Kitabı oku: «Step by Step Tarot»
STEP-BY-STEP
TAROT
A COMPLETE COURSE IN
TAROT READERSHIP
Terry Donaldson
CONTENTS
Title Page
Introduction and Historical Origins
1. Effortless Effort
2. A Deck You Will Be Comfortable With
3. How the Tarot Works
4. Story-Telling with the Tarot
5. Tarot Worksheets
6. The Heightened Meanings
7. The Court Cards
8. Concentrated Meanings
9. Spreads and Layouts
10. Card Reversals
11. Practical Tarot Guidelines
12. Now About Those Cards You Can’t Remember
13. Doing the Same with Playing Cards
14. Brainstorming the Four Elements
15. Meditation with the Tarot
16. Twinning
17. About The ‘Negative’ Cards
18. Use a Tape Recorder
19. How to Avoid Depletion
20. Where to Go from Here
Appendix
Code of Tarot Readership
Bibliography
About the Author
Other Books By
Copyright
About the publisher
INTRODUCTION AND HISTORICAL ORIGINS
WHAT YOU WILL ACCOMPLISH
There have been many books on the Tarot, but never one like this.
This book has come into existence as a result of my training other people in the field of Tarot readership, of having trained personally over 1,000 people in the subject to a high standard, in many countries and in many languages, and on a one-to-one basis over a 20-year period.
The techniques which I am giving you in this manual are techniques which I know work, and, if you follow them through, will enable you to experience the wonder which the Tarot holds in store for you.
The experience of Tarot readership is not a trivial one. To desire to work with the Tarot, whether to be able to do readings and to help other people or even for one’s own insight into the meaning of life is a really enjoyable thing to be able to do!
HOW THE TAROT CAN HELP
The Tarot has always held a great deal of mystery down through the ages, especially for those who have desired to become more familiar with its message.
It is a message - or a map - of how we may achieve greater fulfilment in our lives, through a balancing of the emotional aspects with the material. Not through a denial of either. Many people can’t see a way out of their problems because they do not have an alternative point of reference from which they can begin to see what choices they do have. The Tarot reading can be that starting-point for many.
It is important that the Tarot reading is well delivered. It is not enough just to say things off the top of one’s head in the hope that maybe some of it will stick or somehow make sense to the Querent. (A ‘Querent’ is someone who has come to ask a question from the Tarot.) It is also important that the reader is able to work directly from the imagery of the cards, without having to disturb the continuity of the reading by breaking off to get out a book to check on the meanings of cards.
There is an intellectual discipline involved in learning how to read the Tarot, just as there was a discipline involved in first learning how to read the words which you are looking at now. But it is not a difficult one. There is a sensitivity involved in the art of reading the Tarot. It is not a mechanical process either. You could say that it is a bit similar to learning a craft.
MISGUIDED NOTIONS
There are people out there who still cling to the outdated notion that to be able to read the Tarot you have to be born with a hereditary gift to do so; that the art of Tarot reading is something akin to having dimples or buck teeth: it would have to come down the family line.
The truth is that the door of the Tarot opens itself to all those who genuinely desire to understand its mysteries, and who would make positive use of the knowledge and guidance which they would receive.
The exercises which I am giving you have enabled many people from many different backgrounds, religions, walks of life and educational levels to make sense of the imagery of the Tarot, and to become skilled and effective readers for social, personal and professional purposes.
I have had many professional readers come by to train with me and without exception they have all gained greatly from the experience. I have their feedback letters on my noticeboard for anyone who is interested to come by and look at.
For a long time I was very resistant to the idea of writing up the set of training exercises and making them available indiscriminately to the public. I used to have a very set idea that the Tarot could really only be taught in a one-to-one student/teacher ratio. The Tarot today is being promoted through workshops, weekend courses, correspondence courses, even holidays abroad, as well as in its historical tradition of one-to-one.
THE NEED TODAY
Now more than ever there is a real need for people to think in terms of getting themselves trained as readers, so that they can be effective in giving guidance to the many out there in our society who need it, who are seeking. So that they can be instrumental in guiding themselves as well!
The wonderful thing is that in the Tarot, there’s something for everyone! The basic message of the Tarot is that there is hope and that such hope may be realized through creative change.
In the pictures of the Tarot we have a set of windows through which we may look at life. We have a description of how the mighty creative forces of the universe ebb and flow, of how Yin and Yang manifest their energies in a physical world.
Compressed in the cards, we have many legends and stories from mythologies, astrological and archetypal significance, and esoteric secrets from a wide range of backgrounds.
FINGERS POINTING TO THE MOON
But they are all different fingers pointing to the same moon: hints as to the kind of perceptions we first need to make in order to be able to change our lives. In other words, we all see the same truths from a different viewpoint.
Thus the meanings of the Tarot cards will actually change for you over time. As you grow and develop as a being, so your own needs will evolve and so, therefore, what you see taking place in the Tarot imagery will go through transformation.
HISTORICAL ORIGINS
As to the historical origins of the Tarot, there are many different explanations. The actual Tarot as we know it today dates back to fourteenth-century Italy where we find a nobleman commissioning a hand-painted deck to commemorate the marriage of his daughter. But there are historical records to indicate the use of cards for divinatory purposes earlier than that.
We have always used symbols, in one form or another. Indeed, it is where we get the letters of the alphabet from, each of which at one time held a particular meaning. The Runestones, the Ogham, etc, all date back a lot further than the Tarot as such, although in one sense we might regard them as the earliest forms of Tarot, with their straight lines being marked on pieces of wood or stone to represent storm, harvest, war, protection, etc.
It is from the casting down onto the ground of these stones in ancient times that we have the phrase ‘magic spell’, because from the single letters which would be carved on each individual stone, the local ‘wise person’ would be able to spell (i.e. make out) the words or utterances of the gods which they believed protected them.
The word ‘magic’ is from the same root as the words ‘image’, ‘imagination’, ‘magi’. It is therefore pointing us in the direction of achieving wisdom, through the development of our ability to creatively visualize, to imagine. To put aside your preconceived notions, to let your intuition function with less restraint from your conscious mind, to become aware of your own limitations and to move increasingly beyond them.
This is the very essence of how to approach the Tarot.
LOOK NO FURTHER
One thing I would ask of you before we begin this course: put aside any other books which you have on the subject, books you have already tried to work with. If you go to one doctor for a course of treatment, it would be inappropriate to continue taking medicine from other prescribers.
You will find all you need to learn the art of Tarot readership here in THIS course. I mean it. After you have completed it, you can then go back to all of those other books and you will then get 10 times more from them than you would ever have done before.
1 EFFORTLESS EFFORT
You will master the Tarot not by struggling with ‘the meanings’ or by battling with the cards in any sense whatsoever.
Sometimes it may be that you hit an impasse in your studies.
Don’t panic. Nothing is accomplished without sacrifice, perseverance and patience.
And the sacred mysteries don’t always reveal themselves to the casual enquirer.
You will make progress in your studies if you can allow yourself to enjoy what you are doing.
And by exercising the principle of effortless effort.
This is not the principle of laziness, though, but of gently, effortlessly, stretching into the work which lies before you!
2 A DECK YOU WILL BE COMFORTABLE WITH
One of the most important matters in the first stages of your Tarot quest is the selection of the deck which you are going to work with.
A few words of warning on this.
It could be that someone has walked into a bookshop and bought you a deck of cards already; or passed on to you the cards which were used by their great aunt back in the nineteenth century.
There are many different kinds of Tarot decks out there. Some are oriented towards specific sets of legends, e.g. Greek, Egyptian, Arthurian. And unless you are familiar with those sets of legends already, you are going to have to handle two sets of learning: the principles of Tarot readership on the one hand and the belief system or symbolic system contained within the deck’s imagery.
There are many decks in which the Minor Arcana are shown not by any picture, but by what we call ‘pip’ symbols, e.g. sets of swords crossed over each other, or rows of cups lined up against each other. But to learn from these decks is going to involve a great deal of memory work as well.
Another category to avoid would be decks which are heavily laden with huge quantities of symbolism, magic, astrology, alchemy, etc. The reason again is obvious: far too much to take in all at once.
Once you have a solid basis to work from, you will find that bit by bit all these other weird and wonderful decks start opening themselves up to you. But until you have a really solid foundation, leave them well alone.
It is important that you select your own deck, so this will entail going alone to a bookshop that specializes in Tarot decks and looking at the portfolio which they will invariably have. Here, you can look through a vast selection of different decks, with all the cards held behind a sheet of transparent film.
Ask for some guidance from the assistant if you are unsure and don’t be afraid to say that you are just starting out on the road of readership. You will find that they may well have a recommendation to make.
Probably the best decks to work from as you learn the Tarot are the Ryder-Waite and Morgan-Greer decks. But in the end it will have to be your own choice.
As you progress in your studies, it is very likely that you will build up your own collection of different decks and will have them out on the table when people come for readings, so that as you begin the session, you will be able to ask which deck they would like you to read from.
If you have already selected a deck for yourself or feel drawn to work with the deck you have, then fine. This is going to be the one for you!
All you have to do now is to follow the training steps and we’ll be turning you into a reader!
3 HOW THE TAROT WORKS
The Tarot is something which functions on many levels.
On one level, it is a set of cards which portray a way of looking at the world. A way of making sense of the world, rather than an attempt to define and limit it.
On another level, it is an approach to life, which enables each of us to move away from our own private realities towards the point of being able to have a multi-viewpoint.
A lot of top-level executives these days are finding themselves on expensive courses which attempt to nudge them out of their own personal mind-set and develop qualities of mental flexibility and creativity. This was – and is – the first and primary purpose of the Tarot: to give us a set of windows through which we can look upon life. It has other qualities too:
It is a counselling tool.
It is a means through which communication – sometimes on a highly psychic or intuitive level – can take place.
It is the means through which countless people over countless years have found a place to gain a resolution to the problems which have beset them.
The Tarot works through synchronicity – in other words, the random patterns in which the cards seem to fall are part of a greater pattern within the cosmic scheme of things. This may seem chaotic to some, but not to those who seek to understand the nature of the causes of things; to those who have learned to look for causes which in turn give rise to effects.
This, then, is the function of the Tarot: to facilitate our grasp of how things may be changed in the future through a deepening of our realization of what has happened in the past.
As a trainee, you are entering a new doorway.
May your life never be the same again!
4 STORY-TELLING WITH THE TAROT
THE BARDIC TECHNIQUE
Once you have worked with this you will be able to open up a lot of modern fiction, especially fantasy, sword and sorcery books, and see how their authors actually did it! I actually know a number of writers who use this technique whenever they get stuck for some inspiration.
We are going to use it because it gets you to the point of working more intuitively and imaginatively with the images on a set of cards, without wondering how right or wrong you might be.
What you must do here is lay out a set of, say, three or four cards. That will be enough for the moment. When you get the hang of it, you might well want to lay out sets and rows of them.
Now, without even trying to remember ‘what they mean’, make up a story – a simple little children’s story or a fairy story – using the pictures on the row of cards as a source of inspiration.
It’s a lot simpler, I have found, for those that already have children, as they often get asked for stories at bedtime.
But even if you don’t have children, it is still part of your initiation to develop your story-telling technique. In the ancient Druid Order (and I believe the same still applies today), the first grade of initiation was that of the bard, the story-teller, whose role it would be to entertain, to enlighten, to teach, using songs and poetry, music and legends, in order to do so. They would travel around the land, teaching and learning as they went.
On the facing page, I have given you an example.
Just below, I have chosen for you at random the Knight of Wands, the Seven of Wands, the Ace of Coins and the King of Swords.
It isn’t a bad idea actually to use the words ‘Once upon a time…’ in starting off. Somehow it seems to set the little story up just right.
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