Abstract
This card asks you to care for at least one of three persons. This can be:
1.the moon as a memory of your mother, the person who brought you into this world.
2.The moon is also the persona of the small child within you. For their entire lives every one of us carries inside his or herself, the child that they were at birth.
3.The moon is the persona of the mature (motherly) woman inside you. Each woman has this persona inside her that needs realisation, and each man desires (among other things) a home in which he feels snug and warm.
This card wishes to remind you that one of these three figures feels undernourished. Think about how to feed it!
Tags:Feminine, family, child, emotion, emotion, dedication, acceptance, history of the soul
In our Western mythology, "Mary" is the symbol of the ancestor and the woman's devotion. On his arm he keeps the child on the left side. Accepted the child. Surrounded by lilies, they emerge from the night sea, from the unconscious, from the water, from the female body. The night is lit by the full moon reflected in the water. Thus, light and recognition penetrate the darkness of the soul and the emotions.
No.
IV
Name
THE MOTHER(ALSO, THE CHILD!)
Sign
Cancer
Planet
Moon
Type
Prototype
Tarot
II Priestess
This applies to the first card in your deck, which is the core of this card, describes the background of your problem and represents the source of your problem.
The "no" that is spoken by the child living within you, with which you also lock your inner body, it drains your emotions and your spirit's habit. Afraid of experiencing yourself, you are afraid of your own side of your face, you are afraid of the feeling of helplessness that results from them.
In your deck, remove the first and last cards, and the rest of the cards need to use the text in this section (way). Here are some things you need to do on the way forward.
This card clearly says: walk the path of emotion. Do not listen to your mind, but act according to your feelings. Find the child living in you, let yourself express yourself, let it live. You want to play, maybe you just want to notice it. You seem to need to learn how to become the mother of a child living in you (or someone else in the outside world).
Interpretation of the last card in your deck requires the use of text in this section (outcome). This card explains the final result of the theme (also your question) that your card represents. It's important to note that you must be clear about your thoughts before any explanation of the card combination becomes effective.
At the end of the trip, you embrace the child living in you, you agree. You will create a piece of home for yourself, return home to yourself, your emotions, your female side. You find yourself protected by yourself!
Each Card's interpretation text is divided into three parts: A - problem), B - way), and C - outcome. However, when interpreting the card, be careful not to consider all three parts of each card at the same time. This will cause your understanding of the meaning of the card. Become confused. You need to decide which part of the text to read based on the position of each card.
Correct reading logic for the three parts A, B and C
If the card is the first card of the card, then read Part A.
If the card is the last card of the card, then read Part C.
None of the above, then read Part B.
Dialectical relationship between the three parts A, B and C
Below, a metaphor for the progressive relationship between the three parts of the same card, A, B, C (note, not in the demonstration of the interpretation of the card, but in the three parts of the ABC for a card) Dialectical relationship is a metaphor).
Suppose that part A of a card presents you with a goal - suggesting that you climb a challenge to climb Everest to expand your memory.
Part B of this card is responsible for telling you what you need to do.
For example, what equipment do you need to buy, and what kind of transportation (train or plane) to travel to Lhasa. Once you arrive in the area, you will need to go to Everest Base Camp to hire a guide to fill your oxygen bottle and you can start climbing.
Then, Part C predicts which memories you will gain in this challenging journey, which will become part of your life.
Of course, C may also predict that your journey may be blizzard and you have to return halfway through. The result of not achieving the goal will be part of the meaning of the journey.
So, if you skipped Parts A and B from the beginning, you read directly to Part C: "You will not reach your goal." Then you look at this sentence and come to a conclusion - this journey will be futile - why bother yourself? So you gave up the proposal in Part A and chose to continue sitting on the sofa at home.
Ok, if you really want to do this, then you lose the value of Deka, and Deka can't help you. Be aware that the process is the treasure of our memory. If you care about the outcome for everything and don't care about the process, then you can only leave a memory in your life - "failure."
You will be the one who only likes to read books on the shore to teach how to swim but never immerse his delicate toes in the water - such people can never learn to swim.
Abstract
This card is about our “way” (through life) or about my “behaviour.” Or simply about my “vitality.” The sun is the director giving you, (the main character in the film of your life), stage directions.
The sun also explains how you, as a human being, should act upon this advice. The Ego is either too big, too strong and carries things to excess, then needing correction from the outside, or the Ego is very small and weak, and suffers from this until it finally learns to accept it self as that what you are.
This card says: Either you are too big at the moment, or too small. Either you tread on someone’s toes—or you allow others to tread on yours. You want to remain an “alpha person”, or to become one. Both are causes of heavy stress!
A man sits on the throne and holds the power badges in his hand. The crown symbolizes being more powerful than the others (and brighter because its crown is of gold). The jogar (which comes from the mackerel) points out that he is the most powerful in material terms. His nation represents the world in which he is ruled. His throne is on a platform, so it is above others. In the background, the sunroof, which has always been the symbol of Egyptian solar chariots. He thinks he is ruled without limits, no one can compete with his greatness and glory.
No.
V
Name
The Ego(or Father)
Sign
Leo
Planet
Sun
Type
Prototype
Tarot
IV Emperor
This applies to the first card in your deck, which is the core of this card, describes the background of your problem and represents the source of your problem.
You will not find the way to the vitality and joy of your soul. It is possible that you are trying to offset your lost power and powerlessness with external manifestations of power, that is to try to restore the outer shapes of your dominion in the outside world. But all in vain, because you lost your love towards yourself. You have to ask yourself the following question: where did life go? Try to accept that at this moment you've been in the "loser street". Welcome to the club!
In your deck, remove the first and last cards, and the rest of the cards need to use the text in this section (way). Here are some things you need to do on the way forward.
Your way now means you have to learn yourself, your identity, your true self. Even if the rest can feel hurt, there is nothing else left to be yourself. It's not as easy as it sounds: live your life!
Interpretation of the last card in your deck requires the use of text in this section (outcome). This card explains the final result of the theme (also your question) that your card represents. It's important to note that you must be clear about your thoughts before any explanation of the card combination becomes effective.
At the end of your journey you live again. The power and vitality that you may lack at this moment will return to you. The sun rises, a new day begins. Your heart is back in place.
Each Card's interpretation text is divided into three parts: A - problem), B - way), and C - outcome. However, when interpreting the card, be careful not to consider all three parts of each card at the same time. This will cause your understanding of the meaning of the card. Become confused. You need to decide which part of the text to read based on the position of each card.
Correct reading logic for the three parts A, B and C
If the card is the first card of the card, then read Part A.
If the card is the last card of the card, then read Part C.
None of the above, then read Part B.
Dialectical relationship between the three parts A, B and C
Below, a metaphor for the progressive relationship between the three parts of the same card, A, B, C (note, not in the demonstration of the interpretation of the card, but in the three parts of the ABC for a card) Dialectical relationship is a metaphor).
Suppose that part A of a card presents you with a goal - suggesting that you climb a challenge to climb Everest to expand your memory.
Part B of this card is responsible for telling you what you need to do.
For example, what equipment do you need to buy, and what kind of transportation (train or plane) to travel to Lhasa. Once you arrive in the area, you will need to go to Everest Base Camp to hire a guide to fill your oxygen bottle and you can start climbing.
Then, Part C predicts which memories you will gain in this challenging journey, which will become part of your life.
Of course, C may also predict that your journey may be blizzard and you have to return halfway through. The result of not achieving the goal will be part of the meaning of the journey.
So, if you skipped Parts A and B from the beginning, you read directly to Part C: "You will not reach your goal." Then you look at this sentence and come to a conclusion - this journey will be futile - why bother yourself? So you gave up the proposal in Part A and chose to continue sitting on the sofa at home.
Ok, if you really want to do this, then you lose the value of Deka, and Deka can't help you. Be aware that the process is the treasure of our memory. If you care about the outcome for everything and don't care about the process, then you can only leave a memory in your life - "failure."
You will be the one who only likes to read books on the shore to teach how to swim but never immerse his delicate toes in the water - such people can never learn to swim.
Abstract
There are times in life when one looks for its meaning. (No, you don’t understand it, but you still ask yourself, “What is all this really about?”) “Where does all this lead to?”—and nowhere is an answer to be found. You could become a little melancholic.
Now is the right moment in time to recall all who have preceded you, your parents, your grandparents, your great grandparents, and so on. Only they have answers to these questions.
This card tells you: Every insight into those who came before us, enriches the soul. Each of these people, smiling at you from afar, makes the gloom disappear.
Keyword:Sagittarius, Jupiterpap, missionary, internal therapist, faith, insight, the philosophical view of the world.
The priest is surrounded by emblems of various religions. The priest, who symbolizes the "spiritual pastor", raises both hands and is responsible for bringing the Creator's message close to believers. His mission is to serve as a bridge between the celestial and terrestrial world, but as you can see on the card, he often leads his own self (the Sagittarius fiery ticket) and can easily lose his vocation in his movements and rituals.
No.
VIII
Name
The Preacher(or The Search for Meaning)
Sign
Sagittarius
Planet
Jupiter
Type
Prototype
Tarot
V The Hierophant
This applies to the first card in your deck, which is the core of this card, describes the background of your problem and represents the source of your problem.
At the moment of understanding, where does remembrance remain for your own soul history? You think that you have to put your own opinion and knowledge on others, while it is unfruitful in your soul's soil, because you are searching for meaning in the outside world, without asking and asking for your seeds in a foreign land.
In your deck, remove the first and last cards, and the rest of the cards need to use the text in this section (way). Here are some things you need to do on the way forward.
Remember, this card says. Look for your inner therapist (if you need it, you need another person to reflect in the outside world). And above all else: turn inward. Solving your problem solely and exclusively in your own story. So, again: remember.
Interpretation of the last card in your deck requires the use of text in this section (outcome). This card explains the final result of the theme (also your question) that your card represents. It's important to note that you must be clear about your thoughts before any explanation of the card combination becomes effective.
You will continue to do so. You will be more open and tolerant. You are ready to take the trouble to understand the story of your soul, so Mnemosyne, the Goddess of Remembrance, has a treasure up to the end of the road: the recognition that means the richness of your soul.
Each Card's interpretation text is divided into three parts: A - problem), B - way), and C - outcome. However, when interpreting the card, be careful not to consider all three parts of each card at the same time. This will cause your understanding of the meaning of the card. Become confused. You need to decide which part of the text to read based on the position of each card.
Correct reading logic for the three parts A, B and C
If the card is the first card of the card, then read Part A.
If the card is the last card of the card, then read Part C.
None of the above, then read Part B.
Dialectical relationship between the three parts A, B and C
Below, a metaphor for the progressive relationship between the three parts of the same card, A, B, C (note, not in the demonstration of the interpretation of the card, but in the three parts of the ABC for a card) Dialectical relationship is a metaphor).
Suppose that part A of a card presents you with a goal - suggesting that you climb a challenge to climb Everest to expand your memory.
Part B of this card is responsible for telling you what you need to do.
For example, what equipment do you need to buy, and what kind of transportation (train or plane) to travel to Lhasa. Once you arrive in the area, you will need to go to Everest Base Camp to hire a guide to fill your oxygen bottle and you can start climbing.
Then, Part C predicts which memories you will gain in this challenging journey, which will become part of your life.
Of course, C may also predict that your journey may be blizzard and you have to return halfway through. The result of not achieving the goal will be part of the meaning of the journey.
So, if you skipped Parts A and B from the beginning, you read directly to Part C: "You will not reach your goal." Then you look at this sentence and come to a conclusion - this journey will be futile - why bother yourself? So you gave up the proposal in Part A and chose to continue sitting on the sofa at home.
Ok, if you really want to do this, then you lose the value of Deka, and Deka can't help you. Be aware that the process is the treasure of our memory. If you care about the outcome for everything and don't care about the process, then you can only leave a memory in your life - "failure."
You will be the one who only likes to read books on the shore to teach how to swim but never immerse his delicate toes in the water - such people can never learn to swim.
Abstract
This touches upon one of the most difficult matters in human life: the subjunctive (the tense of possibility) with all its beautiful images of how things should really be! My life, my partnership, my appearance, winning the lottery, foreigners … and so on. Many people are so entangled in a whole net of such images that they can no longer differentiate between desire and reality. They lose touch with their reality, build castles in the air, and fill them with expectations.
This card wants you to ask yourself who you blame for putting you in this mess, where your expectations don’t materialise, and how little this helps you!
Mephistopheles is tempting you, and He has given you an idea. He stood in front of a fire-breathing well, holding a black rose in his hand—those things that nature can't create, and He can create it with magic—he can create whatever is impossible, satisfying any of your desires. It is also a piece of cake. But you also have to see that the shadow of the flame is a cold purple - this is a cold fire that cannot warm the soul.
Remarks
Mephistopheles: It is a demon god, the name of the devil in Goethe's Faust. In Goethe's work, Faust must mortgage his soul in the hands of the devil Mephistopheles, as long as the cessation of the pursuit of life means the coming of death.
No.
VIII
Name
The Seducer(or Idea)
Sign
Scorpio
Planet
Pluto
Type
Prototype
Tarot
XIII Death
This applies to the first card in your deck, which is the core of this card, describes the background of your problem and represents the source of your problem.
You believe in a wrong idea / temptation / idea, you are fighting for this wrong idea, hoping to get "better" things by doing so. You are sacrificing a very vital part of you - the soul. The reality is that you are controlled by the dark world and become the food of the devil.
In your deck, remove the first and last cards, and the rest of the cards need to use the text in this section (way). Here are some things you need to do on the way forward.
You can get up again in the light when you lowered the bottom of the underworld when you passed it. Here you can not get better or better. (Do not you want to make one of your favorite seductions!) Only the word of Vergilius can help: "Look and go on!"
备注
Virgil: The greatest and most outstanding poet of the ancient Augustus era (AD 19), he was one of the few ancient writers who were not rejected by the Christian church in the Middle Ages. Dante respects him very much and thinks that he is the most intelligent and understands human beings. He is used as a guide to hell and purgatory in Divine Comedy.
Virgil's epic has been highly praised by future generations and has become a model of later epics, which has had a profound influence on later European literature.
Interpretation of the last card in your deck requires the use of text in this section (outcome). This card explains the final result of the theme (also your question) that your card represents. It's important to note that you must be clear about your thoughts before any explanation of the card combination becomes effective.
You are going through transformation. The old pictures must shed the way the Golden Calf falls on Moses' plagues. Finally, the false ideas (which in fact never existed) spread as fog in the sun.
Remarks
Allusion: Moses destroyed the Golden Jubilee - the most meaningful moment in Moses' life was the Ten Commandments that Moses received God's gift from Mount Sinai. When he walked down the mountain, he discovered that his people were dancing around the self-cast gold plaque. Qing, he was furious, and threw the Ten Commandments on the ground, and then destroyed the golden dragonfly.
Freud believes that the conflict between Moses is the conflict between "I" and "Super". The "I" symbolizes the impulse to avenge, and it forces Moses' "self" to take action and teach those who have no faith; "Super-I" symbolizes the "Ten Commandments", which ordered Moses to stand still and accept the facts. After the "self" experienced painful struggle, "super-ego" defeated the "self", and the "happy principle" pursued by "the self" was finally replaced by the "reality principle"; the instinct contained in "the self" could not be obtained. Directly satisfied, so replace it by changing direction and transferring, thus avoiding setbacks. This is sublimation.
Each Card's interpretation text is divided into three parts: A - problem), B - way), and C - outcome. However, when interpreting the card, be careful not to consider all three parts of each card at the same time. This will cause your understanding of the meaning of the card. Become confused. You need to decide which part of the text to read based on the position of each card.
Correct reading logic for the three parts A, B and C
If the card is the first card of the card, then read Part A.
If the card is the last card of the card, then read Part C.
None of the above, then read Part B.
Dialectical relationship between the three parts A, B and C
Below, a metaphor for the progressive relationship between the three parts of the same card, A, B, C (note, not in the demonstration of the interpretation of the card, but in the three parts of the ABC for a card) Dialectical relationship is a metaphor).
Suppose that part A of a card presents you with a goal - suggesting that you climb a challenge to climb Everest to expand your memory.
Part B of this card is responsible for telling you what you need to do.
For example, what equipment do you need to buy, and what kind of transportation (train or plane) to travel to Lhasa. Once you arrive in the area, you will need to go to Everest Base Camp to hire a guide to fill your oxygen bottle and you can start climbing.
Then, Part C predicts which memories you will gain in this challenging journey, which will become part of your life.
Of course, C may also predict that your journey may be blizzard and you have to return halfway through. The result of not achieving the goal will be part of the meaning of the journey.
So, if you skipped Parts A and B from the beginning, you read directly to Part C: "You will not reach your goal." Then you look at this sentence and come to a conclusion - this journey will be futile - why bother yourself? So you gave up the proposal in Part A and chose to continue sitting on the sofa at home.
Ok, if you really want to do this, then you lose the value of Deka, and Deka can't help you. Be aware that the process is the treasure of our memory. If you care about the outcome for everything and don't care about the process, then you can only leave a memory in your life - "failure."
You will be the one who only likes to read books on the shore to teach how to swim but never immerse his delicate toes in the water - such people can never learn to swim.
Abstract
This image wants to remind you of the topic (and your issue with) sexuality. Each card that is contained in this deck carries the secret message “Deal with …” (in this case) “... your sexuality“. Something has happened?
Perhaps you have not expressed your sexuality for some time or maybe you have been using it excessively in order to distract yourself from other things, etc etc. There may be as many sexual issues as there are people in this world. Each has their own problems with it! Here and now we are talking about your own, personal Eros. What does he have to say to you? What does he want? Never forget that the ancient Greeks and Romans venerated Eros as a god.
And so, of course, he still is—so why should one not have an issue with him once a while?
Tags: Aries — Taurus
This image wants to remind you of the topic (and your issue with) sexuality. Each card that is contained in this deck carries the secret message “Deal with …” (in this case) “... your sexuality“. Something has happened?
Perhaps you have not expressed your sexual- ity for some time or maybe you have been using it excessively in order to distract your- self from other things, etc etc. There may be as many sexual issues as there are people in this world. Each has their own problems with it! Here and now we are talking about your own, personal Eros. What does he have to say to you? What does he want? Never forget that the ancient Greeks and Romans venerated Eros as a god.
And so, of course, he still is—so why should one not have an issue with him once a while?
Card NO.
01
Card Name
The Eros
Corresponding constellation
Aries — Taurus
Corresponding planet
Mars — Venus
Card Type
Arcana
This applies to the first card in your deck, which is the core of this card, describes the background of your problem and represents the source of your problem.
The card would like to remind you of your sexuality (its problem). He wants to say: man not only has ghost and body at the same time: he does not live alone with his body, he also has a ghost. and you are not receptive to anything else (you already know which version suits you). In both cases, the card says: take care of your sexuality! In some form, it's not in balance with you. You may be obstructing your operation, but you may be overestimating, Amor may have exceeded your target.
In your deck, remove the first and last cards, and the rest of the cards need to use the text in this section (way). Here are some things you need to do on the way forward.
Now, on your way, it has become important to take the courage to revise your sensuality. To learn through your inhibitions or temperance to understand that Amor, in his own way, wants to reunite the two separators.
Interpretation of the last card in your deck requires the use of text in this section (outcome). This card explains the final result of the theme (also your question) that your card represents. It's important to note that you must be clear about your thoughts before any explanation of the card combination becomes effective.
You can measure the range of sexual activity, neither underneath nor over-appreciating. Sexuality is a wise affair of the world.
Each Card's interpretation text is divided into three parts: A - problem), B - way), and C - outcome. However, when interpreting the card, be careful not to consider all three parts of each card at the same time. This will cause your understanding of the meaning of the card. Become confused. You need to decide which part of the text to read based on the position of each card.
Correct reading logic for the three parts A, B and C
If the card is the first card of the card, then read Part A.
If the card is the last card of the card, then read Part C.
None of the above, then read Part B.
Dialectical relationship between the three parts A, B and C
Below, a metaphor for the progressive relationship between the three parts of the same card, A, B, C (note, not in the demonstration of the interpretation of the card, but in the three parts of the ABC for a card) Dialectical relationship is a metaphor).
Suppose that part A of a card presents you with a goal - suggesting that you climb a challenge to climb Everest to expand your memory.
Part B of this card is responsible for telling you what you need to do.
For example, what equipment do you need to buy, and what kind of transportation (train or plane) to travel to Lhasa. Once you arrive in the area, you will need to go to Everest Base Camp to hire a guide to fill your oxygen bottle and you can start climbing.
Then, Part C predicts which memories you will gain in this challenging journey, which will become part of your life.
Of course, C may also predict that your journey may be blizzard and you have to return halfway through. The result of not achieving the goal will be part of the meaning of the journey.
So, if you skipped Parts A and B from the beginning, you read directly to Part C: "You will not reach your goal." Then you look at this sentence and come to a conclusion - this journey will be futile - why bother yourself? So you gave up the proposal in Part A and chose to continue sitting on the sofa at home.
Ok, if you really want to do this, then you lose the value of Deka, and Deka can't help you. Be aware that the process is the treasure of our memory. If you care about the outcome for everything and don't care about the process, then you can only leave a memory in your life - "failure."
You will be the one who only likes to read books on the shore to teach how to swim but never immerse his delicate toes in the water - such people can never learn to swim.
Each Card's interpretation text is divided into three parts: A - problem), B - way), and C - outcome. However, when interpreting the card, be careful not to consider all three parts of each card at the same time. This will cause your understanding of the meaning of the card. Become confused. You need to decide which part of the text to read based on the position of each card.
Correct reading logic for the three parts A, B and C
Dialectical relationship between the three parts A, B and C
Below, a metaphor for the progressive relationship between the three parts of the same card, A, B, C (note, not in the demonstration of the interpretation of the card, but in the three parts of the ABC for a card) Dialectical relationship is a metaphor).
Suppose that part A of a card presents you with a goal - suggesting that you climb a challenge to climb Everest to expand your memory.
Part B of this card is responsible for telling you what you need to do.
For example, what equipment do you need to buy, and what kind of transportation (train or plane) to travel to Lhasa. Once you arrive in the area, you will need to go to Everest Base Camp to hire a guide to fill your oxygen bottle and you can start climbing.
Then, Part C predicts which memories you will gain in this challenging journey, which will become part of your life.
Of course, C may also predict that your journey may be blizzard and you have to return halfway through. The result of not achieving the goal will be part of the meaning of the journey.
So, if you skipped Parts A and B from the beginning, you read directly to Part C: "You will not reach your goal." Then you look at this sentence and come to a conclusion - this journey will be futile - why bother yourself? So you gave up the proposal in Part A and chose to continue sitting on the sofa at home.
Ok, if you really want to do this, then you lose the value of Deka, and Deka can't help you. Be aware that the process is the treasure of our memory. If you care about the outcome for everything and don't care about the process, then you can only leave a memory in your life - "failure."
You will be the one who only likes to read books on the shore to teach how to swim but never immerse his delicate toes in the water - such people can never learn to swim.