Showing posts with label Ten of Arrows. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ten of Arrows. Show all posts

Tuesday, 31 October 2017

Tarot Blog Hop Samhuinn 2017: Birth, Death & Rebirth


Welcome to Alison’s Alembic!   You may have arrived here as a stop on the Tarot Blog Hop from either Hannah Berg's or Lore Lore M's blog. Or you may have found this through TABI’s Facebook page, or though one of the many wonderful tarot bloggers in the ether... It doesn’t matter – what does matter is that you’re here!

It’s the time of Samhuinn (“summer’s end”), a liminal time when the veil that separates us from those who are no longer walking in this world is thinnest. The Day of the Dead, a time to honour the ancestors - and, in the old Celtic tradition, the end of the year.  Our wrangler for this particular Blog Hop, Jay Cassels, has asked us to look at where we are at the end of this cycle – what’s happened to us since last Samhuinn, and where we might be headed as we begin a new year.
This resonates with me more than usual, as I’m approaching the end of an even bigger cycle early next year – my Saturn Return!  Not only that, but this year sees Jupiter travelling through Scorpio, the home of my natal Jupiter, so I’ll be experiencing the end of yet another cycle during the coming year.
With all that in mind, I’ve decided to use the Spirit of the Circle spread (as described in the accompany book to the Druid Animal Oracle) and my ‘go to’ deck for this time of year, the Wildwood.
Card 2                                   Card 7                                   Card 4
Spirit of the Ancestors             The Gift                           Spirit of Time

Card 1
Self
Card 5                                   Card 6                                   Card 3
Spirit of Place                     Spirit of the Journey       Spirit of the Tribe

Self: Queen of Bows - Hare
This suggests that over the past year I’ve become kinder to, and more understanding of, myself – and, I hope, others too. These qualities have certainly helped me to complete several of my long-term projects earlier this year, and I'm sure they will stand me in good stead in whatever I set out to do over the coming year.
Spirit of the Ancestors: 5 The Ancestor 
(I kid you not - I really did draw this card!)
I’m at the gateway of a new cycle, I know. A turning point. I’m wary of what lies ahead but I know that if I listen to my ‘inner ancestor’ and draw from all my past experience – not only from the past year but from all my experiences – I will have the strength and patience (I’m a double Taurus, after all!) to keep me going on whatever new path calls me.
Spirit of the Tribe: Page of Bows - Stoat
Second card from the Bows, and second court card too!  The stoat is a hunter, with the ability to change the colour of its fur. That, and the fact that it lives underground, has given me a strong sense of secrecy (highlighting my Scorpio Ascendant), of staying hidden when necessary and adapting to changing circumstances.  There’s a bit of the “free spirit” at work too, underlying all the “shoulds” and “ought tos” that The Spirit of the Tribe – today’s culture, in other words – projects, which I’d be wise to listen to. Keep my head down until it feels right to pounce! 
Spirit of Time: Ace of Bows
Subtitled “The Spark of Life”, the Ace of Bows (the third Bow to appear in the spread), this suggests that the “spirit of the times” is inviting me to start a new fire burning, to kindle a new spark of creativity, to hunt out new skills to learn.
Spirit of Place:  6 The Forest Lovers
I have been working with the image of the Forest for the past couple of years, as part of my path, so seeing the Forest Lovers representing Spirit of Place  resonates on that level.  I feel I'm nearing the end of this part of the path, so this card reminds me that I'll have choices to make when I reach the next "fork" in my journey.
Spirit of the Journey: Ten of Arrows
Subtitled “Instruction”, this card conjures up the completion of two long-held writing projects over the past year.  The passing on or sharing of knowledge and ideas…that’s the journey I’ve been on this year – perhaps there’s more to come as the wheel continues to turn...
The Gift: King of Bows – Adder
A bit of a shudder when I drew this card (snake phobia) but I also felt a shiver of excitement at this gift. Maturity, strength of resolve, energy and wisdom are phrases associated with this card – what wonderful qualities to receive as the new year begins.
Thank you for stopping off here on your travels through this Samhain Tarot Blog Hop!  Please do come back and read some of my other posts.

The next stops on the Tarot Blog Hop are - depending on whether you’re moving backwards or forwards through the list - Hannah Berg's or Lore M’s blog. The Master List can be found here.

Sunday, 1 May 2016

Beltane Tarot Blog Hop 2016





Welcome to Alison’s Alembic!   You may have arrived here as a stop on the Tarot Blog Hop from either Karen Sealey's Pure Blessed Tarot or Aaron Lonzano's Turtle Tarot blog.  Or you may have found this through TABI’s Facebook page, or though one of the many wonderful tarot bloggers in the ether... It doesn’t matter – what does matter is that you’re here! 


We’ve arrived at Beltane, and for this particular Blog Hop, our wrangler Karen Sealey of pureblessedtarot.com has asked us to write about the word “may”. What does it mean to us? Do we use it often, and if so in what context? Or.... let it take us where it chooses.


Karen, you may have caused mayhem with this one!  Maybe some of us will be shouting ‘Mayday, mayday, mayday!’ (from the French m’aider) as we scramble for ideas.  My scrambled thoughts included...


...the Mayflower, ship of the pilgrims that braved the Atlantic in search of a new life. 


...‘Gathering nuts in May’... an old English rhyme, first recorded in The Traditional Games of England, Scotland and Ireland (1894-8), even though nuts were never gathered in May in England. Turns out that it may possibly be a corruption of ‘knots in may’, referring to the clusters of blossoms on the hawthorn (a.k.a. May tree), and not something rude! Although, given that it’s Beltane, maybe it did...


...even White Christmas ...  



It was the last one, despite the un-seasonality of the song, which really started me thinking.  In the Druid celebrations of the seasons, we usually end with the phrase “May our memories hold what the eye and ear have gained“, which could be taken not only as permission to take away what’s been experienced, but also the possibility or potential for that to occur.


So from there I went to my trusty books on grammar! “’May’ plus an infinitive can indeed express possibility in the present or future” says The Practical English Grammar.  It can also be used in the conditional:  if you do X then Y may happen. 


How many of us have used such constructions in our tarot readings?  I’m probably not the only reader who finds themselves using phrases like ‘you may find...’ or ‘it may be that...’  Some might see this as prevarication, hedging our bets, not wanting to commit – and I have to say, I sometimes still feel that on occasion.  


Ten of Arrows (trimmed): ©Wildwood Tarot
I discussed this with my very first tarot mentor, years ago; she was the one who set me off on this path in an attempt to head off my rather directive first attempts at reading.  She felt that using the word ‘may’ helped to temper what I was seeing in the cards - softening the blow, maybe – and/or giving the power to the querent by allowing them to choose what to do with the information, by offering them the possibility, the potential shown by the cards.  Ever since I saw the Wildwood’s Ten of Arrows, I’ve always thought of her and her sage advice!  

And - surprise, surprise - this card is linked to the approach of Beltane in the Wildwood's Wheel of the Year...thanks to Alison Cross' new e-book, A Year in the Wildwood).


14 Balance (trimmed): ©Wildwood  Tarot
‘Tempering’ makes me think of Temperance, or Balance in the Wildwood Tarot. And – surprise, surprise – in the Wildwood’s Wheel of the Year, this card sits at Beltane! Mark Ryan and John Matthews , in the accompanying book, write of the “balance of powers” – and it’s exactly that that the word ‘may’ represents for me in a reading. Yes, I’m providing the interpretation as I see it, but by offering it with the word ‘may’, I’m sharing the ‘power’ of the card with my querent by letting them choose what to take from it!



Thank you for stopping off here on your own journey through this Imbolc Tarot Blog Hop!  Please do come back and read some of my other posts.  


The next stops on the Tarot Blog Hop are - depending on whether you’re moving backwards or forwards through the list – PureBlessedTarot and Aaron Lonzano's Turtle Tarot. The Master List can be found here.



Wildwood Tarot created by Mark Ryan and John Matthews, illustrated by Will Worthington, published by Connections

Thomson, A J and A V Martinet. A Practical English Grammar, Fourth Edition. Oxford University Press, 1989.