Saturday, January 21st, 2012

4. The Emperor — Napo Tarot

Created by Betty Lopez; Designed by Napo

 

Interpretation: This Emperor looks at the past with eyes that emanate light. He sees the structure on which the present is built: custom, history, and religion. His thoughts and concept of life are geometric and static. He is a paternal, chivalrous man whose actions have great impact on his people. Tho very respectful of tradition and customs, he is not necessarily open-minded and therefore often seems dominant and prejudiced.

 

I generally dislike the Emperor. He reflects rules and regulations. Although I enjoy a harmonious society, I sometimes have issues with structure and often question authority. Rules and regulations are necessary, but many rules and regulations are not necessarily the best. Nonetheless, there must be some basic social structure to prevent anarchy and chaos.

 

Tell me something about my trip to New York.

 

I am (I think) going to NY City for a weekend in February to take a yoga workshop at Baby Om Yoga to learn to do yoga with my up-coming baby and learn to teach others the same. There are no such classes in the area. The Emperor reminds me that the teachers I am going to learn from have a history of studying Iyengar yoga, whose structure and precision I adore. But workshops always cost a lot of money and I highly dislike driving. This results in cost/ benefit event-anxiety on my part. Over and over I ask myself:

 

Is it worth it? —Only time will tell.
Can I survive without it? —Of course!
Will I make use of my new knowledge? —Yes, at least for myself. But if it is only for myself, I could just learn and practice and innovate from their book; I do not need a teacher training. I do have a 500-hour certification with Ana Forrest and I have taught in the past, but I am terrible at marketing my vast store of abilities.
Could I be doing something better with my time? —Perhaps, but at the rate I’m accomplishing things, I probably won’t.

 

The Emperor has a strong desire to see ideas manifested on the physical plane in the form of material gain or accomplishment. He says to me— You know, you won’t have an opportunity to take such a workshop after your baby is born. You cannot learn structure in a void: you need to learn structure from others to provide structure for yourself. You have no experience with babies. Look at the past: learn from others.

 

I have a strong desire to feel as tho I have not wasted my time chasing some intangible golden goose. I say to the Emperor— Keep coming back to remind me you are here. I will keep pushing you away and desiring your return.

 

 

Friday, January 20th, 2012

Strength — Tarots Oreste Zevola

Artist: Oreste Zevola

 Tell me something about a little boy’s anger.

 

Upright: Strength, courage, patience, control, compassion

Reversed: Weakness, self-doubt, lack of self-discipline

 

This card represents not physical strength, but inner strength and the power of the spirit to overcome any obstacle.

 

Strength is great stamina and persistence, tempered by an underlying patience and inner calm which reveals great composure and maturity. Inside each of us is a passionate, reactionary side that sometimes shows its Beastly-face. It takes great Strength to bring instinctual reactions into balance with the greater good.

 

Strength does not act out in rage or hatred, but looks at the situation with love and compassion. Strength’s calm inner-voice is often drowned out by the hubbub of emotion and fear. The qualities of Strength appear once raw emotion is transcended; this creates a silence where spiritual wisdom and intuition may awaken. Strength is a higher level of awareness that allows one to take responsibility for the Self, master the Self, then let the Self be the master of its world.

 

Strength offers love and patience to tame the Beast. She gives space to the needs of others. She forgives imperfections. Thus, she creates a safe and trusting environment of gentle influence. Strength is the Beast Whisperer.

 

Strength says: Conquer your fears; control your impulses. Be strong, assertive, and persevering. Do not lose patience with yourself or what you are doing. There is no room for self-doubt. You have the strength to tame the beasts within yourself. If you are pushing too hard, withdraw and be patient. This time of trouble, too will end.

 

Tame yourself. Subdue the the Beast with love & peace.

Thursday, January 19th, 2012

Five of Cups & Six of Wands — Tarot Piatnik Wien

Rudolph PointnerArtist: Rudolph Pointner

 

I said, “Tell me something about song,” shuffled this deck thoroughly and drew the Five of Cups— previously pulled from this exact deck on December 7th.   The five of cups is disappointment or loss. I will interpret it this way: I am shy of my voice. I love to sing, but am afraid to do so in the presence of others. I wish I could remember all the words and melodies that move me, but this is rarely the case. The five of cups is a sad song, still beautiful, perhaps even more so for its loss.

 

*    *    *

 

Rudolph PointnerFor something new, I shuffled again and said, “Tell me something about sacred song.” I pulled the Six of Wands, upside-down.

 

About wands in general, this little booklet says:

“…[the significance of an object depends] on the way it is viewed. Who is wise sees an object in its entirety, for his is the capacity to recognize the oneness in the multiplicity.”

 

And about this card in particular:

positive meaning— encouraging news; negative meaning— depressing information.

 

The act of god singing the world into being is the most sacred song conceivable.

 

Swami Tripurari writes:

Those that vibrate the names of God in order to achieve liberation, thinking that any name of the divine is equal to any other, may encounter transcendence as a vague experience… // This understanding of transcendence is considered to be elementary by those who maintain that the divine name is a “supramental” sound representation of Godhead. // For those engaged in pure devotion, vibrating the supramental name is both the means and the end of their culture of divinity.

 

In other words:

Some say the personality of the divine is contained within the Name. Through the medium of sound, the world comes into being; through divine sound it can be properly understood. Those who chant the names of God knowing the sound of the Name itself is divinity beyond conception— devotion beyond knowledge— those thus purely engaged in sacred song become a spiritual self-manifestation of the universe— become the spirit of the the universe itself.

 

In conclusion, the Six of Wands, interpreted as pulled upside-down:

Song has the most powerful significance for a person depending on the way it is viewed. Who is wise hears the sacred Name in its entirety, for theirs is the capacity to recognize the oneness in the multiplicity

—depressing information for those of us afraid of the power of our own voice.

Wednesday, January 18th, 2012

Six of Swords — Fantasy Showcase Tarot

George MetzgerArtist: George Metzger

 

Interpretation: Upright— Escape from oppressions; a water journey; sending forth of a representative in one’s stead. Reversed— Stasis; inescapability of difficulties; unfavorable outcomes.

 

Yesterday I came across a blog article by Alec Satin called 37 Best Tarot Questions. I like the question: “What should I look out for?”

 

This image shows three cloaked people on a boat in very deep water. It is drawn in such a way that I have a good view of what is above and what is below. In truth, without the perfect angle, water’s seemingly transparent surface most often distorts or obliterates the view of what is on the other side. Water is the medium.

 

[This entry is interrupted by a news-flash from my younger sister, who quickly reveals something to look out for—]

 

The water is the Media whose waves of Propiganda

obscure the Terror of the outsize Corporation

whose deep pockets sink the Boat of Innovation.

 

STOP PIPA (Senate 968) & SOPA (HR 3261)

Imagine a world without craigslist, Wikipedia, Google, barefootfool, [your favorite sites here]…

News Corp, RIAA, MPAA, Nike, Sony, Comcast, VISA & others want to make that world your reality.

80 Members of Congress are in their sway, 30 against, the rest undecided or undeclared.

★ ★ ★ Please take a minute to tell your Members of Congress you OPPOSE PIPA & SOPA ★ ★ ★

CLICK HERE TO JOIN THE STRIKE

CLICK HERE for MORE INFO & EASY ACTION ITEMS

Learn More: Watch the video · American Censorship page · View the Infographic
Read SOPA on OpenCongress · Read PIPA on OpenCongress

Tuesday, January 17th, 2012

Page of Cups — Ship of Fools Tarot

Brian WilliamsArtist & Author: Brian Williams

 

I can’t sleep. My body is a new, strange, ever-growing size. My hips hurt when I sleep on my sides. I get nauseous when I sleep on my back, quickly triggered by my constant hovering in a semi-nauseous state. I really just want the entire bed to myself so I can flail around without injuring or waking my partner. Failing that, I rise, clean the fishtank, sort some dry beans left to soak, put away the dishes, tend the woodstove, eat a sandwich, surf the web for information on sleeping, and finally ask the tarot deck: “Tell me something about sleep.”

 

Brian Williams says about this card’s meaning: “A wanderer, impulsive quester, wayward pilgrim. An emotional and poetic person, a seeker on life’s journey. Side trips and detours, the unexpected moments of travel, the pleasures and perils of a poor sense of direction. Rediscovering one’s intended path.”

 

The fool on this card has at last found his path after a lengthy bushwhack. On the path there is a shrine: a holy or sacred place, dedicated to a figure of awe and respect. The shrine points the correct direction: a well-traveled path. I know this traveler. I have been him a hundred times or more. The delight of gaining one’s bearings is enough to make one wander off the path almost as soon as the path is found. All who wander are not lost. Finding one’s self and finding one’s self again, over and over, is a thorough state of meditation. That which seems like aimless roaming can be the most thorough search for self-awareness.

 

Eventually the wanderer finds a path so enticing, he does not notice he’s actually following a path instead of meandering through woods and wilderlands. The path is well-trodden not because people follow it, but because people find it. It is a path of inner-wisdom, of following one’s dreams, of intimate knowledge of sacred and holy places not as destinations, but as places created by the journey itself.

 

What does this card tell me about sleep? Sleep is a naturally recurring state characterized by reduced or absent consciousness, among other things. It is as impossible to wake up without sleeping as it is to find one’s self without noticing one is at least slightly lost. Or have I got that reversed?

 

Monday, January 16th, 2012

Queen of Coins — Tarot of the Absurd

Jessica Rose ShanahanArtist: Jessica Rose Shanahan

 

The Queen of Coins represents a mother figure or the mother figure within one’s self.

 

This Queen is queen of her home and its hearth and the earth on which it stands. She knows the use of everything in this dominion, is very handy, versatile in her abilities, and secure in her knowledge.

 

The Queen of Coins has worked hard to gain a level of prosperity and security that allows her the ability to be generous with her time, wisdom and resources. She is resourceful and practical, dealing with issues as they arise in order to come up with simple solutions which fix problems with minimal fuss. Self-assured that she can provide for what she needs, she has an air of independence.

 

This Queen is compassionate, nurturing, practical and down-to-earth when it comes to dealing with other people and life’s issues. She calmly balances home life and work life, largely because she somehow manages to find time to do the things that truly help her become centered and relaxed.

 

This is why she is Queen and I am not.

 

Sunday, January 15th, 2012

10. La Ruota — Tarocchi dei Celti

Benito Jacovitti

Illustrator: Benito Jacovitti

 

The Wheel of Fortune can be interpreted very simply. Right-side-up= Good luck. Up-side-down= bad luck.

 

Yet again I am reading from a deck that is all Italian. This is the second of two majors-only decks of the same name. I much prefer the other: these images were illustrated by a humorist whose humor I don’t appreciate. I didn’t ask a question because I didn’t want to use this deck to be insightful in any manner. I’m not exactly sure what makes this a Celtic deck.

 

This Wheel [of Fortune] is lodged under the over-sized breasts of a very large woman. The sausage at her feet is a repeating theme throughout the deck, as are the dismembered fingers sticking up from the ground. Three-headed gods are not uncommon. They see the past, present and future: every way the wheel can roll. Someone has thrown a pot of coins and a die— common symbols of gambling— at the woman’s helmeted head. The pot empties out and the woman remains oblivious, laughing.

 

I guess I don’t ever have to look at this deck again. I got it for “free” when I ordered a bunch of other decks from Italy. It gives me the same-sort of grossed-out feeling as do movies with too much bodily-function comedy and too few brains.

Saturday, January 14th, 2012

5. Dìan Cècht (il Sacerdote) — Tarocchi dei Celti

Giordano BertiArtist: Giordano Berti

 

This is a 22-card, majors-only deck. The little booklet that comes with it is all in Italian.

I asked the deck, “Show me something new.”

“Il Sacerdote” is the priest, or the hierophant.

 

Dìan Cècht is the physician-god of the Celtic tribe of Tuatha Dé Danann. Famously, he made a silver arm for King Nadua when the original got chopped off in the First Battle of Magh Tuiredh. (Bodily perfection was a requirement for kingship.) To prevent such mishaps during the Second Battle of Magh Tuireh, Dìan Cècht blessed a nearby well. Any of his tribe’s wounded warriors who bathed in the well would become whole and ready for battle again, unless they had been decapitated.

 

Dìan Cècht’s son Micah preferred to use herbs and direct touch and incantations rather than surgical and prosthetic procedures for healing. Some said it was because Dìan Cècht was jealous that his son was the better healer; Dìan Cècht said it was because Micah had been disrespectful— but when Micah replaced the silver arm of King Nadua with a flesh-&-blood arm, Dìan Cècht slew his son with a strike through the skull to the neck.

 

Dìan Cècht’s daughter Airmed mourned deeply. All the healing herbs of the world sprung from the ground as her tears fell on her brother Micah’s grave. Airmed catalogued the herbs and their properties. Unfortunately, Dìan Cècht was an angry, jealous father. He scattered the herbs, destroying the work of two children with one blow. Now no human will ever know the healing properties of all the herbs.

 

Meanwhile, Dìan Cècht’s other son went abroad, married well, and sired Dìan Cècht a grandson named Lugh. Lugh returned to Ireland to lead his father’s people in the Second Battle of Magh Tuiredh— the battle for which Dìan Cècht provided a magic well of regeneration for wounded soldiers. This time, King Nadua of the twice-replaced-arm was killed by Balor of the Poisonous Eye— Lugh’s other, foreign grandfather. Lugh then drove Balor’s eye out the back of his head with the stone from a sling-shot— or blinded him with a spear— or decapitated him— but either way Lugh got rid of his maternal grandfather, Balor of the Poisonous Eye, and won back the throne for his father’s tribe and the now-resurrected King Nadua of the twice-replaced-arm.*

 

Gods are human, too— but not too human.

*I think.

Friday, January 13th, 2012

King of Fear — Matteo Maria Boiardo Tarocchi

Artist: Maurizio Bonora

Author: Matteo Maria Boiardo

 

The Matteo Maria Boiardo Tarocchi deck is based on a poem about tarot cards by Count Matteo Maria Boiardo, written sometime between 1460 & 1494. He used the structure: 4(suits) x 14(cards per suit) + 22(trumps) = 78 cards. As his poem is one of the oldest references to a deck with this exact structure, it is possible that Count Boiardo invented this now-prevalent structure.

 

This card refers to King Dionysius I or Dionysius the Elder (ca. 432–367 BC), a Greek tyrant of Syracuse, in what is now Sicily, southern Italy. He conquered several cities in Sicily and southern Italy, opposed Carthage’s influence in Sicily and made Syracuse the most powerful of the Western Greek colonies. He was regarded by the ancients as an example of the worst kind of despot— cruel, suspicious and vindictive. Dante places King Dionysius I in a river of boiling blood in the Inferno of his Divine Comedy.

 

This card reads—

TIMOR DYONISIO del tonsore in vece

usò le proprie figlie, cum carboni

per fugir ferro; e al fin non fugí nege.

Which can be loosely translated as—

FEAR Instead of using a barber, DYONISIUS

had his own daughters shave him with coals to avoid iron;

in the end he avoided nothing.

 

[Translated with major help from http://trionfi.com, an excellent site about tarot history with plenty of pictures.]

 

Cruel king Dyonisius’ paranoid suspicion lead him to regard all his subjects as potentially threatening. For this reason he forbid knives, razors and other such sharp iron tools into his chamber. Instead of using a barber, he trained his daughters— whose bodies did not go unsearched before entering his presence— to trim his beard hairs with coals of burning nutshells.

 

Thomas Preston (1537-1598) mentions this event in his play Cambyses (1569)—

The king himself…
…trusteth none to come near him,
Not his own daughters will he have
Unsearched to enter his chamber, which he hath made barbers his beard to shave,
Not with knife or razor, for all edge-tools he fears,
But with hot burning nutshells they singe off his hairs.

 

Richard Edwardes (1525-1566) mentions it his tragicomic play Damon and Pythias (1564)—

[The collier asks Wyll and Jack:]
Has the Kinge made those fayre Damsels his daughters,
To be come now fine and trimme Barbers?
[Jack replies:]
The king him selfe…
…trusteth none, to come nere him: not his wone doughters wil he have
Unsercht to enter his chamber, which he hath made barbars his beard to shave:
Not with Knife or Rasour, for all edge tooles he fears,
But with hote burning Nutshales, they senge of his heares.

 

Count Boiardo’s poem predates both of these plays.

 

In the end, Dyonisius the Elder did not escape death. None do, as death is heaven’s only guarantee that comes with birth. The king was possibly poisoned by his physicians at the instigation of his son, who succeeded him as ruler of Syracuse. Or perhaps he celebrated so fiercely that he drank himself to death. Others report that he died of natural causes. Another theory suggests vengeful murder by compatriots who were bitter about the king’s earlier purges and taxation imposed upon them.

 

The tyrant king spreads fear among his subjects, his enemies, and throughout his court. Thus surrounded by fear, he becomes paranoid of those subjected to his treacherous rule. The tyrant king— the King of Fear.

 

[The immense amount of research required to write this post has given me a great deal of satisfaction.]

Thursday, January 12th, 2012

Nine of Cups — Vertigo Tarot

Illustrator: Dave McKean

Author: Rachel Pollack

 

If this card is right-side up, it says:

Witness the perfection of art:  desire, beauty, sensuality. Count your blessings. Live in the moment. Enjoy the good life. Contentment with your accomplishments forms a foundation for the future. Balance is always needed, but right now is more a time of enjoyment than of suffering the negative consequences of such pleasure.

 

If this card is upside-down, it says:

Frustration. Your wishes may not have yet come true. Perhaps you are being unrealistic. Wishes do not manifest of their own accord. Something is missing deep down. Be careful not to over-emphasize your fantasies or gratify your own desires at the expense of others.

 

I am especially unfocused today— as opposed to my regular, generally unfocused self. This being the Vertigo Tarot, my thoughts meandered around the request, “Tell me something about dreams.” (I also thought, “Give me an idea for a boy’s name,” tho not so seriously.) Although every card in this deck may be linked to Dream, the Nine of Cups is generally a dream card: daydream. Rachel Pollack writes, “…the dream here is of the body… We spend a great deal of our imaginative energy on sexual images… The artist takes these fantasies and uses them as a vehicle for something less personal, even serene, as if art, in its universality, transcends physical desire…”

 

This card tells me I have a tendency to daydream rather than get about to doing the work necessary to follow through with my ideas. I know that: I have a house full of things that could potentially, when I get around to it, be fixed up or made into other things. My most intentional work of art— my wicked deck of cards— moves toward completion at a snail’s pace. But who among us is not a dreamer? Nonetheless, Nine of Cups shows emotional, physical, and sensual satisfaction. Perhaps if I was less satisfied, my daydreams would be more than dreams.

 

Some say happiness is an attitude of choice. If my biggest dream in life is to be happy—and in the end, whose isn’t?— than I am successful. I have accomplished— with some hard work— the most important dream. Every other daydream is just icing on the cake.

 

Om Lokah Samastah Sukhino Bhavantu
May All Beings Be Happy

.