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Living in Our Feelings: Rereading Tarot's Cups
“Tarot's Cups ask who we want to be. They ask us "how do you want to feel?"
This is a question that requires both creativity and intuition, one of the other virtues of tarot's suit of Cups.
The Queen of Cups, the King of Cups, the Page of Cups and even the Four and Seven of Cups show the connection between creativity and intuition.”
More than Money: Rereading Tarot's Pentacles
How did this suit about discipline, patience, labor, and stability get reduced to money?
Well, it's sort of a reflex. In a climate of scarcity, especially during a time of inflation and recession, we must find money.
It's true that Pentacles are often where money resides in a quotidian way. Yet the Pentacles speak to more than money, and certainly more than wealth.
Capitalism, Scarcity, and Tarot Love Readings
“Scarcity is very real. It's manufactured, but that doesn't mean scarcity is fake.
Capitalism doesn't work without scarcity. Its ideal is having more demand than supply. That's what scarcity means.”
Seven of Wands: Tarot for Conflict
Conflict can bring out the worst in us.
When we're in conflict, our first stance is often to defend ourselves. Defensiveness is the enemy of intuition.
7 Ways to Work with Tarot to Find (and Keep) Your Next Job
Is your job search leaving you asleep on your keyboard? Do you spend meetings sneaky scrollin the Girlboss newsletter's help wanted ads? Have you given up on finding a job that doesn't suck, or at least suck less?
Hold on there, queermo. Have you consulted your deck?
Intuitive Strategies for Surviving Capitalism: Job Seeker Edition
Using tarot for your job search starts with asking the right questions.
Try to think about what exactly isn't working. Have you been unable to find job listings that fit your skills and abilities. Are the companies you've seen listings for been places you know to have poor quality of life? Have friends and peers told you about workplace violations?
Consider starting a new card pull with one of these questions:
Queering Tarot's Queens: Reclaiming Our Labor
“I suspect that many of these attempts to "modernize" tarot come out of empathy, warranted or not, for tarot's Queens.
The main assumption about gender in tarot is that it must be prescriptive rather than observational.”
Building Responsive Power: Queering Tarot's Kings
The court card's monarchs are power as it really is in our lives. The Empress and Emperor of the major arcana, by contrast, are power as it was designed to operate. They are power as we are conditioned to believe it operates.
Queering Tarot's Knights: Becoming Ourselves
There's something very familiar about tarot's Knights. There's a youthful quality that most of us have passed through. They're on a mission, and seen in the midst of action.
Like all court cards, they're purposeful. We see the Knights, and all court cards, at work. They are figuring out how to do their job, but also how sincerely.
Most of all, the court cards, Knights included, blend symbolism with actual people in your life.
READ BY TAG
- tarot
- queer tarot
- Capitalism
- Major Arcana
- Tarot for Liberation
- Minor Arcana
- Personal History
- court cards
- acolyte cards
- The Empress
- cartomancy
- divination
- The Devil
- Intuition
- Emotions
- Learn Tarot
- Anti-Capitalism
- Tarot in Community
- Spirituality
- The Hierophant
- Black Church
- spellwork
- Love
- minor arcana
- politics
- Money
- Relationships
- disability justice
- Spiritual Hygiene
- Pop Culture
- technology
- aphrodite
- dream interpretation
- Reading for Yourself
- Free Downloads
- Tarot for Writers
- Card Meanings
- Ace of Pentacles
- card reading
- Queer Tarot
- mythology
- Nine of Pentacles
- Black History
- Cups
- Reading Tarot
- 🌿Grounded Intuition
- Ten of Pentacles
- Empaths
- Justice
- queer
Through free thought, by which I mean attention to detail, inquiry, and understanding, we can see that the work of tarot’s Swords isn’t good or bad.
Through free thought, we can see the role systems play in our limited ability to see the truth and accept reality. Our unwillingness or inability to think and scheme freely limits our capacity for action.
It all but ensures that we will act without thinking, and reap the consequences about which the Swords warn.