This page is part of your health 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 Judgment or Rejuvenation specifically try Judgment or Rejuvenation Golden Tarot Meaning. Love, Luck and Light to all!
Well-Being, Physical Health Or Mental Health:
This is an important time to let go of the past and any wrongs that you perceive were done to you, particularly if you are dealing with chronic medical issues. Letting go of your need to be right will go a long way toward helping you to feel better. Besides, if someone did you wrong, then they did wrong, and you don’t have to stay angry at them to prove that they were wrong. Think positively.
Card Meanings: Snap Judgments, Rejuvenation, Awakening, Self-Evaluation, Decisiveness, Composure, Apportioning Blame, Rebirth, Homesickness, Judgment, Atonement, Judgment, Improvement, Promotion, Renewal
Judgment can be a card about jumping to conclusions, decisions and of course, judgments, which are too hastily made. If you are prone to such things, this is a clear signal to slow down and give things more thought and to give people ‘more chances.’ This can also be a time of fundamental spiritual awakening.
This reading is part of a health tarot reading using the Judgment or Rejuvenation 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: Christian abbess who experienced religious visions after years of contemplation in a Benedictine convent. In spite of poor health Hildegard was an incredibly strong woman, founding two convents, getting involved in ecclesiastical politics, travelling extensively and writing nine books as well as numerous poems, songs and plays.
Try our Love Horoscopes: Virgo and Cancer Match
Complete Book of Tarot: Crowley/GD: Queen of the Thrones of the Waters. Dreamy, receptive, tranquil, reflective, imaginative, kind, poetic, unruffled, coquettish, prone to fantasy. The traits displayed depend on the dignity of the card.
Portable Magic: can put their two significator tarot cards together in readiness, but you should place them on the altar individually, one atop the other, before placing your own significator. Generally speaking, the last card placed in a ritual layout will be the significator on the triangle, representing the person at whom the ritual is directed; or, if there is no significator used on the triangle, the last card will be the uppermost realizer.
- Feel free to drop us a line if you looked for Judgment or Rejuvenation Golden Health Tarot Reading and you don’t see what you want. We would be glad to help. In the meantime checkout Angel of Harmony.
Tarot Triumphs: So in this interpretation of the Hanged Man, we see a figure who chooses to be upside-down and has trained himself to do so. Children love to look at the world the other way up; as a little girl, I used to hang head down off my bed, getting a vivid new perspective of the lino and the fluff balls lying beneath. I’ve also seen kittens playing similar games. In this light, the main meaning of the card becomes that of skill and balance, and it indicates a willingness to let the usual viewpoint fall away and enter the world of topsy-turvy. The Hanged Man frees himself from conventions. He is alsobut not historically, perhaps, in terms of Tarotthe shaman on a vision quest, relinquishing normality to receive gifts of prophecy and healing. This is similar to the description of the ordeal that the Norse god Odin underwent, hanging upside-down from the sacred world tree for nine days and nights, sacrificing himself in order to acquire divine knowledge. Ideas of acrobat and shaman do combine well here, for both are entrusting themselves to a reversal. The acrobat must trust his training and the strength of the rope. The shaman goes willingly into the unknown, ready to be shaped by what he encounters there.