Archive - June 2017

Your First Tarot Card Reading

Getting your First Tarot Card Reading: What to Expect, What to Do, What Not to Do, and What to Do When It’s Over

So, you’re getting your first tarot card reading. You know it involves cards, a reader, and a reader interpreting those cards. You ask a question and they answer based on what the cards say. And you’re understandably confused. Well, the good news is that your tarot card reader knows what to do. But as far as the rest goes, here’s a guide for what to do before and during your reading, what not to do, and what to do when it’s over.

What to Do Before Your Reading

It’s best to go into a reading with an open mind. Since you’re asking the universe to help you, you have to accept what the universe gives you. It knows more than you do, and it may not give you an answer you expect or even want right now. The reading will go as it will go, but to avoid an unproductive reading or disappointment, do not go in expecting a specific answer. If you knew the answer, you wouldn’t get a reading, right?

Focus on a specific yes or no question. The most productive readings are for yes or no questions. Find a way to whittle down your question until it could be answered with yes or no. Do you want to find a new career? If you literally asked “What career should I try?” You may get an answer, but it won’t be as specific or helpful as asking, “Should I pursue a career as a plastic surgeon?”

Try to leave your baggage at the door. You don’t want to go into your reading worried about that bitch at work who said something mean about your new sweater, or if the grocery store has that coffee you like on sale. If you can, take a few minutes to do some deep breathing so you can better focus on the reading. Make sure you’re rested enough and not hungry, either. It would be a pity to waste a reading because all you could think about is how hungry you were.

 

What to Do During Your Reading:

Stay focused. Turn your ringer off and avoid distractions. Go to the bathroom before your reading. You have set aside this moment to ask someone to reach into the collective unconscious and pull up guidance from the universe for you. The only thing you have to do in that moment is think about the reading.

Do what the reader says. If the reader asks you to cut the deck once, do so. If you’re asked to choose a card but not look at it, do exactly that. If you’re asked to close your eyes and concentrate, do that. Everything you’re asked to do is for a reason and for your benefit.

Answer questions thoroughly. If your reader asks you for specifics, go ahead and give them specifics. For example, if you ask if you should look for another job, the reader may ask you what kind of work you do so as to better interpret the cards.

 

What NOT to Do During Your Reading:

Don’t change your mind, keep asking questions, or hem and haw. If you have asked a clear question and you have focused on it, then that’s it. You don’t need to give the reader — or the universe — more context. Imagine if you’re playing baseball against the reader. You pitch a ball and expect the reader to hit it. If you ask a yes or no question, you may just get a home run! Now imagine that instead of pitching one ball, you throw two curve balls, one screwball, three fastballs, four up in the air for no reason, and then roll another few along the ground. The reader is probably not going to hit any of those balls.

Don’t touch the cards unless told to do so. The reader may ask you to pick the cards. After that, don’t touch them. They’re there for the reader to read and interpret. You wouldn’t reach up and grab the bottle while your hairdresser is dying your hair, right? Yes, you picked out the color, but now you let them do their job.

Don’t play with your cellphone or take pictures without permission. Stay focused on the reading. Stay focused on the conversation in front of you. And while the reader may not have an issue with you taking pictures of the spread, don’t assume that you can interrupt the reading to do so. Once your reader is in their groove, leave them in their groove. You’re the one who loses if you create distractions.

Don’t test your reader. There is nothing wrong with being a skeptic. There is something wrong with employing the services of another and then giving them a hard time on purpose. If you’re skeptic, ask the reader questions and speak to them in a civil manner outside of a reading. A tarot card reader need not be a psychic to give an effective reading. Purposely withholding information or giving incorrect information is childish and waste of time for both of you.

 

What to Do After Your Reading:

There is really only one rule here:

Don’t dwell or obsess. Yes, you have been given advice on how to go about your business, and whether or not the news is good or bad, the point is to move forward. You still have free will, so even if you were told that whatever you want to do will probably work out well, this isn’t a guarantee. If you’re told that something you want may not work out, you can figure out an alternative course of action.

Dwelling keeps you stuck in the past. It also makes you feel powerless. The point of tarot is to empower you. You’ve been shown a direction and now you have to choose to walk it or not.

The reading was for a specific moment in time, and now that the time has past, you take what you learned and put it to good use. Keep your wheels moving.

Okay, I lied. There are two rules:

Say thank you to your tarot card reader. They appreciate it.

King of Pentacles

King of Pentacles

Suit: Pentacles
Element: Earth
Function: Possessions, riches, material things, practicality

The King of Pentacles sits on a black throne, with a scepter in his right hand and a pentacle resting on his left knee. He looks down at it with a watchful eye. He’s up on a high ledge of a building, and behind him are the mountains, symbolizing stability, and a castle, symbolizing wealth and security.

It’s hard to say whether the plants are coming from his throne, or coming to his throne. It’s also hard to say whether the grapes on his robe are attached to the vines around him. That’s intentional. He doesn’t want you to know. He wants you to think he’s one with them. His black throne and black robe symbolize seriousness but all the darkness where all things originate and go back to at death, and he’s not afraid to go into the shadows to do what he needs to do.

The King of Pentacles is ruthless and as stubborn as the oxen of silver and gold decorating his throne. He hears a read scarf, symbolizing passion, and there are flowers in his crown, symbolizing fertility. The King of Pentacles is a captain of industry. He has spent a lifetime accumulating wealth for the sake of it because he enjoys it and what it can do for him. He will never retire. He’s too stubborn for that, and he will go to great lengths to stay active. His armored foot rests on the head of a lion, the symbol of pride. Even the King of Pentacles will not get in the King of Pentacle’s way.

The King of Pentacles is reliable, practical, strong, stubborn, and steady. He doesn’t get riled up. He doesn’t get angry. He just keeps going. However, if he must, he will change in order to stay on top. After all, his riches are not his own ego, but real life riches. He may seem to be arrogant, but his sense of self comes not from who he thinks he is, but what he produces and gathers. Thus he’s almost humble in a way, even if his goal is to create wealth at every turn.

This card is about doing what needs to be done in order to be a leader and a success. It’s about what a person has to be in order to gain material wealth, and to remain wealthy.

When the King of Pentacles is Reversed:

When the King of Pentacles is reversed, the querent lacks stamina and confidence. They may hold onto rigid ideas of what they think is right instead of change in order to solve the problem. They value their intellect and their ego above all things and don’t understand why the world judges them based on what they produce instead. They may be afraid to actually try doing anything, and may instead be big talkers, even braggarts, but without any evidence to back up their claims of greatness.

This card reversed can also indicate dramatizing emotions to distract from their failures and shortcomings to identify as a lifelong victim.

In a three-card reading, this card means…

Past: In the past, the querent was enterprising, and perhaps trailblazing, with real world accomplishments, likely in business.

Present: Currently, the querent is achieving and succeeding, outmaneuvering the competition and producing good things.

Future: In the future, the querent will become a captain of industry and produce things that will create not just security, but wealth, for them.

Queen of Pentacles

Queen of Pentacles

Suit: Pentacles
Element: Earth
Function: Possessions, riches, material things, practicality

The queen sits on her throne cradling a single pentacle as if it’s a small child sitting on her lap. Her ornate throne appears to be made of stone. Her stone thrown has fruit, symbolizing abundance, a child, symbolizing motherhood, a ram, symbolizing bravery, and an angel, symbolizing a connection to the heavens. At her feet is grass and a little clear dirt or roots to the bush or tree from which the branches of roses climb up the right side of the card and pass over the top and down the left side.

The queen lives in a tiny slice of paradise. Flowers surround her. The roses symbolize magic, and the flowers symbolize youth, beauty, and sexual attractiveness. Speaking off, the rabbit at her feet symbolizes fecundity and fertility. Behind her is a river, symbolizing emotions, and behind that, the mountain, symbolizing stability. She dresses in white, the color of purity, and red, the color of passion, and green, the color of life.

The queen is a gentle, nurturing woman, who has all she needs around her, and the capability of making more. She thus has all she needs to take care of someone else, and she enjoys doing so. Her abundance creates abundance; she’ll never run out. The Queen of Pentacles is the consummate mother figure, the universal mother who cares for and protects. She doesn’t feed her children on dreams or fantasies, but gives them what is real and what is good for them.

The Queen of Pentacles is able to care for others because she’s taken care of. She’s not without, and she’s not nursing her own wounds or tending to her own ego. Thus, she can turn her attention entirely on the ones she cares for without feeling deprived or unloved.

It’s important for her to be an a give-and-take relationship, in which she is loved and gives love in return, where she gives joy and is being given joy in return. The Queen of Pentacles isn’t a martyr. She won’t invest her resources in those who don’t need or appreciate her.

When the Queen of Pentacles is Reversed:

When reversed, the Queen of Pentacles is giving and giving and getting nothing in return. The querent is doing all the emotional heavy lifting, all the nurturing, and all the giving, and is being left emotionally in the cold. Nothing is ever good enough, or the other person or thing is just a bottomless pit.

It’s also possible that the querent isn’t really ready to love or care for others, or even themselves. The querent may be anxious about being independent; they may not feel ready for adulthood or for mature, stable relationships.

The querent may also not have a realistic idea of what to expect from other people, or of what to expect from relationships. They may be hopelessly romantic and refuse to accept people despite their flaws. Thus, they may be alone, waiting for their dream man or woman to show up and sweep them off their feet.

In a three-card reading, this card means…

Past: In the past, the querent was very nurturing and had had positive, reciprocal relationships.

Present: Currently, the querent is enjoying loving, giving relationships with others and possibly also being materially blessed through them, too.

Future: The querent will soon be able to nurture others, or to enter into a nurturing relationship with other people.

Knight of Pentacles

Knight of Pentacles

Suit: Pentacles
Element: Earth
Function: Possessions, riches, material things, practicality

A determined young man in his gleaming, white armor sits on a black horse facing East. He holds on pentacle in his hand. The horse and the knight wear red, the color of passion. The horse is black, the color of sobriety and seriousness. In the distance are plowed fields. The knight holds the reins and looks forward.

The plowed fields symbolize the possibilities before the knight. The seeds are planted; now, it’s time to care for them and wait. This is the time after the first spark of inspiration and after the first baby steps toward the goal. Whereas the Page of Pentacles has the dream, the knight is the one actually making it happen and making the commitment to try to make the dream come true.

This is the long haul, and the knight braces for it. He’s almost daring someone or something to test him and let him show them what he’s made of, because he is made of tough stuff…or so he thinks. No one knows for sure.

Thus, this stubborn man protects and watches over his plowed fields, waiting for them to bear fruit. His horse has a sprig of oak leaves on his forehead, symbolizing resilience and bravery. The knight has to be brave, as he faces the unknown. It isn’t known if there’s anyone around who wishes to challenge him. However, there are forces out of his control, like the weather, and water, and pests that could get in the way of a fruitful crop.

The Knight of Pentacles is about being determined, even to the point of being stubborn. It’s about staying the course, seeing things through thick and thin. The knight makes a choice and acts on it. It chooses a plot, ploughs it, and then stays put, seeing the growing cycle through. Thus, the knight of pentacles is about making a commitment to the dream that the page of pentacles had.

This card can also mean working hard, almost obsessively, and eschewing pleasures and fun while trying to see things through. The knight is focused entirely on what is real and what is practical. It’s vigilant, but it’s also so dead serious that others would find him too intense and boring.

When the Knight of Pentacles is Reversed:

When this card is reversed, the querent is usually struggling to take that first step or plant that first seed. They lack motivation and focus, or they make lack the resources to do so. They may also be too stuck in the dreams to really handle the details and dirty work or trying to make them happen.

It’s also possible that they’re still too interested in impressing people to really see their endeavors through to the end.

Things always sound wonderful when successful but not so great when they’re still underway. The querent may be easily discouraged when others don’t share their enthusiasm. The querent is still looking for external motivation and validation. Jealous people, or threatened by their possible material success, criticize them, and they listen.

In a three-card reading, this card means…

Past: In the past, the querent worked doggedly toward their goal, alone, and without any support.

Present: Currently, the querent may lead a mundane existence focusing entirely on the work of manifesting a goal.

Future: In the future, the querent will put fun on a shelf, roll up their sleeves, and start to make their dreams a reality, even if it’s tedious.

Page of Pentacles

Page of Pentacles

Suit: Pentacles
Element: Earth
Function: Possessions, riches, material things, practicality

A young man in orange and green, the colors of newness, life, and enthusiasm, stands in a spring meadow of blooming flowers, holding up a single pentacle. There is a plowed field to his right, and to his left, mature trees. The plowed field symbolizes newness and potential. The forest symbolizes the cycle of life and the agelessness of wisdom. In the distance is the mountain, symbolizing stability.

The young man holds up his pentacle as if to consecrate it. Or, he’s so transfixed with his pentacle that he doesn’t see anything else. Then again, maybe he doesn’t have to pay attention to things around him. The sky around him is gold; what does he have to worry about literally surrounded with wealth? He looks into his pentacle, trying to decide how and when he will make his fortune.

The interesting thing about the Page of Pentacles is that unlike the other pages, he’s grounded and not in danger of anything. He’s not swinging a weapon, he’s not in the desert, he’s not standing by a raging sea. He’s going to be okay. He’s a practical young man, and even if he’s full of enthusiasm and ready to take the first step, he’s not going to do it foolishly.

His focus on his pentacle show that he’s very interested in whatever material gain he’s planning. He isn’t staring into the distance, but at his pentacle. He has a real, attainable goal, and he will not lose his head getting to it.

Thus, the Page of Pentacles is about new beginnings of a material nature. It’s about taking practical, real steps toward an attainable, known goal. This isn’t pie-in-the-sky or fanciful stuff. While it’s not certain whether the young man is actually going to take any steps toward realizing this goal, it’s possible for him to do so if he’s willing to stop daydreaming and take the next step.

Thus, the Page of Pentacles is a sign of new dreams and ideas of a practical nature. Though the page is inexperienced, his desires are probably attainable, at least by someone, if not the page himself.

The Page of Pentacles foretells the awareness of material or physical gain and the plans and dreams of material gain. The Page of Pentacles may also be the call to start a business, or to make a career or profession out of being someone, not out of fulfilling a role for someone else. The page

When the Page of Pentacles is Reversed:

When the Page of Pentacles is reversed, the querent is generally unrealistic about what they can gain or make for themselves. They’re either too confident or under confident in their abilities, or they aim too high or too low.

It’s possible that the querent underachieves and settles for less because it’s easy rather than push themselves. However, it can also mean that the querent is trying but not overcoming obstacles that get in the way of starting these new endeavors that will lead to riches and financial stability.

In a three-card reading, this card means…

Past: In the past, the querent had an idea or motivation to start a practical or material goal.

Present: Currently, the querent is inspired or dreams of doing something that will bring them financial success or stability.

Future: In the future, the querent will hit upon an idea that separates them from others, that will bring them financial and material success.

Ten of Pentacles

Ten of Pentacles:

Suit: Pentacles
Element: Earth
Function: Possessions, riches, material things, practicality

A wealthy man in a yellow cloak with ornate symbols sits with his dogs at his feet while a man, woman, and child stand happily nearby. This could be the man’s children and grandchild. He’s surrounded by ten pentacles.

They sit in an archway looking out over the city. This may be his home; he is at ease. The archway symbolizes stability and permanence, as the arch is a naturally physically stable structure that can withstand centuries, even eons, if nothing significant happens to knock them down.

This is no doubt a wealthy man, but he’s not just wealthy in money, but in security, in his social relations, and his social standing. The dogs symbolize loyalty, another treasure this man has. It’s probably taken him a lifetime to get all of these things, but he did. Now, he can sit back and relax, knowing that he is provided for, and so are his children and their children.

The ten pentacles are arranged in a pattern similar to the Kabbalah Tree of Life, a diagram of how the universe came into being. For this one, singular man, his universe has come into being, and he’s surrounded by it. He is the past, and the point of creation. His children are the present, and his grandchild is the future. The dogs are the raw energy from which life comes. He is in, a way, like God. He’s drawn in a similar fashion to Jehovah, who is often depicted as a white man and a beard.

The Ten of Pentacles is about being your own god and creating the abundance that sustains future generations. It’s about creating wealth and fortune for not just one’s own enjoyment, but for others. This takes time, wisdom, patience, and a genuine desire to create wealth and abundance for someone other than one’s self.

The Ten of Pentacles doesn’t work anymore; the man sits with his dogs as his children do the work: the son is holding a baton, which symbolizes the power of magick and creating one thing from something else. The son is now the one taking over the hard work. In a sense then, the Ten of Pentacles symbolizes the next step after success, when one passes the magic onto the next person so that they may become successful, too.

When the ten of pentacles is Reversed:

When the Ten of Pentacles is reversed, the querent feels unsuccessful and unstable. They can’t rest and enjoy life. Chances are that the querent doesn’t trust others and is micromanaging them. It’s also possible that a loss of business, divorce, or problems in the family cause financial instability and change the way the querent invests their money.

This card reversed can also indicate someone who is stingy with their money and their mental resources. They don’t want to give up control, so they don’t teach others how to take over. The querent can’t truly invest in anything because they don’t have faith that when not under their watchful eye, things won’t go haywire.

In a three-card reading, this card means…

Past: In the past, the querent was successful and financial stability, and thus taking a break from actively trying to create more success.

Present: The querent is taking a rest from the rat race because they’ve done all they can and now, are ready to let someone else take over and keep things going.

Future: The querent is going to slow down in the future because they’ll have the means and stability to stop working so hard.

Nine of Pentacles

Nine of Pentacles

Suit: Pentacles
Element: Earth
Function: Possessions, riches, material things, practicality

An adult woman stands in a garden surrounded by ripen grape vines with nine pentacles in the leaves. Her garden is behind a gate, overlooking the mountains. The mountains symbolize strength, and the grapes symbolize richness, abundance, and life.

The woman wears a leather glove on her left hand as a falcon rests on it. Her mind and spirit are under control, and can be released at will. She wears a yellow cloak, the color of intellect, with red rosebuds and trim. The rosebuds symbolize magick that has yet to be realized, and the red is passion. However, her passion is tempered and under her control.

Everything she has is because she has control. Her abundance comes from ability to control her mind, energy, and will and direct them toward the things that will create wealth. There is some magic to that; and considering that it’s a woman on the card, and that the picture was drawn in antiquity, her feat was more than your average rags-to-riches story.

A little snail crawls across the grass. While a snail symbolizes the spiral, or the cycles of expansion, it also symbolizes destruction, because a snail will eat the leaves and grapes that the woman appears to be celebrating. Thus, the snail serves as a reminder of the temporal nature of all material abundance. Even something small, like a snail, can take it away. Thus, she my look at ease, but she is definitely on her guard. This doesn’t cut down her enjoyment. In fact, she’s well-pleased with all she has earned, knowing that she earned it, that it is something she could lose. Thus, this card is about enjoying what you earn in the moment you have it.

The Nine of Pentacles tells you that for the moment sit back and smell the roses. Enjoy what you’ve created and what you grew. It should be enjoyed precisely because it won’t be around forever, and delaying the moment means losing your chance.

The Nine of Pentacles can also mean that if you want to reap the rewards of something, you have to do it yourself. Don’t want for someone to hand it to you; victory is sweeter when you get it on your own. You’re willing to put in the time and effort.

When the nine of pentacles is Reversed:

When the Nine of Pentacles is reversed, the querent is waiting for someone else to make their lives happen for them. They’re relying on someone else’s hard work and talents to bring in fortune. They may be failing restrain themselves and avoid impulsive moves that would keep them from growing their own fortunes.

Regret, or future regret, is likely when Nine of Pentacles is reversed. This card reversed can also mean that the querent isn’t enjoying the fruits of their labor, and that they’re too focused on the possibility of future shortages to enjoy the moment they have right now. Thus, they could lose all the good things they have by the time they realize they have them.


In a three-card reading, this card means…

Past: In the past, the querent focused their energy and skills on cultivating something big, were successful, and enjoyed the fruits of their labor.

Present: The querent is currently enjoying well-earned success and the spoils that come with it.

Future: The querent is working hard and will soon be able to enjoy the material success that comes with a job well done.

Eight of Pentacles

Eight of Pentacles

Suit: Pentacles
Element: Earth
Function: Possessions, riches, material things, practicality

A young man sits on a bench, chiseling a pentagram into a pentacle, six of which are fixed to a tree, already completed. There are two more to go, and he’s currently working on one right now. It seems that he’s not creating these pentacles so much as he’s fixing or perfecting them.

He sits alone, away from the city, as he focuses on his work. He wears a blue shirt, the color of serenity and the mind, and red stockings and shoes the color of passion, magic, and vitality. While he seems calm on the surface, underneath it is a fever for something. He enjoys what he’s doing, or at least, he doesn’t want to be doing something else. He’s engrossed in his work.

One wonders what happens next. Do the pentacles just sit there, affixed to the tree? Does he keep them? Does he give them to someone else? The focus is on the moment of labor, not on the moment of achievement. But if he keeps working like that, then chances are that he’ll succeed in whatever he’s doing. He just has to stay the course.

But what happens once he succeeds isn’t important here. In fact, it’s probably better if he’s engrossed in the moment and not looking ahead. His attention should be on the now, not on the future or the past.

The Eight of Pentacles indicates focus, hard work, attention to detail, and making things just right. This is about being proud of a job well done, because that pride was earned through the sweat of one’s brow. However, it’s not about the pride itself, but the pride that inevitably follows the labor.

This is about teaching yourself, or learning through experience. It’s possible that the man isn’t trying to make eight pentacles, but that he’s trying to make one perfect pentacle, and currently, he’s on his 7th or 8th try. This card has been associated with apprenticeship and learning through experience and immersion in the work, as opposed to book learning or watching someone else work.

The eight of pentacles can also mean perfectionism. How much work really needs to go into all those pentacles? Does it really require painstaking detail?

When the eight of pentacles is Reversed:

When the Eight of Pentacles is reversed, the querent is either refusing to learn from experience, or refusing to get their hands dirty and do the work themselves. They’re not actually learning anything in the practical sense, and when the time comes won’t know how to apply what they know, and they may not know how to stick things through.

When this card is reversed, it can mean that the querent is so bogged down in the details that they miss the big picture, and they don’t know when something is enough. Instead of perfecting something, they end up ruining it: they do one thing too many that takes it from perfect to irrevocably flawed. They have to learn to stop while they’re ahead so as not to undo their success.

In a three-card reading, this card means…

Past: In the past, the querent was hardworking, paying close attention to detail, and trying to perfect something, which has brought them to this moment.

Present: Currently, the querent has their nose to the grindstone and is trying to learn how to or trying to perfect something.

Future: The future brings a time of painstaking attention to detail and trying to make something perfect.

Seven of Pentacles

Seven of Pentacles

Suit: Pentacles
Element: Earth
Function: Possessions, riches, material things, practicality

A young man in orange and blue leans pensively on his hoe and looks at his crop, which appears to be seven pentacles growing on a vine. It’s uncertain whether the pentacles are ripe for the picking, or if they’re still growing and maturing.

From the looks of it, the young man has managed to grow this crop from seemingly nothing, because the land isn’t terrible hospitable. There’s a mountain in the distance, symbolizing stability and strength, but the only thing growing – or perhaps the only thing that matters – is the vine of pentacles. The fact that this looks like grape vines is no accident: wine symbolized blood, transformation, and abundance.

The young man watches his pentacles, but he doesn’t do anything. He wears orange, the color of enthusiasm, and blue, the color of serenity. They’re opposites on the color wheel, contrasts. He’s excited, and yet, patient. He may be waiting for the right time, whatever that is. Is this the right time? It looks that way. Is he going to miss his opportunity if he doesn’t act now? Will there be a better moment to act? It’s tough to say.

The Seven of Pentacles is about long-term investment, patience, and waiting until the time is right. Delayed gratification is the key here. Good things come to those who wait, and now, great things are imminent to the one who worked tirelessly and diligently (and apparently, alone) to make them happen.

And the fact that the man is alone is important here: to do what needs to be done requires being alone. The Seven of Pentacles is a reminder that in order to make what is unknown possible, one may have to do it alone. Consider that when a seed is planted, no one knows where it is other than the planter, and that a young plant bears no fruit unless it matures. Thus, someone has to believe that this seed can grow to become a mighty vine that spreads and bears fruit.

However, this card can also indicate that waiting for the right time isn’t ideal, especially if that means losing your chance. The pentacles appear ripe now; will they still be ripe tomorrow, or the next day, or the next week? Or, will they rot on the vine?

When the seven of pentacles is Reversed:

When the Seven of Pentacles is reversed, it usually means that a lack patience and diligence causes things to never come to fruition. It can also mean that the querent isn’t focusing their energy on one thing so nothing works out. Usually, the querent lacks the discipline to focus on something and see it through, or circumstances keep them from seeing something through. They may also be too reliant on external validation to really create their own fortune.

But this card reversed can also mean that someone is letting an opportunity slip by because they’re too scared to seize it. They’re waiting for a better time or circumstance, and are letting the fruits of their labor rot away.

In a three-card reading, this card means…

Past: In the past, the querent was cultivating their fortune, waiting for the time to be right to take it and claim it, which has brought them to this moment today.

Present:
Currently, the querent is delaying gratification and waiting for something big to come to fruition, or it may be ready, but they’re not taking action.

Future: In the future, the querent will hunker down and focus their time, attention, and resources on a major project or personal goal that they’re not sure will be successful.

Six of Pentacles

Six of Pentacles

Suit: Pentacles
Element: Earth
Function: Possessions, riches, material things, practicality

A man dressed in Tyrian purple, probably a merchant, gives money to two beggars. He does this willingly, even lovingly, and the men are grateful. Tyrian purple was a color that only the wealthy could afford. It was a color of status. The beggars wear the same colors as the beggars in the Five of Pentacles. It’s not winter anymore, and there’s enough to go around for everyone.

That the man is probably a merchant is significant, because it means that his wealth was earned through his own skills and talents, and not merely inherited or handed to him. He understands that nothing comes easy, and that times can be rough. Thus, he understands that the men on their knees before him now could rise up and do great things.

After all, they are equal. The merchant holds a scale in his left hand, symbolizing the balance of all things. Times of scarcity are balanced by the times of good. The scale is at equilibrium. The merchant maintains some equilibrium by giving some of his wealth to the beggars, who in turn look up to him. The merchant has earned this deference and respect.

The Six of Pentacles isn’t straightforward. It symbolizes balance, and it symbolizes charity. Moreover, though, it symbolizes that things can change, and that the possibilities co-exist. There are rich merchants, and there are beggars, and why a merchant isn’t a beggar is not straight forward.

This card also represents stability and the ability to be happy with what you have. The merchant is aware that there is poverty, but he’s not terrified of it. He embraces it as he embraces the beggars. It’s not where he wants to be, but he understands that in life, there are those that have, and there are those that have not. However, the merchant isn’t powerless to change it. In fact, he knows that the real value of his money is being able to control and change the world around him. After all, if he’s willing to give to those in need, who does he have to fear?

When the Six of Pentacles is Reversed:

The Six of Pentacles Reversed can mean a few things. It can definitely mean an imbalance of power, but it’s more than that: it means the imbalance of power that causes material imbalances. The querent may be doing all the earning while someone else is doing all the spending. Or, the querent is supposed to share resources with someone, but one of those people is always getting more than their fair share.

This card reversed could also indicate that the querent may find their fortunes changing while someone close to them is seeing their change in the opposite ways. Instead of causing feelings of charity and compassion, it makes the parties untrusting and stingy.

The Six of Pentacles reversed can also mean feeling out of control of one’s environment, or not having the resources to help others or to change their world, even though they hate the status quo.

In a three-card reading, this card means…

Past:
In the past, the querent was in a good financial or material position, having everything they needed and appreciating it.

Present: Currently, the querent is enjoying having earned all they need and the ability to share the joy with others.

Future: In the future, the querent will be able to enjoy the fruits of their labor and share the wealth with those around them.