The place of tarot is steeped primarily in the wonders of the image. It is a culture derived from pictures and symbols, metaphors, myths, and meaning. Nothing is ever as it seems in tarot. As a result, the culture is open, flexible, and constantly shifting. The only steadfast rule seems to be “go deeper.” As a traveller in tarot, you will get to know the place and people far better by respecting the story and the imagination—if you can tell a tale or two, you will win instant respect.

The standard greeting in tarot is “may a full deck of possibilities be yours,” to which the response is, “and yours, a full deck (… indeed, this day, today, this evening, in our passing, etc.),” which also indicates the cultural importance of possibility and wholeness in tarot.

The motto of the state of tarot is “Tarot to Engage Life, Not Escape It” and over the Tarot University doors you will see the Latin for “Developing the Diversity of Divination.”

You may get a flavour of tarot as a culture by visiting such sites as Tarot-Town.com where the spirit of tarot flows in every street and alleyway. We also recommend reading the book Invisible Cities by Italo Calvino, particularly where he describes the city of Tamara, which could be taken as a statement of tarot culture made real.

The Tarot History

Tarot’s history is slightly unclear, although we do know that it derived from Italy in the fifteenth century and the name itself appeared some one hundred years later. There is no evidence at all to suggest that tarot came from anywhere else or was used or created any earlier in history for anything other than a card game.

It is therefore quite a contemporary tool, historically speaking, and we are at the earliest days of its origins and development, so who knows what may become of the art? Perhaps this might be a question you would like to ask your tarot deck at some point during the next seventy-eight days—not “where are you from?” but “where are you going?” and even more importantly, “where are you taking me?”

Now that we have good grounding in the landscape, language, and culture of tarot, and have packed what we need, we’ll just ensure we have an emergency kit to deal with all the possible events and then we can set off in our journey!

Section Five: Your Emergency Kit

In this Fool’s Bag, or emergency kit, we will provide you a compass, a kaleidoscope, and a number of other essential tools that we have seen are in the possession of all those experienced travellers in the realm of tarot.

The Keyword Kaleidoscope

If you’ve ever wondered how to reconcile the different meanings you find in every book for a particular card, this Keyword Kaleidoscope method will soon install a whole new way of looking at the interpretation of any tarot card. Against every card you’ll find a comprehensive survey of keywords—boiled down—and concepts which arise from the card.

You can then feed these into the Kaleidoscope and generate an interpretation for any question whilst remaining true to the card. This is a method modelled by NLP of the greatest and most experienced tarot readers alive today—here presented for the first time.5

One of the first problems encountered as a beginner to tarot is the bewildering difference of interpretations and keywords offered in the multitude of books available on the shelves.

At first, the student finds it difficult because the “little white book” that comes with the deck is often very brief, and only gives a few keywords, such as for the Ten of Cups: “happiness.” If that card then comes up in the recent past position of a spread, where the querent has said they have certainly not been happy in their recent past—what do you do? Or if the question was “How will I progress in my new job?” and the card came up for the future—is it simply that they will have “happiness” or is there something more we can say from the card? The querent will certainly want to know more than a single word!

Usually the student then buys a couple more books. When looking at the various interpretations and keywords, the variations seem immense and conflicting. So often the student despairs and gives up, or stalls in their learning.

However, when looking at experienced teachers and readers of tarot, they seem to have no difficulty applying any card to any reading—in fact this may be one of the true skills of an experienced reader, whether they have natural talent, learning, experience, or all three.

We offer here an NLP method to train your brain in producing lateral but relevant interpretations based on keywords, no matter how different they may be! We call it the “Keyword Kaleidoscope,” and it is a conscious model or template of an unconscious competence possessed by great tarot readers. With just a little practice use of the template, you’ll find yourself being able to use it naturally whilst reading—as if by magic.

Simply take the template and make a few copies, choose a card—we’ve chosen the Ten of Cups as mentioned above—then fill in the template with some of the keywords you’ve discovered which relate to that card. We’ve gone for four extremely different sources for our example keywords—the notorious occultist Aleister Crowley in his Book of Thoth, the Feminist Tarot book, the classic A. E. Waite’s Pictorial Key to the Tarot, and the contemporary Kim Huggens’s Tarot 101.

So we write onto the template “Friendship (Perfected),” “Childhood memories,” “Safety” (from Crowley), and “Home.”

We then pair the keywords and using the same technique as we will see in the “Difference Engine,” we come up with an “arising meaning” or feeling from the two keywords, concepts, or phrases. So we put together and play with “Childhood Memories” and “Homecoming”; the general feeling is “Security.” We write this down on the template between the two original keywords. We repeat this for “Friendship” and “Childhood Memories” and get “Nostalgia” and do the same for the other two pairs of words.

We then fractal or kaleidoscope outwards, and do the same with the pair “Security” and “Nostalgia.” When we think about these two words we come to a feeling, a concept of “safe and secure past,” and it’s a warm glow of a feeling. This is exactly what experienced tarot readers do with their knowledge, wealth of disparate keywords, and experience—they see them fractal out, making a kaleidoscope of words and meanings branching out from the original meanings until they get a feeling that arises—then they apply that actual feeling to spoken words which apply to the question.6

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The Keyword Kaleidoscope Spread

So we would then take that feeling of a “safe and secure past,” apply it to the question and the position in the spread which is in the future, and what would come out is “after a while it will seem as if you have been working there for a long time—you’ll find a lot of security in this job … ”

You can then repeat this as often as you like with each of the pairs, the pairs that arise, and so on. In Kabbalah this technique is known as “exploring the orchard” as each Tree (of Life) contains another tree and so on forever!

The idea here though is just to practice until you find yourself doing it automatically. And the best thing is that the more diverse and conflicting the Keywords you discover, the better and more interesting your readings will become!

The Difference Engine

In this teaching tool we take two cards together and generate what tarot mentor Janine Worthington calls an “in-between” card. That’s to say, it’s the bridging or “5” card between an imaginary sequence of two cards. The best way to picture this is as if every card were a still frame in a movie. Take two cards, starting with two “in sequence” (i.e., the Five of Swords and the Six of Swords), and place them apart as follows:

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The Five of Swords, blank card, and the Six of Swords

In the middle of the two cards, imagine what scene you would put there to connect the story told by the cards. What is the relationship between the figures in the cards? What happens between the two scenes you are viewing? It could involve one of the characters, both of them, or something entirely different still connected to the unfolding scenario.

By making this connecting card, we unconsciously train our mind to recognise sequential patterns in individual cards, extracting meaning out of them to make connections. This is another invaluable skill of experienced readers, and by practising this technique, you will shorten the amount of time it takes to learn this unconscious competence. Once you have practised with several pairs of cards in sequence, you can try picking any two cards out of the whole deck.

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The Three of Wands, blank card, and the Six of Cups

You will also find after this practice you will begin to read your spreads very differently. It is hard to explain exactly how this works, but notice for yourself as you start to weave more meaningful connections between the cards in front of you during a reading.

Tarot Life Story

In this tool, we use the workbook to generate a life story for our whole life, a year, or even a particular point of a relationship, career, or project. We accept that the cards have settled themselves in a sequence which reflects the nature of the Universe—or at least our perception of it—and work as if this is a comprehensive and sequential map of the general flow of creation.

So at any point we can take a snapshot of where we are in life, a sort of GPS positioning of our soul in its evolution. This is the deepest part of any tarot reading, whether it is for a simple or apparently frivolous question, it is always asking and answering “where am I in life?” and “where do I go from here?”

We would recommend spending a whole day preparing to use this tool. Sort through old photographs and diaries and/or journals, review the objects you own in your house, take a trip to somewhere from your childhood—generally recount your life.

When you are ready to use this tool, simply take out the twenty-two major arcana cards of your deck and shuffle them. When you feel ready, take out one card and lay it face-up. This is your current position in your life story.

You can now consult this workbook and discover where you are in life, and your past and future currents. These indicate the lessons you need to learn from your past to release your present self and the opportunities and challenges you must face to move into the future.

For example, if we were presented the Hermit card, this would teach us that our present is summed up by the phrase “What burns within you illuminates your truth, enabling you to inspire and encourage others.” How this manifests in our health, career, and relationships can also be discovered on the relevant page.

It also shows that we need to learn the lessons of the Strength card—come to a better relationship with our own instincts, and take the opportunities presented by the Wheel card—look out to take a chance and not plan so much ahead (amongst other messages indicated by that page).

You can take a Life Story card for any relationship, project, or creative task and read the current state, previous lessons to be learnt, and next stage of the process in the relevant pages.

The Compass Spread

Whenever you need to get your bearings in the world of tarot, you can lay out a compass spread with the deck. This uses one, five, nine, or thirteen cards, depending on your growing confidence in reading as you progress through your journey.

It uses what we call a Split Spread, where we split the deck into separate mini-decks depending on our requirements. In this case, we split the deck into three piles—the twenty-two major arcana, the forty numbered minor arcana (aces to tens), and the sixteen court cards.

The simplest version of the compass spread just to get your bearings in the overall landscape is to use the major cards pile only, and select just one card. Shuffle the mini-deck of twenty-two cards and consider your question, for example, “What do I need to do to resolve my situation?” Then select a card when you feel it is right.

When you have looked over the card and got your first reaction to the image, you can look up the “Card Says” section in this workbook for your answer.

If you require more bearings, you can try the next level of the compass spread, by laying out four cards from the court card pile in a cross surrounding the central major card.

These four cards represent the four quarters of your life in response to your question:

1. How to be/What to do

2. How not to be/What not to do

3. Who to be for the safest route

4. What you will be if you do nothing

You can then extend this spread as you gain more confidence with the minor arcana by adding another cross outside the court cards to explore your environment. Select the pile of minor arcana cards and shuffle and select as before:

5. What to aim for

6. What to move away from

7. What resources you can call upon

8. How to make progress

Finally, you can perform the full compass spread, which takes the past and future into its scope. Add four more cards from the minor arcana pile to your outer circle:

9. The past

10. The future

11. The future if you do nothing

12. The future if you follow the compass

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The Compass Spread: One

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The Compass Spread: Two

How to Turn Any Question into a Spread

Many of the spreads and methods here have been designed in real time with particular querents asking questions which have turned into a spread. A case in point is the “Strange Attractors” or “Whirlpool” method, which arose because a querent presented a particular case.

He asked a question which was framed as “I have two options, both of which are possible, one probably more desirable than the other, but I could sort of do both, and they’re both a little bit out of my hands.” However, whilst he was asking the question, he was motioning with both hands in circular motions on the table. This was to express his own unconscious model of how the two situations were moving and placed relative to each other.

So it was suggested we use the “classic whirlpool method,” where we first lay two cards down, in two positions on the table, to show the source of the two situations, their essential nature. We then placed a ring of three cards around each of those two source cards to show how that particular situation would ripple out. We then placed a ring of six cards around each ring to show the final results of how the two situations would develop.

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The Whirlpool Method

However, by then, the two rings had expanded on the table to overlap each other, with two cards in particular touching each other from both situations. The querent pointed these out and said, “I suppose this is what happens if I try to do both, they’ll interfere with each other.”

I nodded and said, “So let’s look at what happens in that case,” and we laid out three cards around those two cards to show the interference pattern, like ripples on water. I now use this “classic” method whenever anyone presents a similar situation.

There is a simple method for learning this skill, which I have modified from the NLP-derived method of Clean Language, based on the work of the late David Grove, a therapist in New Zealand.

When someone expresses a question, it usually has an emotional content which can be turned into a metaphor by a specialized but straightforward series of clean questions. It only takes a minute, and then you’ll have a precise metaphor of the question against which to design your spread in real time.

The sequence of questions is as follows, with the essential sequence highlighted in bold:

Querent: My question is X [including some emotional content, such as “and I’m concerned that I may not make the right choice”].

Reader: … and your concern. Where is your concern?

Querent: In my head [or querent will gesture unconsciously even if they say “I don’t really know”].

Reader: … in your head. Is it outside or inside?

Querent: Inside, in my head.

Reader: … inside, in your head. I’m wondering how you’d best describe the shape or size of that?

Querent: Well, it’s just everywhere and it’s rushing about.

Reader: … rushing about? And that’s like what?

Querent: It’s like a bull in a china shop, really.

So now you have a metaphor, the bull in a china shop. You can frame the questions in any particular way, following the querent’s own language. The faster you do it and the more you pay attention to their whole communication (including nonverbal gestures), the more noticeable it will be that the question suggests its own spread in response.

You can then apply the “bull in the china shop” as a reading method.

The querent has asked whether to take an early retirement. They have described their question and given a metaphor which represents how their worries are rushing about like a bull in a china shop.

We take the symbols of bull and china shop to quickly lay out a reading.

1. The Bull cards: What is it that drives the client? [Three cards]

2. The China Shop card: What is it they will gain or lose from taking early retirement? [Three cards around the Bull cards]

3. The China card: What will be broken by taking this step? [One card]

Or any other variant that may strike you at the time of the reading, or as the querent explains his or her question, or as the cards are laid down. In this approach, we are using our intermediate experience to be more responsive to the question in our divination rather than forcing it into a predetermined spread. It also allows us to be more flexible and promotes an active dialogue with the deck and an engaging unique experience for the querent.7

Turning a Word into a Spread

If you are performing email readings, you can use a keyword in the querent’s question to design an elegant and relevant spread. If a querent has sent you this question, for example:

Hello, I am asking about my relationship. I have been married for one year and we are discussing children. I wondered if I could have a reading because my parents used to say I was too irresponsible for such things and I am asking what my future might be with children.

Then we might take the word “irresponsible” (highlighted above) as the main concern in the question. We then look up the etymology or derivation of the word in a dictionary or online source.

The word “irresponsible” comes from “to not be responsible.” In turn, “responsible” comes from a similar root idea to “obligation.” The word “obligation” comes from a Latin source, “to bind,” and of course leads to its later use as meaning “to make someone indebted by conferring a benefit or kindness.”

We take that concept of debt and kindness and turn it into the questions for a straightforward linear spread as follows.

The Parents Response Spread

1. What debt does the querent owe her parents?

2. What kindness did the querent learn from her parents?

3. What binds the querent in their attitude to children?

4. What of benefit will the querent be able to give to children?

5. What responsibility will the querent take on?

6. What kindness will their child(ren) bring to them?

You can of course then go from those questions as the cards are placed and engage in conversation with the spread itself. This can be a very powerful method because it takes much of the expectation of the reading out of your hands and places it from the querent’s question directly in dialogue with the cards themselves. Your job is simply to interpret the reading.

How to Make Any Card Meaning Fit the Question

No matter what card arrives in which position of a spread, or in answer to a general question, an experienced reader is able to interpret its meaning. However, when we start from basic keywords and concepts, this can often be difficult for those new to tarot. How does one apply a card whose word is “trespass” to a question about a college exam?

In NLP, we use a method called “chunking” which describes levels of detail applied to thinking. A model of lateral thinking shows how people chunk in a particular “strategy” (which is unconscious) to solve problems in a creative way. We have applied this model to produce a kickstart version of “making a card fit” as follows.

Example: Three of Wands in the “past” position of a spread where the question was about a relationship. This card has the keyword of building and the title “Expression of Ambition.” To make this fit, we map the context (or metaphor) in which building makes sense to the context of the question—the relationship. So “building” takes place in a context of “building a house.” We then compare building a house to a relationship. Obviously, the building comes early on in the process (as it would do in the relationship)—the house is also about security. So we then apply this to a relationship, perhaps seeing that the relationship was “cemented” in the past, based on the person’s high ideals for the union. Those “foundations” are now in the past denoting the relationship—like the building—has moved on.

Example: Four of Cups in the Advice position of a particular spread. This card has the keyword of Weariness. This is part of the context of “entertainment,” so we would fit it into the reading by saying the querent is advised not to treat the situation as a game, otherwise they will tire of it.

We believe that by using the “flip” method to derive these keywords, they will prove fairly universal. However, insight always comes by working with the cards themselves in a range of questions—go practice!

You can then look at any court cards in the reading to see how close the energies are to manifesting the result (i.e., lots of kings means “really close” and lots of pages means “far away” because the energy hasn’t started out properly).

The major cards then signify the archetypal forces at work in the whole situation. Again, if these are more immediate (Blasted Tower or the Fool, for example), then that adds weight to the time being closer rather than far away. Cards such as the Wheel, Moon, Sun, etc., signify more longer-reaching archetypal forces at play.8

So if you are now ready to begin, having packed your tool kit, learnt the language basics, and grabbed your map, we can commence our seventy-eight-day journey into the world of tarot!

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