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What is Tarot?

Have you ever wondered what tarot was? Why people are fascinated by it? Do you know what Tarot is? Did you know it was once a game before it became a method of divination? The art of using cards to divine the future is called Cartomancy. This act did not become popular till the 18th or 19th century. Before that tarot was used just like regular playing cards. You read that right, tarot cards were used as regular playing cards in Italy in the 14th century.

What is Tarot?

Tarot is a deck of cards usually numbering 78 cards. They are used by people wishing to divine their future. Divination by cards is called cartomancy. Tarot cars have been used as a form of divination since the 18th or 19th century but have been in around since the 14th century. They were common place in Northern Italy where they were used to play card games just like a modern deck of playing cards. There are two decks that all other decks use as a guide for their creation. In the English world that deck is the Rider Waite tarot and in Latin countries it is the Tarot De Mareiselle. Please visit the link below to learn more about these decks and to even purchase them.
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Learn Tarot Reading

Tarot Reading Psychic

Tarot Basics: Understanding The Basics of The Tarot Card Deck, Tarot Card Meanings, and Tarot Reading

One thing you will soon discover is that Tarot reading is much more than a form of card divination that can tell us about our past, present and future. It is also an incredibly effective method for self-exploration. It does this by enabling us to peer into the areas in our lives that are challenged as well as offering us new perspectives. In essence, the Tarot are mirrors to the self, reflecting our world back at us, and enabling us to peer into our inner beings. It can help us on our journeys and shed light on the important life lessons we ultimately must learn if we are to achieve personal growth and transformation.
Tarot Reading Basics

The tarot has its roots in many different philosophical and religious backgrounds. It originated in a time imbued with symbolic imagery that was influenced by many cultures, languages and historical references. The tarot's symbolism is based on archetypal elements and metaphors, giving its imagery an universal appeal. Regardless of one's cultural, religious or educational background, the Tarot experience is collective. Their interpretations are recognizable by everyone.


The modern Tarot deck is comprised of 78 cards, 40 in the minor arcana, 16 court cards and 22 cards that make up the major arcana. The 16 court cards consist of pages, knights, queens and kings. The four suits in the minor arcana include the Suits of Cups, Swords, Wands and Pentacles. Each Suit is connected to one of the four elements: Earth, Air, Fire and Water. They are also connected to the four directions: North, South, East and West. The imagery of Tarot reflects an association to these elements. This enables the tarot reader to identify the key aspects that are influencing a particular situation or individual.
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The Suit Cards

In tarot, the cups suit represents the dream world, the unconscious, feelings and relationships. The wands suit represents fertility, creativity and one's sense of purpose or career endeavors. The sword suit represents reason, life challenges, the mind and truth. And lastly, the pentacles suit represents the material, financial and ethical aspects of a person's life.

There is a king, queen, knight, and page in every suit as well. They are referred to as the court cards and each one (excluding the page cards) has an astrological sign associated to it. This adds yet another level for interpretation in tarot card readings. To be helpful, here are the astrological associations. I often encourage people to identify their sign and the associated tarot card meaning. This can offer tremendous insights into ones strengths and vulnerabilities.
  • Aries: King of Wands
  • Taurus: Queen of Pentacles
  • Gemini: Knight of Swords
  • Cancer: King of Cups
  • Leo: Queen of Wands
  • Virgo: Knight of Pentacles
  • Libra: King of Swords
  • Scorpio: Queen of Cups
  • Sagittarius: Knight of Wands
  • Capricorn: King of Pentacles
  • Aquarius: Queen of Swords
  • Pisces: Knight of Cups

The Major Arcana Cards

The Major Arcana cards reflect where one is in his or her life's journey. There are 22 tarot cards in the Major Arcana. The first half of the Major Arcana (the Fool through the Hermit) identifies the transition from child to adult and all of the challenges we must face as we progress into a deeper level of maturity and spirituality.

The second half of the Major Arcana (The Wheel of Fortune through the World) reflects our personal and spiritual world view. In a tarot reading, the second half of the major arcana typically points to a more inward-looking stage or process in our development. Keep in mind, this does not always happen in procession. In fact, in some areas we are still the "fools" while in other areas we can be the "The Hermit".

The Minor Arcana Cards

The Minor Arcana, or Pip cards, are the numbered cards (1-10) that comprise each suit. The Minor Arcana reflect day to day issues. They can represent how you interact with people, your work, your emotions, your finances, and your personal relationships. In a tarot card reading, the minor arcana reveal the who's, how's, and what's. There is no sense of permanence. If there are a number of minor arcana suit cards in your spread, know that you can make changes, work through blocks, and understands where you are emotionally.

Interpreting Tarot Card Meanings

They key to understanding tarot card meanings is to not always be literal. It often requires one to attach their own life experiences to each of the tarot cards. Tarot card meanings can also vary depending on the type of reading that is being done or even where a particular card might appear in a tarot spread. Upside down cards, known as "reversed tarot cards", also have their own unique meanings as well.

The Basics Of Tarot Reading

Now that you know a little about the basics of the tarot cards, we can now look at what you can expect from your first tarot card reading. Most readings typically consists of shuffling the deck, drawing a set number of cards, and placing them in a specific configuration known as a "tarot spread". There are hundreds of tarot spreads in use today, but most psychic tarot readers tend to favor some spreads more than others. They will often use different tarot spreads for different types of readings as well.

Once the cards are pulled and placed in a spread, the tarot reader will begin to interpret the symbols of the cards. Often they will point out the implications of the past, what is happening in the here and now, and what will influence your future. You may ask particular questions and additional tarot cards may be drawn for specific areas of your life. The configurations the cards are placed in add to the complexities of their meanings.

The tarot's power lies in its ability to distinguish a person's path through the psychic ability or intuition of the tarot reader. In some cases, a psychic tarot reader will rely primarily on their own psychic abilities to interpret the cards, while a non-psychic tarot reader will rely more on the tarot card meanings themselves. Either way, trust the cards can do their job and ask a lot of questions.

Becoming a good tarot reader takes more than just memorizing tarot card meanings and knowing tarot spreads. Tarot reading requires practice, patience and, most importantly, a willingness to trust your own intuition. Whether you are reading for yourself or for someone else, there are some very useful practices you should follow to ensure a good reading.

1. Preparing a Peaceful Environment

Believe it or not, the environment in which you conduct a tarot reading can significantly influence the reading. Not only can the environment affect you as a tarot reader, it can also have implications for the person being read. In tarot reading, it's always important to set aside your own personal issues and concerns. Creating a comfortable space that helps you remain centered and calm will assist in helping you remain objective and neutral during a reading. Rituals such as lighting candles or burning incense can also help you get into the mood.

2. Select a Signifier Card

In tarot reading, signifier cards serve as a representation of either the person being read or the situation they are asking about. If you are using the signifier card to represent the person being read, most tarot readers tend use the court cards either by associating the inquirer's physical attributes to one of the court cards or by associating their astrological sign to one of the court cards. If you are choosing a signifier card to represent a specific situation, you can get as creative as you like. Depending on the seriousness of the question at hand, you may either choose a card from the major arcana or the minor arcana. The major arcana cards tend to be used for important life issues while the minor arcana cards tend to focus on every day concerns.

The signifier card also helps you to remain focused on the person for whom you are reading. In many tarot spreads, the signifier cards are centrally positioned. This helps the tarot reader interpret the cards as well as help them to identify the key issues that are surrounding the inquirer.

3. Choosing the Right Tarot Spread

Tarot spreads are card arrangements laid out in a specific pattern. Each card position within a spread has a specific meaning. When individual tarot cards are put together in a tarot spread, their meanings can be used to form a kind of story. The tarot reader then interprets the cards according to their position and relationships to each other within the spread.

As a tarot reader, it's important to choose a tarot spread that appropriately correlates to the question being asked. If the question is about love, for example, then you will probably want to utilize a love spread. In some cases you may want to create your own tarot spread. This can be particularly useful when the question covers more than one topic.

4. Framing the Question

How the inquirer frames or asks a question prior to their reading can have a significant effect on the overall usefulness of the reading. The more specific the inquirer is with their question, the better the likelihood that the tarot reading will address their issue in a specific manner. It's also helpful to keep the question open ended. Open ended questions can reveal hidden or overlooked issues that may have been otherwise missed. Open ended questions can also help the tarot reader discover core issues or other influences that may be affecting the person being read.

5. Shuffling the Cards

There are a number of approaches to shuffling the cards before a tarot reading. This is usually the point where the person being read for will actually touch the cards (although some tarot readers prefer not to have anyone handle their cards). Should you choose to let the inquirer handle the cards, you must make sure that they are instructed to focus on the question at hand while they are shuffling so this energy can get transferred to the cards. There are also different approaches to the "cutting" of the cards; the most popular includes having the inquirer cut the deck three times with their left hand.

6. Knowing Your Tarot Deck

Prior to giving any tarot reading, I always encourage people to take them time to really get to know the tarot deck they will be working with. This not only helps you become comfortable with the cards, it will also deepen your understanding of their meanings and how they relate to each other in a tarot spread. Inevitably, those who will be receiving a tarot reading from you will always pick up on your relationship to your own cards.

The Six Essentials of a Great Tarot Reading

Becoming a good tarot reader takes more than just memorizing tarot card meanings and knowing tarot spreads. Tarot reading requires practice, patience and, most importantly, a willingness to trust your own intuition. Whether you are reading for yourself or for someone else, there are some very useful practices you should follow to ensure a good reading. Sometimes it is hard to learn tarot fast and even after that it is hard to predict future for yourself in this case I would sugest for you to Join 100% Free Psychic chat and get up to 10 min 100% Free Psychic Reading.
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1. Preparing a Peaceful Environment

Believe it or not, the environment in which you conduct a tarot reading can significantly influence the reading. Not only can the environment affect you as a tarot reader, it can also have implications for the person being read. In tarot reading, it's always important to set aside your own personal issues and concerns. Creating a comfortable space that helps you remain centered and calm will assist in helping you remain objective and neutral during a reading. Rituals such as lighting candles or burning incense can also help you get into the mood.

2. Select a Signifier Card

In tarot reading, signifier cards serve as a representation of either the person being read or the situation they are asking about. If you are using the signifier card to represent the person being read, most tarot readers tend use the court cards either by associating the inquirer's physical attributes to one of the court cards or by associating their astrological sign to one of the court cards. If you are choosing a signifier card to represent a specific situation, you can get as creative as you like. Depending on the seriousness of the question at hand, you may either choose a card from the major arcana or the minor arcana. The major arcana cards tend to be used for important life issues while the minor arcana cards tend to focus on every day concerns.

The signifier card also helps you to remain focused on the person for whom you are reading. In many tarot spreads, the signifier cards are centrally positioned. This helps the tarot reader interpret the cards as well as help them to identify the key issues that are surrounding the inquirer.

3. Choosing the Right Tarot Spread

Tarot spreads are card arrangements laid out in a specific pattern. Each card position within a spread has a specific meaning. When individual tarot cards are put together in a tarot spread, their meanings can be used to form a kind of story. The tarot reader then interprets the cards according to their position and relationships to each other within the spread.

As a tarot reader, it's important to choose a tarot spread that appropriately correlates to the question being asked. If the question is about love, for example, then you will probably want to utilize a love spread. In some cases you may want to create your own tarot spread. This can be particularly useful when the question covers more than one topic.

4. Framing the Question

How the inquirer frames or asks a question prior to their reading can have a significant effect on the overall usefulness of the reading. The more specific the inquirer is with their question, the better the likelihood that the tarot reading will address their issue in a specific manner. It's also helpful to keep the question open ended. Open ended questions can reveal hidden or overlooked issues that may have been otherwise missed. Open ended questions can also help the tarot reader discover core issues or other influences that may be affecting the person being read.

5. Shuffling the Cards

There are a number of approaches to shuffling the cards before a tarot reading. This is usually the point where the person being read for will actually touch the cards (although some tarot readers prefer not to have anyone handle their cards). Should you choose to let the inquirer handle the cards, you must make sure that they are instructed to focus on the question at hand while they are shuffling so this energy can get transferred to the cards. There are also different approaches to the "cutting" of the cards; the most popular includes having the inquirer cut the deck three times with their left hand.

6. Knowing Your Tarot Deck

Prior to giving any tarot reading, I always encourage people to take them time to really get to know the tarot deck they will be working with. This not only helps you become comfortable with the cards, it will also deepen your understanding of their meanings and how they relate to each other in a tarot spread. Inevitably, those who will be receiving a tarot reading from you will always pick up on your relationship to your own cards. If you are not familiar with the deck you are working with, chances are it will come through during the tarot reading.

The Tarot Card Spread

The more comfortable you get with the tarot deck, the easier it will become to decipher the tarot card meanings. The same came be said for tarot spreads. There are literally hundreds of tarot spreads to choose from, so to simplify this process, I have listed some examples of different tarot spreads and the many purposes for which they may be used.

For the beginner it is important to first understand what tarot card spreads are and how they function. A tarot spread is a configuration of cards laid out in a pre-specified geometric pattern. Each position of each card in a the tarot spread has a specific meaning. When individual tarot cards are put together in a tarot spread, their meanings can be used to form a kind of story. Thus, the pattern of a spread provides the framework for a tarot reading. The tarot reader utilizes the placement of the cards, or the card's position, with an identified theme. For example, many spreads include positions for the past, present and future. They can also include positions for internal feelings, specific challenges, external factors, and so on.

Tarot card spreads have different implications depending on the type of question or issue being explored. Some tarot card spreads relay information in a general way while others are designed to impart information that is very specific in nature. They can also vary in complexity from a simple one card spread to elaborate spreads that can include all 78 tarot cards. The choice of which spread to use depends primarily on the reader and the questions that need to be answered.

In a tarot reading, the cards are shuffled by the person being read. This enables the person to have contact with the cards. While the person is shuffling, they are asked by the tarot reader to think of a question or issue. The tarot cards are like magnets that attach to individual energies. Once attached, they pick up information that facilitates the tarot reader in his or her reading.

Once the cards are pulled and placed, the tarot reader will begin to interpret the images and positions of the tarot cards. The spread they are placed in adds to the complexities of the cards meanings. The strength of the cards lies in their unique ability to impart a person's path. It can do this in two ways; by igniting the intuition or psychic ability of the tarot reader and by picking up the energy of the person being read. In essence, it is a marriage. The tarot cards are the bridge between the reader and that of the person being read, and the tarot spread is the architecture of the reading.

Once you become familiar with the Tarot, you will want to choose the best tarot spread to suit the particular situation being addressed in your reading. Once you get really comfortable, you may even want to make up some of your own tarot spreads. As a tarot reader it is important to choose spreads that encourage your imagination and intuition. Understanding the placement of the cards is important, but it is just as important to identify tarot spreads that work for you as an individual. They are as personal as the tarot cards themselves.

The History of Tarot Reading

First and foremost, I am not a historical expert, nor do I find it necessary to go into great detail regarding the origins of the tarot cards. There is a plethora of information available to those who wish to explore the history of the Tarot in greater detail and I can suggest some great books for those of you who would like to embark on a great historical journey.
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Tarot-History

For our purposes, however, I believe it may be useful to get a brief background on the tarot cards. It certainly has been useful for me to understand such a genesis.

The rich imagery of the Tarot has its root in many different religions and philosophies. The first records of the Tarot Cards date back to the 15th century. Although there are no records that identify the exact geographical region where the Tarot originated, most scholars believe the Tarot originated in northern Europe. The cards were primarily used for a card game known as Tarocchi. This was a game of chance and the deck consisted of numbered cards (1-10) in four suits, court cards (page, knight, queen, king) and 22 trumps cards. These 22 cards are now associated with the Major Arcana. The popular term for this early card deck was called carte da trionfi, or Triumph Cards, and it became an extremely popular game for the wealthy and noble.

It wasn't until the 18th century, however, that the Tarot were used for divinatory purposes. Jean-Baptiste Alliette (French occultist) was the first to create a tarot deck used for this purpose. He included new symbolism and imagery that incorporated the four elements (earth, air, fire, and water) and astrology. It became a popular tool for fortunetelling during this time. In 1910, the Tarot became truly mainstream when the Rider-Waite-Smith Tarot deck was first published. The Rider-Waite-Smith tarot deck was the first deck to include symbolic imagery in all 78 cards.

Much of the symbolism in the modern tarot deck has its roots in astrology and the Kabbala, but bear in mind that there are many religions, myths and legends symbolically depicted in the Tarot. This is because the cards were developed in a time imbued with symbolic imagery that was influenced by many cultures, languages and historical references. After all, it was the time when the dark ages where ending and the Renaissance was beginning. Certainly there is a great deal of allegorical symbolism referencing the Christian teachings of those times, and we certainly see a great deal of Greco-Roman imagery as well. The list goes on. Knowing the symbolism and tarot card meanings can be quite helpful, but remember the intention of the Tarot, and all of it's magical imagery, is to stimulate your intuition.

How to Become a Professional Tarot Reader

If you have discovered a love for tarot reading, there is absolutely no reason why you can't make a living reading the cards for other people. If you feel confident in your skills, making the leap to becoming a professional is not nearly as difficult as it may seem. It just requires a little willingness, trust in your self, and the ability to put yourself out there.

The three most important elements to earning a living as a Tarot reader include: your skill at reading the cards, your ability to connect with others, and most importantly, your ability to market yourself. By far, the most difficult aspect to becoming a professional is self-promotion. While it is true that word of mouth can certainly help to get your name out there, you usually have to get a few happy clients to help get you started.

So how exactly do you get your first clients? I always suggest reading for friends. After you read for your friends, ask them if they have any friends that they can recommend to you. One really successful method is to host a Tarot party. Invite all of your friends and ask them to each bring one guest. Offer free mini readings and make sure you have the opportunity to let your guests know who you are and how long you've been working with the Tarot. Make sure you have business cards and leave out a guest book. Get emails! In the future, you can contact people via email with new client specials (another topic).

Believe it or not, a really successful way to attract new clients is to associate yourself with either a metaphysical store or coffee shop. Websites like Craigslist, bulletin boards and local weekly papers are other great places where you can promote yourself at little or no cost. You may not initially generate the income you may want, but you will get repeat clients. Over time, some of them will become loyal customers. More importantly, you will develop relationships with them. This is how one develops a word of mouth clientele. It's always about your relationships with your clients. Part of being a professional tarot reader includes conducting your business with integrity, honesty and open-mindedness.

Finally, another great method for getting new clients is to rent a booth at psychic fairs or new age conventions. In this type of setting, you are already considered a professional. The good news is that you don't have to sell yourself as much as you have to in other settings. This is a great arena to really let people see your skills.

Again, you may not generate the type of income you eventually see yourself earning, but it's a start. Even if you start by doing occasional reading for clients, it can still be a great second income until you feel confident enough in your earning abilities to leave your present job.

How To Learn Your Own Personal Tarot Card Meanings

If you go into any metaphysical bookstore you will very likely find several books on the Tarot. They can be a valuable tool for the beginning Tarot reader. However, as you become increasingly familiar with the Tarot and tarot reading, you will find that you will interpret tarot card meanings less and less from what you have read in books, and more and more from your own personal interpretation of the cards. In the end, you will find that the best and most experienced Tarot readers are always the one's who utilize their own personal associations to the cards.

Just as every individual has their own, unique point of view, Tarot reading offers you the insight to truly understand and interpret your own, personal story. It does this by illuminating the nature of your purpose and identifying how your story has framed your own view of the world. The more you become conscious of your story, the more you can understand yourself. This process you can also help you to understand the story of others. When we identify with another person's experience, we can gain a deeper understanding of our shared experience. This is our humanity.

As a Tarot reader, it's important to be able to identify where your story ends and another person's begins. Neutrality and objectivity will be your greatest allies in Tarot reading, particularly if you are reading for someone other than yourself. It's also important that you become conscious of your own projections. In other words, you do not want to project your story onto someone else's. One way to ensure that you don't do this is by committing yourself to your own process of self-discovery. Tarot reading can help you do this by reflecting your own story back to you.

The following exercise can be very useful for this process:

Separate the 22 Major Arcana cards out from the rest of the deck. Begin first with the Fool Tarot Card followed by the rest placed in numerical order. Thus, the Fool would be followed by the Magician, The Magician would be followed by the High Priestess, etc%u2026

Next, take out a piece of paper and examine the first card: The Fool Tarot Card. Ask yourself the following question:
  • What is the story of the Fool?
  • Where have I been the Fool?
  • Where does my story differ from the Fool? Where is it the same?
  • If the Fool where to speak to me, what might he say to me? What might I say to Him?
  • What might the Fool say to the card that follows him? In this case, it would be the Magician.

You can continue this narrative throughout the Major Arcana until you finish with the World Tarot card. Allow each card to tell you a story. In turn, you can use the cards to tell your own story. The ultimate purpose of this exercise is to help you identify your own story and life journey. This exercise can also deepen your understanding of tarot cards meanings.

This exercise is also a great way to interpret the cards for those for whom you may be reading. Knowing traditional interpretations can be useful, but there is nothing more powerful than letting the Tarot cards speak for themselves.

Tarot and Astrology

Although there are many similarities between the Tarot and Astrology, they are both entirely different fields of study. Some believe that astrology offers better insight into the timing of events while the tarot offers better insight into the various people surrounding the querent (the person being read for).

In either case, intuition is required for both disciplines. It is important to recognize, however, that there is not a direct relationship between astrological and tarot symbolism. Typically, correlations between these two fields can differ from interpreter to interpreter.

For our purposes, the associations made between astrology and the tarot should be used as a tool for deepening one's understanding of the subtleties of the tarot's meaning. The tarot cards have their own, completely independent symbolism and the generalized astrological associations offer only another layer to their interpretations.

Below I have listed the most accepted approaches to assigning astrological meanings to the cards in the tarot.

Seasons and Direction

The Suit of Cups Direction is north and the season is summer.
The Suit of Pentacles Direction is south and the season is winter.
The Suit of Wands Direction is east and the season is spring.
The Suit of Swords Directions is west and the season is fall.
Cancer, Scorpio, and Pisces are signs of the summer.
Capricorn, Taurus, and Virgo are signs of the winter.
Aries, Leo, and Sagittarius are signs of the spring.
Libra, Gemini, and Aquarius are signs of the fall.

Astrological Associations of the Major Arcana
  • The Fool: Uranus
  • The Magician: Mercury
  • The High Priestess: Moon
  • The Empress: Venus
  • The Emperor: Aries
  • The Hierophant: Taurus
  • The Lovers: Gemini
  • The Chariot: Cancer
  • Strength: Leo
  • The Hermit: Virgo
  • Wheel of Fortune: Jupiter
  • Justice: Libra
  • The Hanged Man: Neptune
  • Death: Scorpio
  • Temperance: Sagittarius
  • The Devil: Capricorn
  • The Tower: Mars
  • The Star: Aquarius
  • The Moon: Pisces
  • The Sun: Sun
  • Judgment: Pluto
  • The World: Saturn

Astrological Associations of the Court Cards
  • Aries: King of Wands
  • Taurus: Queen of Pentacles
  • Gemini: Knight of Swords
  • Cancer: King of Cups
  • Leo: Queen of Wands
  • Virgo: Knight of Pentacles
  • Libra: King of Swords
  • Scorpio: Queen of Cups
  • Sagittarius: Knight of Wands
  • Capricorn: King of Pentacles
  • Aquarius: Queen of Swords
  • Pisces: Knight of Cups
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Tarot Cards Readings | The Fortune-Teller

Are You Looking for Instructions on Tarot Cards Interpretation?

Have you ever wanted to get information about tarot cards reading and interpretation? What about being able to predict your own future and the future of your friends. Moreover, this ability would help you create your personal tarot card readings and interpretation business for the profit of your trustful customers!

In this page, you're going to discover everything you always wanted to know to read the tarot cards and make your personal tarot cards interpreation. We're going to cover everything, from the origins of the tarot cards to the truth about fortune tellers and tarot cards readers.

Take a cup coffee, a cookie - or two - sit down and read on.

The Tarot Cards in History

Where do the Tarot cards come from?

About the origin of the Tarot de Marseilles, we know few things but we can however say this: the Tarot de Marseilles deck appeared in France under the reign of the king Charles VI. When this poor king became insane, he was locked up in a castle by his wife Isabeau of Bavaria. Odette de Champdivert, his mistress offered a deck of Tarot cards to him.

In fact, these tarot cards were composed by 56 paperboard pieces decorated with figures and signs. This play was used by Sarasins in Eastern countries. Charles VI asked to Jacquemin Gringonneur to redraw the figures in order to make them look prettier. Some claim that the first illuminations of the cards appeared in Italy but the work of this artist is indexed on the journal of Charles VI's banker.

The Tarot we talk about here was not a divination Tarot but well a card game; which still exists and is still used in Mediterranean countries. Although the opinions are divided and the experts seldom agree between them, the Divinatory Tarot de Marseilles was born from this game.

22 major arcana were associated to the 56 basic cards (minor arcana). These major arcana are more often used than the minor arcana. The graphics of the Tarot de Marseilles look medieval and reflect the concerns of our ancestors to perfection.

The 22 Major Arcana of a Tarot Card Deck

Most used Tarot arcana
tarot card spread - simple crossFortune tellers mostly use the major arcana when spreading the cards as they quickly give them general information regarding the prediction. Here's a list of these cards:
  • I. The Magician,
  • II. The High Priestess,
  • III. The Empress,
  • IIII. The Emperor *,
  • V. The Pope,
  • VI. The Lovers,
  • VII. The Chariot,
  • VIII. Justice,
  • VIIII. The Hermit *,
  • X. The Wheel of Fortune,
  • XI. Strength,
  • XII. The Hanged Man,
  • XIII. Death or (The Noname Arcana),
  • XIIII. Temperance *,
  • XV. The Devil,
  • XVI. The Tower,
  • XVII. The Star,
  • XVIII. The Moon,
  • XVIIII. The Sun *,
  • XX. Judgement,
  • XXI. The World,
  • XXII. The Fool **
* classification "IIII" and not "IV" highlights the progression of the Tarot of Marseilles game.

** The Fool is the 22nd arcana but is generally not numbered.

The 56 Minor Arcana of a Tarot Card Deck

Arcana used to narrow the prediction
tarot cards - cup suitOne makes less use of the 56 minor arcana, however, they're used to narrow the predictions the fortune teller is about to do. The 56 minor arcana are split into four suits:
  • Spears,
  • Cups,
  • Coins,
  • Swords

Each suit includes 14 cards that are numbered from 1 to 10, or Ace through 10 and 4 noble cards ; which are: the Page, the Knight, the Queen and the King.

During the Middle-Ages and later, these suits were associated with the social classes: Coins with the traders, Cups with the clergy, Swords with the nobility and Spears with the peasants


Are Fortune Tellers Scammers or Honest People?

Beware of dishonest people!

Before consulting a fortune-teller, it is necessary for you to know that, if all these persons aren't good fortune-tellers (some of them earn their living by telling anything); the predictions that you will hear will perhaps never arrive but that does not mean that the fortune-teller is bad.

Indeed, during the pulling of tarot cards, you will be asked to "cut" in order to allow the set to be impregnated by your emotions. One can talk about "magnetizing". If the day you consult a fortune-teller, you have negative ideas or if you are depressed, the predictions will be in harmony with your state of mind. Hundred percent of the predictions made by the fortune-teller will be carried out if you follow the way of life that you fixed the day of the consultation.

In some occasions, I noticed that my predictions are carried out at 100% with people who keep the same state of mind during the months following the consultation.

For example, a friend asked me for a consultation because she had compulsive obsessional disorders and wanted to know how her disease would develop. I announced to her that she would not be interested by her disease within some weeks because she was going to leave on a journey in an Island and would meet her husband-to-be. She believed that I was becoming insane! Because of the compulsive disorders, she did not travel but the year she came to me, she went to Jersey Island (U.K.) and met her husband-to-be. They got married two months later.

You have to know that people who consult a fortune-teller, do it for sentimental purpose, particularly when they are depressed. However, a depress is momentary, one can cure a depression and consequently, the predictions are distorted.
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