Predictive Sciences - Transformation with Tarot
by Kumkum Bhandari
Of late, Tarot has become popular in India. Many of us reach for the weekend papers to see what Tarot cards predict for us in the week to come. But prediction, divination or fortune-telling are just some of the ways in which the deck of Tarot cards has been used through the ages.
For experienced Tarot card users, these ancient cards serve a variety of purposes like counseling, therapy, healing, spiritual growth and energy work. Originally an ancient book of wisdom, the Tarot took its card form in the middle ages, the earliest surviving deck dating back to the 15th century.
Hundreds of distinct Tarot decks are available today: the choice extends from decks with modem imagery to the classic ones like the Rider Waite pack. Tarot consists of 78 strikingly vivid, pictorial cards, divided into two sections commonly called the major and minor arcana. The major arcana consists of 22 cards with names such as the Magician, the Empress, Strength, the Tower, the Chariot.
A primary and sometimes a secondary meaning is assigned to each of these cards. For instance, in popular occult, the Magician represents will power, the Emperor: realization, the Chariot: triumph, the Hermit: prudence, and the Devil: fate.
The minor arcana, which consists of 56 cards, is divided into four suits of wands, cups, swords and coins. Each suit, which is said to represent a different level of consciousness, has 10 cards plus a King, Queen, Knight and Page. From these cards have come our modem deck of playing cards with the suits of diamonds, hearts, clubs and spades.
In an essay in the book Who Am I, Angeles Arrien writes: "The Tarot has the ability to reveal to us, both, individually, collectively and therapeutically, the gifts and talents inherent within the psyche; it can also reveal, through problematic symbols, our personal psycho-pathology. Within the Tarot, 13 symbols of the 78 represent neurotic or challenging states."
USING TAROT FOR SELF-DEVELOPMENT
Ma Prem Usha, an Oshoite
who has been using and researching the Tarot cards for the past 13 years,
emphasizes: "The Tarot has been evolved for spiritual growth and this
should be a person's essential reason for using it. It gets you in touch
with your strengths and weaknesses at the four levels of consciousness:
physical, mental, emotional and spiritual."
With Tarot, you can "change energies, look at situations from another
viewpoint", sidestep blocks and progress. Longtime Tarot user, fashion designer
Maria Jaworska-Weber, a Polish-born French national who frequently comes to India,
remarks that Tarot is a remarkable tool for developing intuition.
Let
us consider some simple exercises with the Tarot deck. For the new initiate, it
is best to use just the 22 cards of the major arcana for the following exercises.
To begin: hold the Tarot deck picture upwards , keep shuffling the cards and ask
'what do I need to look at in my life right now?' "It would be even better," suggests
Maria, "if you could make the question more specific and directly pertaining to
any blocks or problem in your life."
As you shuffle the cards, the picture
on top keeps changing. Stop at the picture you are drawn to at that moment. Look
at it carefully. If you have never seen Tarot cards before and have no idea of
the primary or secondary meanings assigned to the cards, so much the better. There
are many books which detail the meanings, but the value of this particular exercise
lies in creating your own meanings. If you are using the Rider Waite deck, keep
in mind that it was created in the early part of the 20th century and the symbols
bear relevance to that time and culture .
Study the card that you have
chosen. Describe it to yourself. What kind of landscape does it depict? Is it
lush, green, fertile or dry, desert-like, desolate? If there is a person in the
card, note what the person is doing. What kind of person is he or she? Is she
approachable or remote? Describe the person. Describe his or her feelings.
Write down your description. See if you can get a story out of it. Why is
the person where he or she is? What sort of lives have they led? What has brought
them here?
When you have finished writing whatever you can, read it
and relate it to your life. Let us suppose what you wrote reads: "The man in the
card looks, very stiff. He cannot open up to others. He sits against a bleak background
and leads an isolated life." Now consider how this description fits your own life-situation.
Perhaps you were drawn to that card because it reflects your own problem
or situation in life, and until you picked the card you didn't see it quite so
clearly. You will be amazed at how revealing this exercise can be of your internal
states of being, which put up blocks to comprehensive self-growth.
Psychologists
often use similar tools, asking people to spin a story from a picture. This technique
works especially well with Tarot cards. Once you have a basic description that
clarifies where you are in life, then you can dialogue the figure in the card.
Do this like a conversation: Write down your statement or question, then allow
the card to answer. Write down any thoughts that surface, no matter how insignificant
or trivial.
If you are not used to right brain methods, you may feel
inhibited, uncomfortable or dismissive of the value of such an exercise. If you
don't censor yourself, surprisingly relevant answers can provide deep insight
into your situation. If you keep using this method, you may find your intuition
developing in other areas of your life as well.
TAROT MEDITATION
In this exercise, we are again using the Tarot card as "an outer
mirror for the internal process". Choose any card from the major arcana which
appeals to you at this particular moment. Gaze at the chosen card for some time,
then close you eyes. Imagine yourself before a door. Depending on whether you
are a visual or tactile type of person, attempt to actually 'see' or 'feel' the
door, focusing the mind on every small detail. When the picture is clear, open
the door.
Let the scene displayed in the Tarot card that you have chosen
unfold in front of you. If you can see it all at once, well and good, otherwise
build the picture bit by bit. What kind of landscape have you stepped into? Take
your time to 'fill in' the details. Add anything which will make it more real
for you.
When the scene is clear, imagine the figure from the Tarot
card walking into it. If the card shows a seated figure, you can imagine yourself
rounding a bend and coming across the person. Greet him or her much as you would
anyone you are meeting and hold a conversation. Say anything you like, ask questions
and get answers. Don't try to force the pace. Let yourself respond completely
to what is taking place in the scene visualized. This is a process of self-revelation,
of opening your heart and mind to what you stand for and are at the present moment
in your life.
FINDING YOUR LIFE-PURPOSE
Another way to use
the Tarot decks to work out your personal card. A simple calculation will reveal
the card which will have particular significance for you. You can, suggests Ma
Prem Usha, use this card for meditation.
Write down your birth date
with the day, month and year one under the other. Add the numbers. Suppose your
date is June 23, 1997. Write these numbers one under the other and add them. You
will get 2026. Add the numbers: 2+0+2+6=10. Keep any number below 21, but also
add the compound number to get a single digit number. In this example, the compound
number is 10 and the single numeral 1.
These numbers relate to the 22
cards of the major arcana, There are 22 cards, the first one is numbered 0 and
the last 21 If your calculations yield a number above 21, add the two digits of
the compound number to get a single number. If the number is 21 or below, you
will have two numbers, a compound number and a one digit number. In the example
given above, the personal cards are the card number 1 which is the Magician and
number 10, the Wheel of Fortune.
These are the cards which define your
life path. The single number card is the main card (the personality card) and
the compound number card often shows you the kind of problems you may face. In
his book Tarot, Adam Fronteras points out that "the cards serve as visual guides to the readers, who must then use their psychic powers" which each one of us possesses, albeit to varying degrees.
In addition to the personal card, you can also derive a year card. This is done by adding up the day; month and year of your last birthday. The year card, in an uncannily accurate way, gives you the kind of lessons you will learn during the year, and also broadly suggest what your approach to life should be during that year.
THE SPIRITUAL DECK
"The Tarot should be treated with respect," cautions
Ma Prem Usha. "Playing with it can be dangerous. It was years before I read the cards for anyone, and that to very gingerly. You have to be very sure of the mechanics,
of the incredibly powerful tool that Tarot can be."
She decries the current trend of acquiring the Tarot deck and using it (without any Groundwork)
by looking up the meanings in the accompanying book. Some of the assigned meanings are negative in nature. Further, a card can take on a negative meaning "depending
where you are coming from. For instance, the Moon: it can look sinister, it can look happy, sad or like a piece of chapatti, if you are hungry."
The
power of the mind is tremendous. It can leave you spinning in a vortex of negativity, if you don't know how to change the negative energy and the vibes that you are
receiving from a card. It is best, counsels Ma Prem Usha, to allow yourself to be guided by an expert if you intend to do intensive work with the Tarot.
You could, she suggests, pick up a spiritual deck first. "You cannot go wrong with it. It's Osho's work and interpretations. Each of the pictorial cards in
it has a message. An accompanying book offers an explanation. You can use the spiritual deck in the morning and evening and spend some time meditating on the
spiritual messages."
As you experiment further with such exercises, and grow with the Tarot, the cards will serve as a powerful and creative tool
which will give you insight both into the different levels of your consciousness and your current spiritual growth.
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THE MAJOR ARCANA SYMBOLS
• 0 The Fool: fear; courage; mystical ecstasy
• I The Magician: communication; inspired, original mind
• 2 The High Priestess: intuition; independence, self-trust
•
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