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Draw one to three cards in the morning for guidance for the day. Draw one card for focused guidance. Draw two cards to compare and contrast. Look for differences to see where challenges may arrive. Draw three cards to look at synthesis and flow. Throughout the day, notice the synchronicity. If you have to make a decision, contemplate the spread to see if it has advice for you. Sketch part of your reading. Write a little in your journal. Consider selecting jewelry, clothing, or wallpaper for your computer based on the spread. At the end of the day, reflect on the synchronicities of the day. Legacy Spread 1. What legacy have I inherited?2. What is my legacy?3. What do I need to work on ...

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Much of the history of tarot is rooted in France. It's not surprising that Marseille was famous for its paper manufacturers that specialized in playing cards because other forms of divination were popular there as well. Marie Anne Lenormand (1768-1843) was a well-known cartomancer. She enjoyed a privileged relationship with Josephine Beauharnias and her husband, Napoleon Bonaparte, and spent much time reading for the upper classes. Because of her time spent mingling with society at their famous salons, she earned the nickname "Sybille des Salons." In 1828 a fifty-two-card deck was published. In 1840 it was redesigned and reduced to a thirty-six-card deck. This smaller deck was and still ...

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"If we are to solve problems, from those confined to a single individual to those afflicting whole nations, we must learn how to identify and break out of restrictive mindsets... In other words, we must learn how to keep an open mind—one of the most difficult things we human beings can do"—CIA Analyst Morgan D. Jones My book What's in the Cards for You? takes an experimental approach to learning Tarot. There are no keywords or card meanings to memorize. Instead, you'll find a series of hands-on experiments, each of which can be completed in fifteen minutes or less. By completing one experiment a day for thirty days, readers gain first-hand insight into the benefits of working ...

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April Fools Day, a light-hearted day filled with pranks and jokes, heralds the beginning, for me, of Spring Fever—that feeling of wanting to ditch work and mundane obligation in favor of adventure, preferably outdoors. After hunkering down during a long, dark, cold winter, I am ready, even if there is still a chill in the air, to wander. And this, naturally, makes me think of The Fool card. The Fool card is complex, and made no less so by the evolution of its imagery and meanings over the centuries. What began as a comical figure, base fool, often with his pants down (see the Universal Wirth Fool) has changed into something more admirable. Indeed, early meanings (in the 18th century) ...

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FEATURED ARTICLE
5 Ways to Forge Communion with Crows
by Rick de Yampert
Crows and ravens are some of the most intelligent and magical animals that most people will ever encounter. By attuning ourselves to the extraordinary, even supernatural abilities of corvids, we can...
       
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