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Cuz i dont understand what this is saying?!...

"The High Priestess card reversed suggests that turning on the charm could be part of a romantic strategy, and emotional resolve may crumble in favor of satisfying lust, desire or revenge. The attraction or release may seem sweet at first, but it could backfire, resulting in remorse or anger. Make a conscious effort to see beyond the moment or control your passions, otherwise you may end up feeling dissatisfied. You don't have to be sexual to feel valued. "

2006-10-11 19:35:01 · 9 answers · asked by Z ten 3 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

9 answers

This could mean several things depending on the placement of the card and what cards are next to it. A basic of the reversed High Pristess card would be..She warns you about not learning from your mistakes, which will only make you do them over and over again.

2006-10-11 19:45:24 · answer #1 · answered by Epona Willow 7 · 1 0

What position was it in? The High Priestess card usually has a general meaning of gaining in something... love, promotion... but upside down, it could mean gaining something great only to find it is not what you thought it was. "emotional resolve crumbling in Favor OF satisfying lust" The meanings connect with the meanings of other cards and it depends on what position it is in. If it was a position of the Past, it could mean something you desired but have yet obtained. Present, it may be warning that what you are trying to obtain is merely a shallow image of what you truly want. Future, could mean a lot of things depending on what other cards are with it.

2006-10-12 04:31:31 · answer #2 · answered by Kithy 6 · 1 0

I want I knew if the cardboard became upright or reversed once you initially drew it, as i'd desire to offer you a distinctive confident/no reaction. yet aside from that, that's an extremely thrilling card you drew up. The 4 of Pentacles is all approximately protection specially else, rather on a financial, materialistic point. that's totally humorous how this card got here up such as your utilising attempt project. i'm finding on the cardboard now, and it exhibits somebody rather gripping a coin/disk, protecting it on the threshold of himself in any respect cases. Do you spot any symbolic imagery right here? I honestly do. The coin/disk the guy is retaining in that card is the guidance wheel of a motor vehicle on your case. you're probable going to be very nervous on a similar time as taking your highway attempt, yet you will additionally be very concentrated, this is top right here. And as long as you're looking after that sharp concentration, you will actually bypass your highway attempt. And besides the undeniable fact that the classic which ability of this card ability "blockading substitute," what this suggests on your specific project is that no longer something is going to quit you from taking your eyes off the line, thereby making you much extra concentrated. Make experience now? i'm hoping my answer settles your project!!!!

2016-12-26 17:06:49 · answer #3 · answered by gerda 4 · 0 0

Here is a free download demo for a great Tarot program. To keep the size of the demo manageable it contains the Rider/Waite deck, the actual program will have 10 complete decks. This Demo version of Tarot is a full working copy for 30 days. So you get 30 days to study meanings and spreads! http://www.free-tarot-download-demo.wotsnext.com

And if you want to strengthen your psychic ability I can help you here… http://www.psychic-junkie.com/am-i-psychic.html

2006-10-12 09:25:31 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

the cards themself, don't actually mean anything more than what they mean to you. those are gross guidelines to get you started

you have to learn what each card means for you, so that you can understand in context what the cards are telling you

if your just getting started, I suggest separating out the major arcana, getting into as meditative of a state as you can, and focusing on one card at a time, gazing at it, noting symbols and images, ect... and compare each card and see connections to other cards through shared symbols, complementary symbols, ect.

you have to get to know your deck,

2006-10-11 19:44:17 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

1

2017-02-17 12:15:38 · answer #6 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Most modern tarot decks consist of 78 cards with allegorical representations today used for divination. A typical tarot deck consists of:

The major arcana, consisting of 22 trump cards (sometimes referred to as keys):
The Fool, The Magician, The High Priestess. The Empress, The Emperor, The Hierophant, The Lovers, The Chariot, Strength, The Hermit, Wheel of Fortune, Justice, The Hanged Man, Death, Temperance, The Devil, The Tower, The Star, The Moon, The Sun, Judgement, and The World.
The minor arcana, consisting of 56 cards (sometimes referred to as pips):
Forty cards in four different suits of ten — traditionally batons or wands, cups, swords, coins or pentacles, and
Sixteen court cards of four per suit: the page, knight, queen, and king

While the exact sources of tarot are not completely known, the earliest reliable information suggests tarot originated as a game in 15th century Italy by adding to a normal deck of cards 21 trump cards, a fool, and 4 queens of each suit. Some early tarot decks of north Italian origin, which date to the early to mid-15th century, have remained. These were called carte da trionfi or "cards of the triumphs". Soon afterwards, the cards came to be known as tarocchi.

It is unknown when the tarot was first used for divination, but there are no documented uses of tarot cards for divination prior to the 18th century. All available evidence indicate that cartomancy with more conventional playing cards pre-date tarot cartomancy. As early as 1540, a book entitled The Oracles of Francesco Marcolino da Forli shows a simple method of divining from the coin suit of a regular playing card deck. Manuscripts from 1735 (The Square of Sevens) and 1750 (Pratesi Cartomancer) show rudimentary divinatory meanings for the cards of the tarot, as well as a system for laying out the cards. In 1765, Giacomo Casanova wrote in his diary that his Russian mistress frequently used a deck of playing cards for divination. In 1781 Antoine Court de Gébelin wrote a speculative history and a detailed system for using the tarot to foretell the future. From Gébelin's time forward, various explanations have been given for the origins of tarot, most of them of doubtful veracity. There is no evidence for any tarot cards prior to the hand-painted ones that were used by Italian nobles, but some esoteric schools believe its origins could be in Ancient Egypt, Ancient India or even the lost continent of Atlantis. Such beliefs in non-Italian origins, however, are speculative.

The typical 78-card tarot deck has two distinct parts. The first, called the trump cards, consists of 21 cards without suits, plus a 22nd card, The Fool, which is often given the value of zero. These cards are known as the major arcana, or "greater secrets."

The second consists of 56 cards divided into 4 suits of 14 cards each. The traditional Italian suits are swords, batons, coins and cups. In modern tarot decks, the batons suit is commonly called wands, rods or staves, while the coins suit is often called pentacles or disks. These cards are known as the minor arcana, or "lesser secrets."

In many parts of the world, tarot cards are usually seen either as a means of divination or as a psychological tool for accessing the unconscious. Tarot cards, when shuffled as a deck and laid out in one of a variety of patterns, are often believed to show a person's thoughts and desires, to show events that have taken place in a person's past or that are presently happening, to answer a question, or to reveal possible future events.

Each card in the tarot deck has a variety of symbolic meanings that have evolved over the years. Many custom or themed tarot decks exist, especially in the United States, which have even more specific symbolism. Also, in divination, the astrological attributions of the coat, or pip, cards can be used as general indicators of timing in the year, based on the Octavian calendar. Court cards (kings, queens, pages, and knights) can signify different people in a tarot reading, with each suit's "nature" providing hints about that person's attitudes and physical and emotional characteristics.

Some schools of occult thought or symbolic study, such as the Freemasons and the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, consider the tarot to function as a textbook and mnemonic device for those groups' teachings. This may be one root of the word arcana being used to describe the two sections of the tarot deck; arcana is the plural form of the Latin word arcanum, meaning "closed" or "secret."

2006-10-11 19:37:19 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

there is a very complete discription on the History channel under Modern Marvels i think,, and it is about all kinds of cards.

2006-10-11 19:41:02 · answer #8 · answered by icheeknows 5 · 0 1

In the bible it talk about Satan and Astrology, if you want the bible verses I can email them all too you

2006-10-11 19:37:54 · answer #9 · answered by ? 4 · 0 4

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