I use tarot and oracle cards as tools for reflection and contemplation. Rather than divining the future, they are a way for me to look more deeply at the "now."
"The goal isn't to arrive, but to meander, to saunter, to make your life a holy wandering." ~ Rami Shapiro

Sunday, May 22, 2016

Barrier Test

This week I'll be using the Wild Unknown Tarot, created and self-published by Kim Krans. I'll also being using the Pictish Oracle, created by myself and brought to life in 3-D form by Alaska Laser Maid on Etsy. Today's draws are the Seven of Swords and the Crescent and V-rod:
          You almost don't notice it at first - that seventh sword tucked beneath the fox's tail. He might pretend to be asleep, but he's keeping a watchful eye out. Is he playing a defensive or offensive game? He obviously has information or an idea that could be used in either way. Yet he's content to rest instead of attacking, which makes me think he's keeping a secret tucked away for a purpose that involves self-protection. The Crescent and V-rod symbol appear approximately 32 times on Class I stones that have been inscribed by the Picts. Though many have guessed its meaning to range from death to weather magic, J.N. Bellchamber makes a good argument for it representing a seasonal sundial - a sort of farmer's almanac. Added to the Seven of Swords card above, the tile seems to encourage a calmness that would lend itself to right timing. Information used as gossip or character assassination is its impulsive form; used with mindfulness and compassion, it may be helpful rather than harmful.

Yogic tradition has it that speech must pass before three barriers prior to being uttered aloud. These barriers come in the form of three questions: Is it kind? Is it true? Is it necessary?
― Prem Prakash

6 comments:

  1. kind, true, helpful. Would that we all thought first. The world would no doubt go silent as a tomb.

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    1. Heehee, that reminds me of the next lojong slogan I'm working on: All dharma agrees at one point (that point being practice should make us less self-absorbed rather than more).

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  2. Less is often more: also in case of talking it is good to keep some of our thoughts for ourselves :)

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    1. I would hate for anyone to see or hear all the thoughts that swirl through my head! :D

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  3. I like that Seven of Swords. That fox definitely knows something and is pretty protective of it. I had to go Google Class 1 stones.

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    1. The history of the stones and their inscriptions were a really interesting study for me. :)

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