THE TAROT
This is a weekly bog hop hosted by Rhiann Wynn-Nolet and Kristina Perez, about what inspires you. Please join us. I will try the link, but if I can't get it to connect, please got to Rhinn or Kristina's blog and hop on.
Here's my attempt to attach the linkey: Sign on!
This is a weekly bog hop hosted by Rhiann Wynn-Nolet and Kristina Perez, about what inspires you. Please join us. I will try the link, but if I can't get it to connect, please got to Rhinn or Kristina's blog and hop on.
The Tarot inspires me, questions
me, and has been instrumental in helping me create my first novel length
fiction.
The Tarot figure semi-prominently
within the pages of ABEGALE FORCE: When Abegale finds her grandmother's
mysterious herbal medical book, The Tarot fall from its pages. Her
grandmother's left a note explaining how to use the cards; how to bridge her
unconscious and trust her intuition—and eventually figures out where her grandmother has
been for the last three years.
In my early twenties, I became
fascinated with The Tarot. I began collecting several decks. As many as I could afford. They were so
beautiful, mysterious, and FILLED with symbolic situations—my focus at that
time. Each deck had a history and story of its own. I was writing a lot of
poetry then, and delved into esoteric studies of all kinds. I went deeper into
my study of The Tarot, practicing on friends, who were only too willing,
practicing on myself, taking intricate notes of what I was experiencing the
moment the cards were laid out, and what the cards were showing; the patterns,
the symbols, and how the passing of time resulted in the card’s fulfillment of
a question, or situation the person had asked about.
I sometimes think of The Tarot as a
way my ‘over self’ uses the symbols in the cards to make contact with my mind—or
consciousness.
They say within The Tarot every
life experience can be shown, each conflict, resolution, and tool to over come.
Or the process of ‘individuation’ as Carl Jung said. “They [the cars] combine
in certain ways, and the different combinations correspond to the playful development
of events in the history of mankind.”
To read more about Jung’s perspective of The Tarot: Carl Jung
Sounds perfect for writing
fiction—right? I didn’t use the cards as a tool for creating my fiction,
ABEGALE FORCE, but I suppose it’s within my subconscious from the years of
study. I expect it’s seeped into my blood and now pours from my pen. Ha! I’d like to think so, anyway.
I once read The Tarot over the
phone--as a job—for about a week. An interesting experiment; I found I was less
judgmental not seeing the person, only hearing their voice. I could be true to
the cards and springboard a story from my intuition. I drew on conclusions from
the cards laid in front of me.
There was a past, a present, and a possible future. A choice. Where
again, events turn into unlimited possibilities—because nothing is fixed in
time. Nothing.
I may use The Tarot the next time
I’m stuck on plot, or a character’s motivation. Why not try it? What about
you? Do you have a deck?
The Fool: 0, zero, the beginning, symbolic of the egg, with its unlimited potential. It marks the beginning of the Tarot journey, The Major Arcana, ending at 22, The World--completion.
The Fool jumps off where others fear to tread.
I found Ms. Greer's books a great help. I highly recommend them,
and her blog for beginning readers. Have fun!
Here's my attempt to attach the linkey: Sign on!