Tarot – A Deck of Discovery
In this article my intention is to provide a
general overview of the structure of the Tarot and to explain the basic
purpose and significance of each section of the deck.
I will begin by introducing the major arcana. The
major arcana consist of 22 cards. In my own opinion and what is the likely
view of the majority of Tarot readers, these cards are the most
significant cards in the deck. These cards detail the psychological state
of a human being and determine the areas where attention is required in
order to promote psychological growth. In essence, these cards reflect our
‘inner self’ and have spiritual significance.
The simplest way of considering and understanding the phases of growth
that are depicted throughout the major arcana is by looking to it as the
story of ‘The Fool’ embarking upon his journey through life.
The Tarot portrays the movement of ‘The Fool’ key
0, from his first appearance in the major arcana until the end when he
reaches ‘The World’. This is the last card in the major arcane, key 21 and
the point where he has completed one life cycle of evolution. From his
first point of expression, leading from him being a spark of enlightened
divine perfection, into facing the trials of life and experiencing the
lessons of both a positive and negative nature that are required of any
human being to grow and evolve until they gain enough wisdom and insight
of life to become, once again, an unbound enlightened being. On reaching
this stage ‘The Fool’ has evolved into the same state of consciousness he
was at when he first arrived onto the earth plane.
The next section of the cards is the minor
arcana. These cards add fullness and depth to the details given in the
major arcana. The minor arcana represents the ‘outer life’, for example,
relationships, events, work and any projects that are significant in
influencing the state of mind of the human being in psychological terms as
demonstrated in the major arcane.
There are 40 cards in the minor arcane which are divided into four
individual suits.. These suits are Cups, Wands, Swords and Coins. You
might recognize these suits as bearing resemblance to the suits
demonstrated in regular decks of playing cards where we have Hearts,
Spades, Clubs and Diamonds. The four suits of the minor arcane are
governed by the four elements earth, water, fire and air.
Wands – Fire which rules creative energy and
ambition.
Cups – Water which rules the emotions, love, feelings and the
subconscious mind.
Swords – Air which rules rational thought, logic, intellect and the
conscious mind.
Coins – Earth which rules material manifestation, physical growth,
finance and industry.
The Tarot shows us the importance of having
balance in our lives. Without achieving and maintaining a balance the
result can be of bringing harm to ourselves in either a psychological,
physical nature or a combination of both factors depending, of course,
upon your own life circumstances.
The principle of the four suits and elements I
explained above are invaluable to one and other and they do require a
balance between all of them to reach the successful completion of any
project we embark upon. The element of Fire and the Wands brings the
creative, ambitious energy we need in order to invoke the first stage of
an idea for a project. This energy then requires the application of the
principle of the cups and water which brings us the feeling, emotion and
intuition to inspire and move us to take the project in hand. Now we
require the application of the Air element and the swords which brings
organization of our emotions and feeling into control by applying logic
and intellect. This is required to move our project in reasonable and
rational terms. All three elements cannot manifest into materialization
without the influence of the Coins and earth element which brings the idea
into effect by allowing physical manifestation of the project.
The last section of the Tarot deck is that of the
court cards. There are 16 court cards all together which are then split
into four sections of four cards represented by each of the four
individual suits. Again being similar to regular playing cards, we have
the court cards consisting of the Kings, Queens, Knights and pages of each
suit. The court cards act as the link between the major and minor arcane
and show up in a spread representing a whole range of circumstances. These
cards usually represent people in your life or an aspect or characteristic
of your own personality. They can bring the arrival of a new person
entering into your life or someone who is already a part of and will bring
change by influencing a certain situation. These cards can also represent
an event, a shift in circumstances in your life or the arrival of news or
a message from someone.
The appearance of court cards in a spread brings
a vast amount of possibility of what they may represent. In this instance
the best way to determine the true meaning is to simply trust your
intuition when reading the cards rather than making an assumption of what
you think it should mean! These cards can sometimes be confusing, however
when you trust your own intuition you should not ever fail!
So you can conclude from my explanation of the
Tarot that specific sections of the card deck does determine different
areas of our lives and being, but no one area is any more significant than
another. All aspects are required to integrate together into bringing a
complete structure and balance. This is the whole point of the Tarot. It
is a valuable tool and will detect the area in our life that is out of
balance, causing us problems in effect. After determining the problem
itself we can then use the advice of the cards which will show us the best
course of action and the most likely outcome as a result. However, how we
choose to use that advice is entirely up to us. We are the master of our
own destiny, in effect; we create our own life path for the future
regardless of what path the Tarot might advise us to choose.
© 2009 Ashleigh Stewart
Click here to read about the author