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

Showing posts with label chair. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chair. Show all posts

Monday, January 15, 2024

The Root of Reactivity

From the Legacy of the Divine Tarot, the Four of Cups; from the Tea Leaf Reading Cards, Chair:

When you get reactive, get curious. You have a wound that is asking to be healed.
—Mark Groves

Boredom, apathy, burnout or discontentment - the Four of Cups could have any number of causes. Yet they are all a reaction to something. It could be unmet expectations, an empty spiritual well, a lack of self-care, overindulgence or a failure to accept life as it is. When we discover the root of our moodiness, we will find the solution for it, if we choose to apply it. The Chair suggests rest, but it also makes me think of the saying "pull up a chair." If we have been spending to much time alone, it's possible we might need to spend some time with a few friends. 

Wednesday, May 13, 2020

The Foundation for Happiness

From the Legacy of the Divine Tarot, the Ten of Cups; from the Tea Leaf Reading Cards, the Chair:

          Both cards seem to suggest rest today - not just the physical kind, but also the kind that allows the heart to relax and open rather than constrict. I've been reading a book by Devon and Craig Hase, and an excerpt from the introduction speaks to this longing for contentment:

Mindfulness is not enough to live a level-headed existence right in the middle of the storm that is contemporary life. When the Buddha taught mindfulness, he always taught it as part of a whole. He never said, “Pay attention to your breath and you will be free of suffering.” More like, “Pay attention to your breath as a way of steadying the mind, and then look at your life.” Look at your life. Closely. Notice your mind states. Notice your heart states. And, also, if you want to be happy, make sure you’re really taking care of things. Like goodness, and sweetness, and love, and compassion. In fact, the Buddha said, goodness, not mindfulness, is the foundation for a happy life.