Tarot Card of the Week, August 10-16, 2015: The Queen of Wands

The purpose of life is to live it, to taste experience to the utmost, to reach out eagerly and without fear for newer and richer experience. ~ Eleanor Roosevelt We have certainly been getting a run of Wands lately, and now to crown this brilliant week of the Leo New Moon, we welcome the Queen … Read more

Tarot Card of the Week, Nov. 30-Dec. 6, 2015: The Devil

Shall I tell you what the real evil is? To cringe to the things that are called evils, to surrender to them our freedom, in defiance of which we ought to face any suffering. ~ Seneca (Roman philosopher, mid-1st century C.E.) This is certainly not the card I would wish for this week. After a … Read more

Tarot Card of the Week, March 21-27, 2016: King of Wands

If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader. ~ John Quincy Adams In this important first week of Spring (or Autumn, if you live below the equator), featuring a Full Moon eclipse, we are graced with a visit from the King of Wands. Coming … Read more

Tarot Card of the Week, Aug. 17-23, 2015: Four of Pentacles

If you look at what you have in life, you’ll always have more. If you look at what you don’t have in life, you’ll never have enough. ~ Oprah Winfrey        Here’s a card that we haven’t seen in a long time. Not that we’ve been missing him much. In Tarot numerology, the fours are about … Read more

Tarot Card of the Week, Dec. 7-13, 2015: Two of Swords

I used to be indecisive; now I’m not sure. ~ Anonymous This week of the Sagittarius New Moon and a challenging Mars T-square aspect with Uranus and Pluto, we have a visit from the Two of Swords. The Twos are often about choices, balance, duality, polarity, and opposites. And the Swords in the Tarot are … Read more

Tarot Card of the Week, March 28-April 3, 2016: Eight of Pentacles

Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work.
~ Thomas A. Edison

This week, we receive a reminder from the Eight of Pentacles that the more we focus and work hard at something, the luckier we get.

Pentacles are, of course, the Earth suit, dealing with living in the physical, material world. The Eights of the Tarot are often about getting organized, setting priorities, and moving forward (or not). So in the Pentacles suit, this is about focusing on work, success, and resources.

Here we see an artisan who is focused on his creations. Although he is completely lost in his task, we see the city in the far distance. Perhaps this is reminder that there is a larger world to which his products must have relevance, lest his work be an act of vanity or waste of time.

There is no indication whether he is self-employed, or working under the authority of a larger business. But in this moment, unsupervised, he works with good cheer, concentration, and a high level of productivity.

This is another of Tarot artist Pixie Smith’s “stage cards.”  It’s tiny, but notice the double line behind the figure, hinting that the background may be theater scenery. What story is being played out for us?

Here we have the pure act of the creation itself. We see both the physical energy of the hammering, yet also the meticulous care reflected in the results.

True Confession

This is really going off the rails of my usual Card of the Week writing, but I have a true confession that comes up when I see this card:

I am hooked on business makeover TV shows.

I used to adore Tabatha Coffey and her hair salon takeovers. And when she started branching out into other kinds of businesses, I positively swooned. (Alas, her shows were too short-lived.)

Nowadays, I can’t get my fill of all those wild restaurant and bar before-and-after shows. Something about how they all resonate with magical Cinderella fairy tales of transformation, but are applied to real life, nitty gritty situations just makes my entrepreneurial heart go pitter-pat!

Having clocked an embarrassing number of hours (weeks? years?) watching this stuff, several very clear themes repeatedly emerge.

One is accountability. It’s amazing how many excuses people can come up with, to explain their failures. Some favorites are family dysfunction, backstabbing friends, or being under the influence of some old personal drama.

We don’t know if the young man in the Eight of Pentacles has a chronic illness, or child custody troubles, or a feud with his in-laws. We see a man who is simply doing focused, consistent good work. And he does it without anyone standing over him. He is accountable first and foremost to himself.

“No excuses! No crybabies!” as the refrain from one of my favorites goes.

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