Home | Arts & Entertainment | Tarot Cards
When a tarot reading is done, the cards are laid out as a patern in what is called a spread. There are many different types of spreads, ranging from those that comprise of a single card to spreads that include all 78 cards of the deck. Some spreads are only done with the Major Arcana Cards. Which spread is applied is up to the reader and the particular type of question or reading. Some spreads focus more on a specific type of information. An example of this is that a spread may be focused on a singular question, while others are broader in terms, such as in ones outlooks and prospects in regards to relationships, financial maters, etc... One of the most common tarot spreads is the Celtic cross, it is used more for those specific questions. This is the one I am going to cover in this article. It depends on the person giving the reading, but usually, prior to the reading, the cards are shuffled by the person receiving it, also known as the querent. The reason for this is that some say this carry-overs the person's energy to the deck. The person, while shuffling, should also concentrate on the answers they are after. Some readers do it differently, asking the querent to cut the cards for them after they have shuffled. Or in more traditional circles, a more complicated sorting and separation of the cards is executed . Card 1: Represents the Present. Card 2: The immediate challenge confronting the querent. You will frequently pull a hard card here, which will suggest an obstacle that must be overcome. If you pull a "good" card here, analyse it carefully because it will still represent a challenge. Card 3: Distant past, foundation. This card should indicate the root of the subject matter of the question Card 4: More recent past, including events. This will indicate events taking place, not necessarily directly associated to the question. For instance, if a love affair going wrong Card 3 would show the root of why it is going wrong, whereas Card 4 will show something that recently happened to reflect this. You could see this as a "check comment" card - a way of seeing that the reading is valid. Card 5: The best that can be accomplished. This is directly associated to the question. Note that this may not necessarily gel against Card 10 - it depends whether you are able to get the best. However, a negative card here in all probability signifies that it is worthwhile cutting your losses rather than putting any more effort into the situation. Card 6: Immediate Future. This indicates events in the next few days or week(s). This reading does not cover months. Card 7: Factors or internal feelings impacting the situation. Compare this against Card 1 in order to understand underlying forces/trends. If there is conflict between them this tends to indicate that the querent is going in the wrong direction. Card 8: Outside influences. People, energies or events which will affect the outcome of the question and are beyond the querent's control. Card 9: Hopes or fears around the situation. This may bring forth a card that confuses us badly. Always bear in mind that hopes and fears are closely entwined, therefore that which we hope for may also be that which we fear, and so may fail to happen. Occasionally it is useful to draw a second card for clarification after the reading has been laid, and to read the two together. Card 10: Final outcome. This is a fairly self explanatory card. However it is worth saying that if the card comes up fairly ambiguous, once more it may be worth drawing three extra cards to clarify. These should be interpreted through the lens of Card 10.
Article Source: http://www.mycontentbuilder.com
For a clear, easy, tarot cards reference guide visit Meaning of Tarot Cards
Please Rate this Article
5 out of 54 out of 53 out of 52 out of 51 out of 5
Not yet Rated
Full name
E-mail address