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It has long been acknowledged that Tarot is an excellent oracle, a method of divination which can help people discover their direction in life, to make the choices that can aid them in shaping their lives and producing the future they desire.
But, how does it work? How can these cards with the unusual on them really tune in to us and assist us in seeing our life from a different viewpoint and determine the changes we need to make?
Carl Gustav Jung, world-renowned Swiss psychiatrist, philosopher, and contemporary of Sigmund Freud, frequently used the word archetype in this respect. He hypothesized that all human beings possessed, in their subconscious minds - he called it the "unconscious" mind) - mental images which have been with us as long as we have existed; images like kings and queens, lions, devils and Angels, etc...
In humans, these images appear to take the place of the instincts that all of the lower animals seem to possess. Jung postulated that it was this archetypal imagery in the Tarot which addressed the unconscious mind of some people and aided them to "tune in" to others and ascertain what might be ahead for them.
Jung also theorized that there was a Universal Law which superseded the Law of Cause and Effect. He referred to this as the Law of "Synchronicity." Simply stated, this Law contends
that there are certain events that occur beyond time and space which, although we can't detect a cause and effect relationship, are meaningfully related to other events. He believed that it is this Law that explains why exactly the correct Tarot card comes up, at exactly the perfect time, to make the interpretation meaningful.Jung’s theories are decidedly not the only views on the subject of how the Tarot functions.
One hypothesis goes like this: Each card has many meanings. The more one studies Tarot, the more significations he/she learns. So--this theory goes: It actually doesn’t matter what cards are cast, the cards merely focalize the reader’s subconscious and the right meanings come to him/her psychically. (The subconscious is the source where all of our psychic insights are gathered.) This hypothesis might explain why the cards appear to have different significations in different readings.
Another interesting hypothesis is that a Tarot reader should designate a short, one-word or one-phrase meaning to each of the cards--deciding for themselves what the cards imply to them. And, they should commit these meaning to memory. As soon as the subconscious, creative mind knows the meanings, it will always ensure that the right cards are drawn for any particular reading. The reader may then interpret the card without being forced to worry about which meaning is applicable in this reading.
Still another theory is that it's not essential for the reader to memorize anything. If he/she
is using a Tarot deck with illustrations on all 78 cards (like the Rider/Waite/Smith deck), The universe will ensure that the reader sees the story he/she needs to see for the reading they are presently doing.
Personally, I utilize all of these different techniques at one time or another, counting on my intuition to lead me.
However it works, Tarot has proven itself time and time again, over the centuries, for millions of people in helping them to find their way.
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