Tarot Tour Guide offers easy tarot instruction to those just beginning their tarot journey. For enthusiasts of all levels of experience, Tarot Tour Guide presents tarot as a guide for the journey of life. Tarot, the Four Elements, and your Spiritual Journey Tarot is a book of spiritual wisdom that maps the journey of life, describing the experiences and lessons we encounter along the way. Tarot is a tool of spiritual growth, divination, meditation and magick that is useful in every aspect of life, from the mundane to the mystical. Your Spiritual Journey begins when you are present, conscious and intentional in each moment. Let tarot be your guide for that journey. In this book you will · Tarot as a tool for your spiritual growth. · Understandable interpretations for all seventy-eight cards. · Instructions for reading tarot for yourself and others, using several tarot reading styles. · Eight tarot spreads, along with instructions to create your own tarot spreads. · An introduction to tarot magick, along with several tarot spells for love, healing, and prosperity. · Meditations and exercises to expand your understanding of tarot, and of yourself. · Ways to summon and connect with the four elements for balance and healing. · Ways tarot can help you in all aspects of life, including career, relationships, spiritual growth, creative development and communication with the spirit world.
Reading this book is like sitting with Christiana as she describes the entire tarot deck to you. Not only traditional correspondences, she also describes how the cards speak to each other in a spread, how the positions might tweak the meaning, and the difference between traditional and intuitive reasons - and how they work together.
Christiana writes like she talks and in Tarot Tour Guide she is talking to me. Her 30 plus years as a professional reader shine through. I read the second edition. Strongly suggest it.
Tarot Tour Guide: Tarot, the Four Elements, and Your Spiritual Journey Christiana Gaudet Jupiter Gardens Press [PRICE]
In April 1989, I stood outside one of the world's greatest art museums, the Louvre, with only an inkling of what I would find inside. I knew about the Mona Lisa, "Winged Victory", and a few other gems, but otherwise, I had no idea of the depth and breadth of the collections that stood all around me. It was definitely overwhelming.
Working with the tarot can seem overwhelming, too: There are tons of books and other resources vying for the time and attention of the beginning tarot reader. Luckily for those interested in learning the tarot, Christiana Gaudet created something that I should have had at the Louvre: A tour guide!
Tarot Tour Guide is a remarkably complete work that surprised me with its breadth and simplicity. Everything you'd expect from a tarot book is here: Card meanings, example spreads, suggestions for tools and various techniques, and meditations. The author's tone is conversational and not pretentious, making the reader comfortable. It also doesn't make judgments about how you should or should not use the cards; in other words, Gaudet presents the options without pushing one way or the other.
What I didn't expect was the elemental focus of the book--five entire chapters dedicated to this vital topic. To me, the four elements of fire, earth, air, and water are an essential part of not only tarot, but of spiritual practice. Gaudet includes a full chapter on each of the elements and asks the student to work with each one through exercises and meditations. Most books are content with a cursory "here are the four elements" portion, but the author really went over and above to ensure that the reader understood each element. I'd love to see an individual book on each of the elements in the tarot from this author someday.
I really liked the additional information included in each of the elemental chapters. In Chapter 8, for example, "The Element of Air", Gaudet discusses the element and the mental body, but includes related topics, like reading for other people, tarot ethics, and what to do if you feel that someone is lying during a tarot reading. The other elemental chapters follow a similar pattern, with earth focusing on work and the physical body; fire focusing on the spiritual body, creativity, and sexuality; and water presenting the emotional body, as well as love and relationship readings. The fact that these topics were organized by element really stood out for me, and for that reason they resonated with me even more.
One final point: The readings that Gaudet includes in the book really help understand not only the elements, but the role of the tarot reader. The reading "Single Again" from Chapter 10, "The Element of Water" really hit home for me as a professional reader, because these are the types of problems our clients face every day. It's about a man going through a divorce. While you should go buy this book and read it for yourself, I'll say this much: The author does a great job of showing how to react compassionately but honestly when a client doesn't want to see the truth of a particular situation. It's a regular occurrence in my own practice as well.
Whether you are an aspiring tarot professional or just want to develop your intuitive abilities, I'd recommend this book. It's also great for beginners, especially those who may be interested in using tarot as a larger part of their spiritual development or are drawn to a Pagan/Wiccan spiritual path.
Scritto in caratteri grandi e con eccessiva spaziatura tra le righe, in pagine di dimensioni quasi A4, alla fine – stringi stringi – sarebbe un libricino se stampato in maniera “normale”. Inoltre, la carta su cui è stampato è troppo sottile: le parti evidenziate si intravedono dall’altro lato della pagina, inficiando la comprensione. L’autrice descrive sommariamente tutte le carte, a una a una, per poi passare a illustrare alcune stese senza però elaborarle. Il “grosso” del libro, se così lo si può chiamare considerate le dimensioni, è scritto prendendo spunto dai vari Elementi tradizionali, e lì l’autrice dà informazioni di varia natura che possono risultare utili nella pratica e per l’apprendimento dei Tarocchi (e include anche sezioni dedicate a rituali e meditazioni, per chi fosse interessato a queste cose), aggiungendo – ma solo per alcune carte qua e là – ulteriori significati che possano avere in un ambito o nell’altro (p.e. denaro, sentimenti). Nel complesso è un libro che, seppur apprezzabile per certi versi, lascia l’amaro in bocca perché dà l’impressione che avrebbe potuto essere una miniera di informazioni, se fosse stato ben strutturato e scritto più approfonditamente.