This page is part of your spiritual 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 Six of Cups specifically try The Six of Cups Golden Tarot Meaning. Love, Luck and Light to all!
Faith, Spirituality Or Psychic Progression:
Ritual of any kind can be helpful to you spiritually now. You may find beauty and meaning in re-creating some of the spiritual rituals that you knew as a child; this does not mean that you must go back to your earliest spiritual traditions and follow them exactly, updating and re-inventing your old traditions will serve you very well at this time.
Card Meanings: Past Influences, Nostalgia, Goodwill, Simplicity, Family, Good Memories, Gifts, Childishness, Sharing, Homesickness, Childhood Issues, Reunions, Protection, Creativity, Playfulness, Yearning, Children, Charity, Childhood Memories, Immaturity, Happiness, Innocence, Acquaintance, Support, Kindness, Youthfulness
The Six of Cups is often a card about nostalgia; looking back on how things ‘used’ to be. It can be (but is not always) connected with children or childhood.
This reading is part of a spiritual tarot reading using the The Six of Cups 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
Portable Magic: It is only in the past few decades that the origin and history of the Tarot have been known with any degree of assurance. Prior to that time, the wildest rumours circulated in books and among the papers of esoteric organizations. The Tarot was said to be an invention of the Egyptians, or the Hebrews, or the Gypsies. It was said to come from the Middle East, China, or India, or even prehistoric America. It was said to be the inspired teaching of spiritual masters set to watch over and guide the progress of humanity.
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Reversed Cards: The Six of Cups even in the upright position can have an uneasy feel to it. The larger boy could be seen as trying to intimidate the smaller girl. Oftentimes this aspect of the card is overlooked. Not here in the shadow aspect. Here we are looking to see how someone is being emotionally played or manipulated. Sixes are about relationships and the power struggles these relationships represent. In the shadow aspect of the Six of Cups you are being asked to explore the power plays in your own relationships. Are you the one who likes to be in control, or do you feel like someone is always trying to bring you down and use your emotions against you? Not everything is as it seems when the Six of Cups shows up in the shadow aspect.
Portable Magic: The best example is the set of cards known as the Tarocchi of Mantegna, after the name of the man who was at one time believed to be the artist, Andrea Mantegna of Padua. The actual artist remains unknown, although it may have been Parrasio Michele of Ferrara (Kaplan, The Encyclopaedia of Tarot, vol. 1 , 3 5 ) . The Mantegna pack is thought to have been engraved around 1470, decades after the invention of the Tarot, and the cards are too large and thin to have been used for gaming, but it shows the tradition of placing symbolic images on cards for the purpose of memorization or instruction that
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Portable Magic: The limitations of this system of assignment are obvious. Not all men with fair hair and blue eyes have the same personality. Some are timid while others are bold. Some are enterprising and others lazy. Some are kind and others malicious. Yet only one human personality type correctly matches the King of Cups. Aleister Crowley completely did away with the assignment of significators by physical indicators. Instead, he relied on personality profiles, and made no mention of hair and eye color in his descriptions of the human types linked to the court cards. Under Crowley’s revised method of assignment, a mature man who is easy going, graceful, and sensitive would receive the King of Cups as his significator no matter what he might look like, whether he was a blond Norwegian or a black Moroccan. Crowley did not change the personality types of the court cards from those of the Golden Dawn; he merely omitted the physical indicators linked to the court cards.