![]() ![]() You will see symbols of these four elements popping up all over the place in many tarot cards & learning to spot these visual clues can really help you to understand the nuances of a card’s meaning, & develop your own interpretations too.Įarth, air, fire, & water represent four different aspects – physical, intellectual, energetic & emotional respectively. How you feel (Water) to how you think (Air) you could be angry (Fire) or just plain stubborn (Earth). The wind (Air), rain (Water), heat from the Sun (Fire), and the ground that supports you (Earth) all have a direct physical effect outside, but the elements are also matched to interior processes and behaviours. The four elements, which the ancients considered to be the building blocks of everything, can be seen and felt everywhere. Goes back to the myth-forming bull era that began 5000 years ago. The concept of four elements – air, water, earth & fire has historical connection with the Tarot. Xem các nội dung hay nhất tại Tâm linh do website biên soạn.Introduction to the Concepts of Four Elements Stripped bare of the arcane and medieval, the Tarot of the Four Elements offers an original approach without compromising the Tarot’s inherent archetypal structure–a feat indeed!” ― Kate Warwick-Smith, author of The Tarot Court Cards: Archetypal Patterns of Relationship in the Mino TAROT / SPIRITUALITY”The stimulating and thrilling artwork and insightful text in Tarot of the Four Elements will help every reader bring its ancient energies to life.” Rachel Pollack, author of Seventy-Eight Degrees of Wisdom: A Book of Tarot”The primal language of this deck reaches straight to our inner depths and evokes a response that feels ancient and all-knowing. Using the Tarot of the Four Elements almost makes any tarot reading an instinctual act.” ― Muninn the Changeling, TCM Reviews The Tarot of the Four Elements is a deck not to be missed!” ― Amanda Bureguard, Timeless Spirit Magazine, July 2007 Stripped bare of the arcane and medieval, the Tarot of the Four Elements offers an original approach without compromising the Tarot’s inherent archetypal structure–a feat indeed!” Kate Warwick-Smith, author of The Tarot Court Cards: Archetypal Patterns of Relationship in the Minor Arcana This innovative 78-card tarot deck calls forth a shamanic presence through its evocative imagery of primal symbols, sacred geometry, and tribal art forms from earth mythology and folklore. ![]() ![]() Tarot Elements is written for an intermediate tarot reader, with the presumption that you already possess a baseline knowledge of card meanings or you can get access to card meanings somewhere else, like Cynova’s first book, Kitchen Table Tarot.Ĥ Elemental Stories of Tarot class - t. She updates the esoteric tarot tradition of expressing facets of the human condition through the four elements and adds a fifth, Spirit. Tarot Elements closes with a chapter of additional tarot spreads to work with, to help bring clarity, along with case studies on how these spreads are used in actual reading scenarios. ![]() In Tarot Elements, the scope is narrow, but Cynova dives deep into each elemental reading and guides you to mastery over each reading type, which in turn, facilitates mastery over your self, over the areas of life that elemental reading covers. Melissa Cynova, author of Kitchen Table Tarot, which I’ve reviewed before on this blog, has now released an intermediate sequel: Tarot Elements: Five Readings to Reset Your Life. Tarot of the Four Elements Tarot Elements: Five Readings to Reset Your Life by Melissa Cynova ![]()
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