On Being Grounded – Or Not

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I was at a workshop recently, and one of the other participants was complaining because her spouse’s lack of groundedness created difficulties in their relationship.  The conversation turned to grounding, and the importance of being grounded, and everyone eagerly shared tips for becoming grounded, staying grounded, living grounded.

And then it was my turn.

There are times it’s good be to grounded. I agree. I think it’s important to know how to ground so we can be grounded when we choose.

Key words – “when we choose”.

I have a lot of air in my astrological chart. I live in my head most of the time.  I’m aware of that, and I like it – there’s a lot of interesting stuff going on in there.

Having to take time to eat, drink, sleep, stretch – tedious. I want to be, to create, to think. I do not go to the Michelangelo extreme of sleeping in my clothes to minimize the time I spend on grooming, but I can work right through lunch and breaks without notice.  You know those intangible blue energy field characters in The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy? I am so there – no laundry to do, ever again.

What I shared in the workshop is that a lot of the time I am intentionally ungrounded. On purpose, I am not in my body and not connected to my physical reality. And I’m okay with that choice. I was surprised at the strong – and negative – reaction this disclosure elicited. “You can’t work if you’re not grounded!” “You aren’t living when you’re not grounded!” “Being ungrounded is bad!”

Being grounded slows me down. I can reach more intense places with my creativity, think more expansively, and simply do more if I’m not grounded. I can focus my energy in ways that I can’t achieve when I’m grounded. I can move faster, process information more quickly, and make connections and solve problems with greater ease and speed.  Creativity, for me, is an out-of-body experience.

Focus? Oh, yeah. I got focus. Having focus and being grounded are two very different states. They’re not mutually exclusive, but if I can choose only one of them, focus wins. Every time.

Grounding slows me down. Makes me stop. Requires that I contend with material plane issues, like food and sleep and the ever-present ache from the back injury I sustained when I was 17.

I do ground for some meetings, events, etc. Some days I’ll ground so I can slow down, give myself a break, be more in the moment and less caught up in everything.  Being grounded as much as people seem to think we “should” be grounded doesn’t work for me.

When it’s right, I’m grounded. The rest of the time, I’m focused – and happy – in the ether.

Tarot at Chabot Space and Science Center, March 16, 2012

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Friday night Tarot fun! I’ll be reading at “NightSchool” at Chabot Space and Science Center in Oakland on Friday, March 16 – “Where Social Meets Science!”

From our gracious hosts:

“At NightSchool, students of life can explore, imagine, create and mingle in an incredibly inspiring and magical setting. Themes and activities reflect current events, favorite pastimes and playful experiences, each celebrating the unique, resourceful and exciting community of the East Bay.

“Get back to school and unleash your inner nerd, spark a new hobby, hobnob with artists and experts, enjoy a show, and relax and contemplate your place in the universe!

  • Adults 18+
  • $12 General Admission / $5 Members
  • Includes full access to exhibits, special activities, workshops, open labs, discussion forums, live Planetarium show, film screenings and telescope viewing (weather permitting)
  • Food, Beer & Wine available for purchase”

 

Really, what more could you want on a Friday night? More, you say? More there is!  Two of the three creators of the Science Tarot – Logan and Martin – will be joining the festivities, offering readings and tours of the deck.

You can find us in the Space Exploration area upstairs!

See you Friday!

Michelangelo: Michael, the Angel of Creation

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“Every beauty which is seen here by persons of perception resembles more than anything else that celestial source from which we all are come.”
~ Michelangelo

Today is the 537th anniversary of the birth of Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni, more popularly known simply as Michelangelo.

Best known for his sculpture and statues, Michelangelo was also a renowned painter, and not-so-renowned poet. (Some of the poetry is lovely; some if it is, well, not so much.  The mention of cabbage in a love poem brings down the tone somewhat.)

Despite his fame and popularity, and the occasional (but not sufficiently frequent) generosity of his patrons, he did not live the life of a Renaissance Rock Star.  His contemporaries noted that he was not particularly polished, nor did he enjoy casual socializing. He was an artist who lived to create, keeping his life confined to basic physical needs and the creation of art.

Wikipedia informs us:

He told his apprentice, Ascanio Condivi: “However rich I may have been, I have always lived like a poor man.” Condivi said he was indifferent to food and drink, eating “more out of necessity than of pleasure” and that he “often slept in his clothes and … boots.”

Definitely not a Renaissance Rock Star, unlike his contemporary, Leonardo da Vinci.

As someone supported by patronage, Michelangelo’s society expected that he would be sociable and make himself agreeable to his patrons and peers. That was of no interest to him; he preferred to spend his time creating, or reading alone when he was not working.

He had no personal life to speak of – he never married, never had any reported indiscretions with the daughters of patrons, never had his name linked romantically with anyone in the rich and celebrated circles in which he found himself, never fathered any children.

He had peers, he had acquaintances, and some historians speculate that he had a relationship with Tommaso dei Cavalieri towards the end of his life.  He did not have any of the usual relationship with which people fill their lives.

What he had was an amazing gift to create art out of stone; bringing blocks of rock to life, creating something out of nothing, as did the Great Creator he depicted in his work again and again.  In his own words, “I saw the angel in the marble and carved until I set him free.”

My favorite painting is the Delphic Sybil:

Delphica, by Michelangelo

He lived his life as a continuous act of creation – if he was awake, he was creating.  Divine inspiration? Divine madness?

For Michelangelo, a simple spread – The Angel in the Marble. You can use this spread to find the Angel in the marble of your current circumstances.

4.  Angel

3. Chisel               2.  Hammer

1.  Marble

 

1.  The Marble: What you have to work with; your starting point.

2.  Hammer: What you can do externally to chip away what is blocking or unnecessary.

3.  Chisel: What you can do internally to remove the blocks.

4.  Angel: The peak manifestation of your work.

 

 

“Buy A Damn Hat!”

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Ask almost anyone who lived in San Francisco during Willie Brown‘s terms as Mayor, and they’ll probably be able to name his hatmaker – Ruth Dewson of Mrs. Dewson’s Hats.

For those who aren’t familiar with Brown, in addition to being a long time California politician, he’s also a dapper dresser, known for being perfectly put together at all hours of the day and night, regardless of weather or circumstance, and always sporting a stylish headpiece.

One day, I suddenly found myself on Fillmore Street near Mrs. Dewson’s Hats, and with time to spare. (I’ve no recollection of how that happened, but it did!) I went into the store, and Mrs. Dewson herself was minding the shop.  We chatted pleasantly as I browsed.  The hats were lovely – really wonderful – and I was flat broke. As in, $2.00 left in the bank account until payday, which was more than a week away.

At the end of my browsing, I thanked Mrs. Dewson for the pleasure of enjoying her work.  She asked if I were going to buy a hat. I explained that, although I loved them, I was not in a position to buy a hat at that time.

She replied something to the effect of “I get that all the time. Appreciation is great, but I can’t cash it. Buy a damn hat!”

I wasn’t able to that day, but I did eventually make it back to the shop to buy a hat, th0ugh it took a while. In the meantime, I had a great story to tell, and some of my friends also patronized Mrs. Dewson’s hats.

How many times does this happen to us?  We want to support something, but we’re not able to for one reason or another. Or we simply choose not to.

Yes, it’s wonderful for an artist or entreprenuer to hear “I love your work” or “I appreciate what you’re doing”. I love hearing from people that they find our artists’ work intriguing, and that they appreciate our fair treatment of authors.  That’s great – but our artists can’t eat appreciation. Can’t put it in the bank and use it pay rent or the utility bills, or buy art supplies.

Love an artist’s work? Like what a company is doing? Buy something and make it possible for them to keep doing it.

If you can’t afford something, then share your enthusiasm with others. Spread the word. If you can’t contribute directly to their prosperity, contribute to their fame and help create that prosperity.  If you like it, support it with real action.

Buy a damn hat!

SOPA Protest on January 18, 2012

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In support of the SOPA Strike, I will be taking this site, my personal blog, dark on January 18, 2012, 8:00 am – 8:00 pm.

We are leaving our company site, Tarot Media Company, live during that time, out of regard for the artists and authors who have entrusted us with their work. We have committed to supporting them in their right livelihood, and we take that responsibility seriously.  To show our support for the SOPA Strike, we have added a protest box to the company site.

Thank you for taking the time to read this.  If you want to learn more about SOPA and PIPA, you can visit the SOPA Strike page.

I’ll be back at 8:01 pm on Wednesday!

The Miracle Worker Retires

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Looking back on 2011 (and prior years, of course, but 2011 in particular), I realize how often I have stepped into the role of The Miracle Worker.

Someone loses track of a deadline? No problem, The Miracle Worker drops everything and rushes in to make sure the deadline is met!

Someone knows the deadline, but hasn’t bothered to do their part?  No worries, The Miracle Worker rearranges her life and completes the missing pieces!

Someone on the project bows out at a critical juncture?  Hah, it is to laugh! The Miracle Worker steps into the role, marshals the troops, finds a substitute, stays up all night, and the project proceeds on time and on track!

Over and over and over. And over and over and over.  And often spilling over into the time and life-energy of those around me.  (You could ask the DH, but he’s busy with a client emergency.  The glamor of the dual-entrepreneur marriage is vastly overstated.)

Hoping for a miracle in a tight situation – sure. It may or may not work. Expecting someone else to perform miracles because you can’t be bothered to do the minimum – not so much. There’s a reason consultants charge emergency rates – but for the projects I work on that aren’t paid by the hour, what I get is the privilege of screwing up my schedule, eating erratically, losing time for other pursuits, and missing sleep – all in an attempt to solve a problem of someone else’s creation.

The phrase “If you want something done, give it to a busy person” is true – to an extent.  But, you know, sometimes the busy person doesn’t really need One More Damn Thing To Do, but they’re so busy it doesn’t occur to them to say “sorry, not this time”. They just shift around the puzzle pieces of Things To Be Done to fit in One More Damn Thing, gulp down some more caffeine, and get back to it.

In 2011, I worked a breathtaking number of hours.  A regular 40 hour-a-week job comes to 2,080 hours per year.  Attorneys at major law firms are expected to clock at least 2,200 hours per year.  Let’s just say that last year, I’d have overachieved at a law firm.

And a lot of that time was spent working miracles and averting disasters created by the actions (or inactions) of other people.

Not this year.

This year, I am doing my work, managing my schedule, keeping track of my projects.

I expect others to do the same.

If they don’t, I am not going to let it become my problem.

The Miracle Worker will still make an occasional appearance, if *I* deem it necessary.

But The Miracle Worker as a way of life – and a way of work – has to stop.

I need time for my life. My creativity. My family and friends. For sleep.

I am going to take off holidays. Maybe even both days of some weekends, or else Monday if we have a weekend event.

When the office is closed, I won’t be here.

The Miracle Worker is off for a well-deserved rest.

And I’m off to have dinner with my husband.

2011 in Perspective, or, Wow, I Didn’t Spontaneously Combust!

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Inspired by Jo Crawford‘s post on Crafting the Sacred, I am sharing my 2011 “I Did” list, to celebrate what I did accomplish. It’s so easy to get caught up in thinking about what I should have done, or ought to have done, or didn’t do at all, that I’m reminding myself that the 365 days did have a point, even if I wasn’t always able to see it at the time.

The biggest accomplishment was the release of the Sustain Yourself Cards & Handbook to Live Well and Live Long by James Wanless.  Countless hours of work by me, James (of course!), Rose Red, Chris Lowrance, and Christophe Pettus meant that we were able to debut the deck at INATS, where James was the keynote speaker – really quite a high point for the year!

Sustain Yourself Cards  Little Stone

At INATS, we also launched the revised version of James’ book “Little Stone: Your Friend for Life“, long out of print – and very well received!  Thanks to T.A. Pratt for pulling it together in record time.

We printed and distributed James Wells’ annual Tarot guide, “2011: Year of the Emperor” in January, and were delighted to release the updated, revised, and generally wonderful “Tarot for Manifestation” in June.  Thanks for these two go to Christophe Pettus and Rydell Downward.  (Yes, “2012: Year of the Hierophant” will be out soon – there was a delay in production.)

2011: Year of the Emperor
 Tarot for Manifestation

August brought the paperback version of the guidebook for T.E. MacArthur’s “Shamanka: Oracle of the Shamaness“, as well as a second printing of the deck! Thanks to T.E., of course, and once again, Rydell Downward.

Shamanka: Oracle of the Shamaness

October saw the release of Rachel Pollack’s “Soul Forest“, a collection of 24 short writings on Tarot by the Godmother of Tarot.  Big thanks to Rose Red and Chris Lowrance for bringing this work into the world!

Soul Forest Tarot Lover's Notebook

We also worked with the wonderful Karyn Easton to release the US version “The Tarot Lover’s Notebook“, featuring her gorgeous deck, due out next year!

We ended the year with the release of David Palladini’s memoirs, “The Journal of an Artist“.  The result of over a year of work with David, Rose Red, and beautiful graphic work by Christophe Pettus, Tim Pratt, and Rydell Downward.  (Yes, it took three graphic artists to produce an art book – go figure!) Of all the books we’ve released this year – and I love them all – this one has a special place in my heart.  David’s Aquarian Tarot was the second deck I owned, and part of me is still in wonder that I have met this amazing man and helped to bring his story to the world.

The Journal of an Artist

We also moved offices in three days flat, made our first appearance at INATS, journeyed to Readers Studio in New York in April, attended and vended at the San Francisco Bay Area Tarot Symposium in August, and did our first Holistic Living Expo in November.  Rose Red and Andrew led the wonderful Tarot-To-Go readers to several events and private parties throughout the year.  And, for once, I opted out of Halloween reading gigs and spent the evening at home, enjoying the fun of handing out candy to all the neighborhood kids and reading by the fire.

For my own Tarot projects, I taught 10 Saturday Tarot classes, led 12 meetings of the San Francisco Tarot Cafe, and blogged randomly (not as much as I’d liked, but see above list for other claims on my time).

On a personal level, I managed a trip to Amsterdam to keep Christophe company at a tech conference, followed by a few days in London.  I also made a trip to see my family and attend my grandmother’s 90th birthday party.

And I did all of this without spontaneously combusting!

Looking back at the year, there was a lot of external focus – projects, teaching, and events – and not as much internal focus (writing, reading, and *sleeping*!). However, I feel good about all of these accomplishments, and am planning for a more balanced 2012.

Happy New Year! Here’s to a joyful 2012, filled with friends, love, and abundance for all!

If You Can’t See Where You’re Going, Slow Down

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Twenty-seven years ago today, my mother died.

She was 43 years old.

She was killed in a car accident. She was traveling a dark country highway. Approaching an intersection with another road, she had the right of way. The driver of the car to the right had stopped for the red light. The driver of the car to the left was “distracted” by the lights of the car on the right, and was looking down into her lap because of the brightness.  She didn’t see my mother’s car, or the red light. She ran the red light at 65 miles an hour, and hit my mother’s car at a perfect 90 degree impact. My mother’s car spun, bounced off the car on the right, and rolled into a ditch. She died before the ambulance arrived.

Yes, she was wearing a seatbelt. As the highway patrol officer explained, it didn’t matter – the impact and spinning threw her head against the driver’s side window (which smashed), and the seatbelt doesn’t help in that situation.

Her car was totaled.

The other two drivers and their passengers were uninjured. Their vehicles sustained some damage, but were driveable.

Prior to the accident, in the two and a half years since my father had abruptly exited the planet (having chosen death as the option preferable to life without my mother after 24 years of marriage), my mom had shed a lot of responsibilities – their marriage, their house, and me among them.

She’d reinvented herself, and made up for the time she’d lost in her youth, having been a wife and mother of two when she graduated from high school. She went on dates, calling me for advice on what to wear. She came home drunk one night, and I took care of her while she threw up. She drove across the state with some of her friends to see a Neil Diamond concert, and back the same night, and then was back at work in the morning. She took a cruise with the same friends, and bought a see-through spaghetti strap sundress and the world’s smallest bikini. This, from the woman who embodied Dress for Success phenomenon and who had once lectured me that my ballet class gear was insufficiently modest.

Shortly after my father’s death, she enrolled in a Grief Recovery class, where she met a man who’d recently lost his wife to cancer. He was named Philip – just like my father. (This is a pseudonym.) He had the same birthdate – even the year – as my father. After 18 months, they decided to marry. I can’t speak for the rest of my family, but I was less than thrilled. It wasn’t the usual “I don’t want a stepfather” issue – no danger of that, he was completely fixated on my mother, and the rest of the family was an inconvenience he’d accepted as something he’d have to deal with in order to have my mother in his life.

In those less eco-conscious times, no one thought much about all the driving we did. The night before Thanksgiving, I drove the hour from my place to my mother’s house to spend the night. She and I drove the three hours to my grandmother’s for Thanksgiving, and Philip drove his car, as well as my brothers, cousins, etc., all in their cars. Mom and Philip were staying the night at my grandmother’s and driving home on Friday, but I was heading back on Thanksgiving night for a concert, so I needed my own wheels. Besides, Philip had a two seater, so the three of us couldn’t have gone in his car anyway.

Driving to my grandmother’s on Thanksgiving, I had three uninterrupted hours with my mother, for the first time in – well, possibly, ever. We talked about all kinds of things, although I don’t remember specifics. The last thing I said to her when I left my grandmother’s house for the concert was “I love you, mom.” Her telling me she loved me is the last thing she ever said to me.

The wedding was to be the Sunday after Thanksgiving at her mother’s house, necessitating that we all drive the three hours each way – again – just three days after we’d done so for Thanksgiving. She and Philip were doing the romantic thing of not seeing each other before the wedding, so she was driving by herself down to her mother’s house on Saturday. The accident happened less than a half hour from her intended destination.

I was a college student, working Saturday night at my pizza place job. It was an incredibly quiet night, and I had to be up early the next day to drive to my grandmother’s for the wedding. My boss said it was fine for me to leave early, and I told him to call if things got busy, and I’d come back in. When I received the accident report, I was faintly amused – the time I’d suddenly felt tired and asked to leave work was the time – to the minute – of the accident.

My mother, in typical fashion, had sent me some money shortly before the wedding and instructed me to buy something presentable to wear. I had done so, albeit presentable to my eyes. Once back at my apartment after leaving work, I pulled out the clothes, and realized they were all black. I tried not to think about how much this would irritate her. I hadn’t done it intentionally. She’d take it very personally that I would be wearing all black at the wedding, and it would ruin her day, and it would be all my fault. This in spite of the fact that the 99% of my wardrobe was black, and she knew that, but it would still be something she could be upset at me about.

Instead, even she would have had to agree that the outfit was perfect for her funeral.

The funeral was rough – even more difficult to deal with than my father’s funeral, in the same place, two and half years prior. When my father died, his mom was understandably devastated, and was propped up with a panoply of pharmaceuticals. (All the more appropriate – or ironic – since he was a pharmaceutical salesman.) When my mother died, it triggered everything all over again for his mom, and this time both grandmothers were heavily medicated. That’s a condition no one should ever have to be in, and a sight no one should ever have to see of their loved ones.

I felt sorry for the minister conducting the service. He hadn’t known my mother, and had been forced to rely on second-hand accounts of her life from various well meaning, but not necessarily well informed, sources. The talk bore little resemblance to the mother I knew, but seemed to make everyone else happy – judging by the weeping and sniffling throughout. As I had at my father’s funeral, I kept myself from crying by focusing on the fact that my mascara was not waterproof, and I’d look like Alice Cooper if I wept, and my mother would have been incredibly irritated by that.

The funeral home was packed, and there were enough flowers and plants to stock a commercial nursery. A surprising number of my friends made the long drive to be there, unbeknownst to me. I’m not sure if I ever thanked all of them at the time; whether I did or didn’t, I thank them now.

Their presence was all the more amazing when you consider that we all were in our last week of classes and staring at impending finals, and they had chosen to make a long drive to a remote town for a funeral of someone that many of them had met only once, or not at all.

In particular, one group of friends had somehow managed to view my mother’s car in police custody. They were permitted to remove the pot of flowers she’d had in the car, since they weren’t evidence. My friends carried out my mother’s intentions, and placed the flowers on my father’s grave. Those flowers were in place when we arrived at the cemetery, along with all the flowers from the funeral home for my mother’s service. Friends are the best thing in life.

The flowers, food, and cake which had been ordered for the wedding reception were instead sent to one of the homeless shelters. I’ve always wondered how the recipients felt, knowing the source of the abundance. I hope that, in spite of the circumstances, the unexpected decorations and delicacies were enjoyable for them.

Most of my family were angry, but I felt sorry for the woman who’d caused the accident. Yes, I had to live the rest of my life without my mother, but the driver had to live with the knowledge that she had killed someone.

That made a big change in my driving habits.

Since everything – and I do mean everything – in her life was always about my mother, her timing couldn’t have been worse to screw up my life. I was heading into the last week of classes of my last semester in college, preparing for the GRE exams, and preparing to move to California. My professors were all extremely understanding, I managed to graduate, did decently on the GRE, and still made it to California, albeit a bit later than planned.

So, what have we learned?

1. Live every day as though it’s your last. It just might be.

2. Tell people you love them, frequently. You might not get another chance to say it.

3. Be a good friend, and you’ll have good friends.

4. Write your own obituary if you want it to be accurate.

5. Compassion is a gentle, yet compelling, instructor.

6. If you can’t see where you’re going, slow down.

A Rainbow for Your Monday

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Because sometimes we all need a little cheer for our day – below is the rainbow which graced our workshop with James Wanless on Sunday:

 

Review: Who Are You in the Tarot? by Mary K. Greer

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My pal Ankhie at Weiser Books was kind enough to send this wonderful book my way!  It arrived as I was heading to the airport for a trip, so I tucked it into my bag, thinking I’d read it on the plane.  Well, it was an idea . . . .

First, it’s by beloved Tarot goddess Mary K. Greer, so one goes into it with certain expectations of academic, philosophical, and creative excellence – which are met and surpassed.  While it can be read in bits and pieces, this is not a book to be skimmed and shelved, but a book to savor, to revisit, to work the exercises at various times and points in one’s life to see how one and one’s life has changed – or not.

Who Are You in the Tarot? by Mary K. Greer

Mary demonstrates finding one’s Soul Card, Personality Card, and Hidden Factor Card.  Even if you’ve done this guided by other books or in workshops, go through Mary’s system.  Even if you end up with the same numbers, the process is informative.  If you’re math-phobic, get a calculator or a friend to help you.

While it is certainly tempting, having worked out one’s own cards, to go straight to the chapters on those cards, once you’ve done that, go back and figure out the cards for other significant people in your life – family, friends, role models – to see how your cards and theirs frame your relationships. You may find some unexpected – and quite useful – information.  I’ve done this kind of work on my own family for many years, but it was helpful to have Mary’s unique perspective on them, especially issues dealing with my parents. (Do we ever really get over that first, and most complex, relationship?)  My mother and I have a shared card – her astrological birth card is Hermit, which is my numerical birth card – which made life interesting for us (and everyone around us).

Mary also discusses the idea of the Tarot year, both the calendar year and our personal year which begins on our birthday.  Being as my birthday is early in the calendar year, and the way the math works out, my personal Tarot year ends up the same card as the card for the calendar year. Sometimes that’s great – I’m currently in a double Emperor year! – but I can’t say the idea of a double Hanged Man year sounds as enticing.

Then, if you’re up for further adventures, Mary explains how to find your Name Cards. Once you’ve done that, check to see if any of them are repeats of your birth cards.  Also, if you’ve changed your name at any point, figure out the cards for the old and new names and see how they connect – or if they connect at all.  I have done two separate name changes as a conscious decision to identify more closely with my grandmothers.  Comparing the names was useful:

Desires and Inner Motivations Outer Persona Destiny
Birth name: Lovers Priestess Strength
Name #2: Magician Priestess Empress
Name #3: Emperor Hermit Emperor

 

Additionally, doing the math on the changes in the individual names in my full name was a chorus of 9s, even with all the changes – tying back to my numerical birth card, 9, The Hermit.  I didn’t do the math on the names when I did the changes, but mapping these cards against the course of my life was very interesting. Running the card’s on my husband’s birth and his chosen name was also enlightening – he went from

Chariot / Hermit / Chariot to

Lovers / Hierophant / Priestess.

Just a little bit of a change!

Mary also suggests laying out your names with the trumps to see what patterns occur.  This is easier to do if you have multiple decks – for example, I have five As in my name, so multiple decks really help.

In the final chapter, Mary discusses the court cards, significators, and people in readings.  It’s an excellent lesson on working with these cards, and this chapter alone can provide hours of consideration.

The book also includes three appendices – one on the 8-11 controversy, one on the Qabalah of the Nine Chambers, and a Summary of Card Names. If you’re not familiar with the first two topics, Mary’s work is an excellent introduction; if you are familiar with them, Mary provides her unique insight on the topics.

Once again, Mary Greer distills her immense learning with practical wisdom to create a work that gives its readers deep knowledge, useful techniques, and a Tarot resource to return to year after year to further their own work with the Tarot and their own personal development.

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