|
Teach Yourself
Tarot - Lesson 7
Read
the section on Reading Tarot.
Exercise
1: What is your ritual for setting up to do a reading, if you
have one at all. Why do you do what you do?
Exercise
2: Reversals: Select three cards you feel comfortable with as
far as really knowing the definition. Try interpreting them in reversals
following methods 2-6. Be sure to record your experience with each.
Does one seem more natural? Does one way seem right? Do you even
like using reversals?
*
Read Time
and the Tarot
Exercise
3: Give some thought to the different ways one can use the tarot
to get a time estimate. Do you feel comfortable with any of these.
How will you reference time in your readings?
*
Practice,
practice, practice
I suggest when you are
starting that you keep your deck with you. The best way to get good
at Tarot readings is to just to them. Constantly. For everyone.
Sooner or later, you will find your groove. I used to do 5-carde
spreads for myself during commercial breaks just to practice reading.
Practice different spreads, including no spreads. Which work for
you? Which do you feel comfortable doing? How do you like to do
readings? Do you like to shuffle cards and pull from the top or
do you like to spread them out and chose them at random? Don't be
afraid to experiment. There is no right or wrong way to do a reading.
Develop your own flair and make your mark.
If you find reading isn't
getting easier over time, don't fret. Sometimes the answer is that
you are not using the right deck. The more you learn about the cards,
the pickier you will be when it comes to which cards you use. Also,
some people find it very difficult to do readings for themselves
or close friends because it is hard to be objective and not project
your wants and desires onto the cards. And sometimes, maybe Tarot
reading isn't your thing. There is nothing wrong with that either.
We all have different talents. I can do some really great Tarot
readings, but put Runes in front of me and I am lost.
Now I know you are all
ready to jump right in but I am going ask you to bear with me just
a little while longer as we ease into readings.
Exercise 3: Card a
day/night:
Pull a card each day.
Jot down the card's meaning. Then at the end of the day, pull out
your journal again to see how this card manifested during your day.
Note your thoughts.
If you are one of those
people who read your horoscope in the morning and then become determined
to have that manifest during the day, you should try the card a
night option. At the end of the day, draw a card that would represent
the lesson or situation you were to learn from today (make sure
this is what you are thinking while shuffling). Write the definition
of the card you pulled. What lesson do you think you were to have
learned? How did that lesson manifest itself? How did you handle
it?
Feel free to do both
of these exercises if you wish. Many advanced Tarot readers continue
to pull a card a day/night as a way to focus their energy for the
day.
Exercise 4: Two-card
draw: Energy spread.
This is also a great
way to start the day. Again, be sure to jot down the definition
of the card (even if it is only a key word or a phrase) and the
end of the day results in your journal.
While shuffling the cards,
ask the spirits what you will need to know about the energy of the
day. Draw 2 cards.
Card 1 = The energy you
will be dealing with
Card 2 = How you can make this energy work for you.
The timeframe of this
question can also be changed. Just make sure you state which time
you want (today/tomorrow, next week) in your question.
Questions? Email Apythia

Glossary
For
further reading
Get
a Rune or Tarot reading, dream interpretation or astrological report
|