Showing posts with label Motherpeace tarot. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Motherpeace tarot. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

How I Read Tarot Cards



Article © 2013 by Joyce Mason
All Rights Reserved



Still Life with Motherpeace - Well-Worn and Well-Loved  Tarot Tools


I learned to read tarot through the “wild woman” of all decks, the Motherpeace Round Tarot. In their unbridled femininity, the Motherpeace cards evoke intuition like a Full Moon.

This deck was a fit for me in the 1980s, when I was learning that my own lunar overdose was too much of a good thing waiting to be transformed into an asset. Because the Motherpeace literature suggested it, I began reading the cards, as a first step, without guidance from the classic meanings. I had so much success doing so; I almost threw out the book.

Eventually, I came to a middle ground and a three-step routine when reading for clients:

1. Client Take - Ask the client “what do you see” or “what stands out for you” for each card in the layout. Do this one at a time. Encourage her to go with her first thoughts or feelings. In doing this, she is connecting her subconscious with the images. Colors and images that are prominent to her are important. Clients will often see very different things in the cards. Even if something is glaring to you; it may be in the background for the seeker. 

I used the feminine pronoun here, mostly because more women have sought me out for the Motherpeace then men. There are lots of naked women in their untamed, instinctual energy in this deck, a little overwhelming for some men and some women, too. Its perspective is clearly feminist. Even if there's some initial discomfort, I've seen both genders alike take to this process, which is really a lot of fun once we get going. It's a journey into the seeker's inner life that can be a true adventure. Besides, we're both yin and yang and it does us all good to explore the full range of both energetics.

2. Reader Take - Next, I take the card in hand and say what I see or what stands out to me in the card. This often enhances or differs somewhat from the client’s take. My reaction to the card adds my intuition to the client’s, connecting both our inner guidance systems with the images. This process also links the intuition of both client and reader, a merger of spiritual forces.

A very personalized message begins to emerge. The reader’s take often uncovers what she may be too close to see when it comes to a pressing issue. If you bring a picture near your nose, it goes out of focus. The reader sees the client’s issues at arm’s length, because he or she is not personally involved. The client’s first reactions often cue me into the most personal impact of the archetypal images. This is so important because it’s this particular client’s reading and no one else’s. Obviously, an archetypal image has to be very encompassing to contain all the variations on the same theme. What’s important here is the element of personalization, something you just can’t get in a book. It’s not important that I prove I’m psychic; it’s more important to facilitate a waking dream experience we can interpret together in a way that is meaningful to the “dreamer.”

3. Classic Meaning - Lastly, when necessary, I include the classical meaning of the card. Often when I’ve worked with clients, we never end up needing it. We’ve already defined the message in much more personalized terms than we’d find in the literature, though there’s always a chance for some other spin to take into account. Discussing the classical interpretations of specific cards or looking in the book or literature provided with the deck is always an interesting, final check, time permitting. Some of the books on the Motherpeace have information about why certain images were chosen in creating a particular card. These details can enhance a card's overall impact and layers of meaning.

As with most oracles, over time you’re unlikely to need a reader/interpreter, except for those occasions  when you truly are too close to an issue. Read the cards for yourself in the same way. Although I work primarily with the Motherpeace, I have found this process to work with almost any deck, and especially well with those that are highly visual with complex imagery. A couple of my favorites in that category are The Voyager Tarot and the Faeries’ Oracle.


A Sample Affirmation Before a Tarot Session
 May we explore life's mysteries together in a way that enlightens, enhances and brings greater love and joy to you and everyone whose life you touch.

Just use whatever deck  appeals to you. If everything green stands out for you, perhaps you’re in a period of growth or are grappling with envy. Listen even to the most ridiculous things that pop into your head. Those oddball ideas have been the key to some of my best readings. It takes a little courage to roll with them, but I have never been disappointed when I’ve braved it. As with dreamwork, it’s a matter of learning to access your own response to the mirror of the tarot symbols.

I like to say a prayer or affirmation beforehand to bless any reading. Set your sacred space, and the dialogue will be divine.

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Photo Credit:  Still Life with Motherpeace by Joyce Mason

Monday, May 24, 2010

Astrology and Tarot: The “Astro-Tarot” Reading

© 2010 by Joyce Mason


#2 of 3 of the Astrology-Plus Trilogy

My post on Astrology and Dreams got a lot of nods from readers who like the interface between the stars and their night movies. As an eclectic practitioner over the years with a lot of different tools in her trick bag, I admit that my all-time favorite kind of consultation is the “astro-tarot” reading. (This photo reminds me of myself when I’m in full regalia with my mixed bag, because I often use a pendulum to dowse for flower essences—but that’s another post!)

Astrology in and of itself is a fabulous GPS on the Road of Life. In order to keep a client empowered with the full possibilities of the symbols, it’s often helpful to tap the unconscious of both the reader and seeker. Astrology can put you in the ballpark of the symbols, but tarot can sometimes pin down the exact seat of meaning. Astrology starts in a more left-brained linear way, as we have learned the various generic meanings of the planets, signs, and houses. I’ve found that by inviting Tarot to the party, a right-brained intuitive energy helps me hit a home run on accuracy. The best part is that my clients and I have so much fun with the process!

If you haven’t already read the article Oracular Spectacular or How I Read Tarot Cards on my Writer Joyce Mason website, check out these links! I love involving my clients in sorting out the symbols where we merge our intuition and often come up with guidance gold. I’m telling you, we tingle and laugh with delight over the surprises we discover together.

I find tarot to be especially helpful in giving a deeper understanding to transits. Let’s face it, with any symbol system:

We have to be careful we aren’t just being control freaks trying to predict the future to make life less risky and growy.

When we bring in tarot, dreams, or any other system that mines the subconscious, we are often getting at the stuff a client isn’t even aware is an issue, much less “the” issue. Tarot helps dig out hidden challenges, feelings, and relationships among events that’s tougher to do with astrology alone. So, the person is having a Neptune/Venus transit. What about that helps us find out the actual growth mission lurking beneath the surface of Neptune’s trip to our client’s Planet of Relationship? We have possibilities, but what if we had a way of discovering, together, the most probable lesson? The core information that will make a difference on how s/he acts?

It isn’t our job to impress the client with our psychic skills. It’s much more empowering—and powerful—to show her methods to discover the answers for herself.
The results of this composite way of reading are sometimes highly amusing. I love watching the expression on someone’s face when they “get it” and the insight is surprising. It’s even greater then they’ve helped pull out the hidden thread of meaning. I’ve seen things “pop out” in the cards that have nothing to do with traditional meaning but everything to do with the client’s undiscovered core issue around a transit or natal configuration.

I’ll repeat my all-time favorite. Once I was reading the Death card, which in the Motherpeace deck has a detail of notches in a tree with a snake and skeleton nearby.(My gag reflex has improved since watching Bones and the CSI’s.) My eyes went straight to those notches, and pretty soon, I heard a song in my punny mind, an old train tune, but with a slightly modified title: “The Notches and Topeka and the Santa Fe.” Of course, the actual title is the Atchinson, Topeka, etc. But the tune would not stop, so I asked my client if there was something going on that involved training or trains. After running it back and forth, I got intuitively that someone was trying to “railroad” her, make her do something she didn’t want to do. This actually turned out to be the final death knell of the relationship involved. The key to her ability to act on it was to grasp, completely, the battle of wills. Of course, there were both Pluto and Saturn transits involved, but how much more colorful and close to what she needed to know we got, thanks to the tarot card and the information it evoked.


Maybe I fell in love with the Motherpeace because the cards are round like horoscopes, but it’s very important, if you choose to experiment with this dual reading, to find your deck. (See discussion on A Tarot Blog of round decks.) My Oracles page on joycemason.com has a list of some of my favorites and places you can discover yours.

I would love to hear from readers regarding your experience either giving or receiving mixed media readings. How do you think they enhance astrological information? Are there other combos that work for you, too?

Until you comment, I think I’ll pull a tarot card to figure out why I’m asking you this question, just out of curiosity …


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Photo Credit: Photosani @Fotolia.com