68-Five of Coins Upright Golden Family Tarot Reading

This page is part of your family tarot reading with the Golden Tarot Deck. If you are reading this page by accident you may prefer our Spirit Guide Quiz or if you looked for The Five of Coins specifically try The Five of Coins Golden Tarot Meaning. Love, Luck and Light to all!

Family, Friends & Relationships:

In general, the Five of Coins points to a feeling of being left out in the cold, as though everyone else in the world has everything and you are the only one that is suffering. Realize that this is not the case. Do the best you can, with what you have, but remember that the wise thing to do, if one needs help, is to go out and ask for it. The help you need will come.

Card Meanings: Loneliness, Bankruptcy, Bad Luck, Hardship, Divorce, Poverty, Destitution, Despair, Unemployment, Struggle, Poor Health, Alienation, Illness, Homelessness, Financial Ruin, Financial Loss, Breakups, Adversity, Feeling The World Is Against You, Recession, Negative Change In Circumstances, Temporary Financial Hardship, Outcast, Feeling Left Out In The Cold, Scandal

The Five of Coins can point to a time when life is feeling less than secure. The important thing to remember is that there is always help available when we need it, from forces both seen and unseen. You may feel alone, but you have the capacity to change that. Reach out.

This reading is part of a family tarot reading using the The Five of Coins using cards from the with the Golden Tarot Deck. You will find many more tarot pages that will be of great help if you need tarot card meanings. Use the search at the bottom of the page. We have some amazing tarot books for you to browse. Please see below.


Here are some snippets from a few of my favorite books

Elements of the Psychic World
Book Details
Elements of the Psychic World: According to a pamphlet written by Richard Chamberlain, secretary of the Province of New Hampshire, entitled Lithobolia, or the Stone-throwing Devil (1698), the stone-throwing case occurred between May and August 1682. One Sunday night in May at around 10 pm, wealthy landowner George Walton and his family were surprised by a great pounding of stones upon the roof and sides of the house. Walton ran outside and the stones continued to fall, but it was impossible to tell who or what was throwing them.

Try our Love Horoscopes: Pisces and Sagittarius

Creative Tarot: The Five of Coins represents alienation. Either the two figures have been forced to leave the sanctuary, or they have been denied entry. The result is the same: they are exposed to the elements, vulnerable, and will have to survive on their own. This can be due to poverty, or perhaps because of a more personal form of rejection. This card marks a time of hardship and loneliness, and a time of feeling rejected by the people who have the power to protect you.

Portable Magic: There is some evidence that at its earliest beginnings the Tarot had not four, but six court cards in each suit, and that subsequently two of them were dropped. In a hand painted Italian Tarot deck dated around 1441, each suit contains three pairs of court cards: King Queen, Knight Dame, and Page Maid. This may have been part of the original design for the Tarot, but if so, it did not survive more than a few decades, and was quickly replaced with the four court cards in each suit with which we are familiar.

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Portable Magic: Two court significators may be overlaid within the circle for other reasons. For example, if the magician wishes to psychically communicate with another person, joining the significators within the circle is a workable method. Thoughts or images are easily projected from the magician to the other individual in this way, and the thoughts or emotions of the other person will find their way into the mind of the magician. This technique can be a good way for getting to know another person on a deep level. It is best used only with someone who is loved and trusted, since he or she is invited into the circle with the magician. When two court cards are overlaid on the altar, the identities of the magician and the other person who is the focus of the ritual become merged.