Yesterday was 9 of Water, which advised me to 'flow like a flood' -- little did I know how emotional yesterday was going to be.
Today, though, I draw Water Queen. I'm the master of this flood. I will not be ruled by it. The water flows from me and through me. I can take it, I am the source of it, I am the master of it. I am one with it. The emotions came from my head -- my thoughts. I created the emotional reaction through my thoughts about the situation. I can control the emotion the same way.
'Breathe deeply and slowly,' the companion book advises, 'and say, "I am so calm and so strong."'
Showing posts with label Mystic Meg Tarot. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mystic Meg Tarot. Show all posts
Friday, 30 December 2016
Thursday, 29 December 2016
Flow like a flood
It's Thursday, it's back to work for me, and my draw for the day from Mystic Tarot (by Mystic Meg) is 9 of Water. We see nine water fountains and nothing else.
The little companion book to the deck says, 'Nine is the signal of sharing, security and strength in the knowledge that the future is truly exciting.' Well, maybe. In my way of thinking, nine is the signal of the end of a cycle and 'heralds change'...
But in all ways of thinking, that's a lot of water. And that reminds me of a word I've been pondering lately: flow. I want to learn more about this concept from psychology. This Ted talk by the man himself is a good place to start:
May I enjoy 'flow' today. And you, too. :)
Saturday, 3 December 2016
Formerly known as Mystic Meg Tarot...
I can't remember what this set is called because I threw the giant box away at once. I think it was called 'The Tarot Pack.' The book inside is called 'The Tarot Book' and is written by someone called Mystic Meg. I gather she was rather famous a while ago as a pyschic. Anyway, the artwork for this deck is by Caroline Smith. It was previously published as The Mystic Meg Tarot. It's just a harmless bit of frippery, really.
As you'd expect it's on thin card stock and the pips are the emblem from the ace cards presented in multiples. The four suits are called by their elemental correspondence, so we have Fire, Water, Earth, Air rather than Wands, Cups, Coins and Swords. The courts are Princess, Prince, Queen, and King. Majors don't vary wildly from traditional, though four of them are softened through a name change: Fool becomes 'Beginning', Hanged Man is 'Self-Sacrifice', Death is 'Changing' and the Devil is 'Temptation'. The art work is pleasant enough. Majors have a sort of 'tribal' feel, and the court cards echo one another in posture. (All the princesses are in the same pose, all the princes are in the same pose, etc).
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You may also have noticed that courts and majors have elemental and astrological symbols included on the cards.
As to the book, it's 112 pages long and follows the traditional pattern of two pages per major and one page per court and pip card. There full colour illustrations of the cards. The introduction has the usual silliness about tarot coming from ancient Egypt and 'even older civilizations right across the world.' Selection of significator is based on age and star sign of the querent. For each card, we are given four bits of information: Love Reading, Life Reading, Luck Reading and Cosmic Counsel (aka, affirmation). The interpretations are highly idiosyncratic. The book is pretty much useless, though could make for amusing reading.
It's no TdM, but it's kinda cute. :) I will be drawing from it this week.
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