02-The Priestess Upright Thoth Love Tarot Reading

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

Romance, Love Or Relationships:

This can be a magical, mystical time for love for anyone interested in love. If you are a woman, you may well find people literally throwing themselves at you. The problem is that you will attract both the good and the bad and it’s not always easy to tell which is which! You have the power of femininity at your disposal at this moment in time and at first glance that may seem great, but there is a caveat. Don’t abuse that power or it may backfire on you. Use it wisely – it’s potent! If you date women, you could well be interested in a woman who is distant and unapproachable and it may be that that is the way she will stay. Trust your instincts to let you know when you are chasing the unattainable.

Card Meanings: Impatience, Virtue, Desirability, Purity, Learning, Spirituality, Creativity, Mystery, Wisdom, Intuition, Thirst For Knowledge, Knowledge, Unattainability, Higher Power, Sensuality, Subconscious

The Priestess is a very spiritual card – often with sexual overtones. It can mean that you are in a phase where you are going to be much more physically attractive to others. She is tied to the moon, to femininity, and to inspiration.

This reading is part of a love tarot reading using the The Priestess using cards from the with the Thoth 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

Complete Book of Tarot
Book Details
Complete Book of Tarot: Hebrew letter: Teth or Theth (a clay or wicker basket; a Hebrew word meaning to surround, contain, store, catch, intertwine, coil, knot together, interweave; also mud or clay, and a snake or serpent). The coiling serpent is suggestive of the intertwining of bodies in sexual intercourse. The Hebrew letter Teth (basket) and this card’s association with human lust bring to mind the nursery rhyme, ‘A-tisket a-tasket, a green and yellow basket, I wrote a letter to my love and on the way I dropped it … a little boy he picked it up and put it in his pocket.’

Try our Love Horoscopes: Sagittarius and Sagittarius

Complete Book of Tarot: Long before the tarot existed, the people of the Mediterranean sought guidance from the Oracle at Delphi. Generals of armies and heads of state would not take major decisions without first consulting the Oracle, Apollo’s representative on Earth. In ancient Greece, the god Apollo had the power to foresee the future, an ability he bestowed upon the priestess of the temple at Delphi.

Elements of the Psychic World: Clay models of livers dating from around 2000 BC have been found. They are divided into sections and bear markings and inscriptions. The practice evolved from Babylonian ritual and was handed down to the Greeks and Romans, who employed an official called the haruspex to oversee the ritual. The idea behind the practice was that when an animal, and in some cases a human, was sacrificed to a deity, the god or goddess would absorb the essence of the animal and a link was created back to the priest or priestess. When the animal was opened up they were looking into a god’s mind and could therefore interpret the future or answer a question based on the size, shape and appearance of the entrails. Haruspicy is still practised today in areas of Africa, Borneo and Southeast Asia and forms part of

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Elements of the Psychic World: Clay models of livers dating from around 2000 BC have been found. They are divided into sections and bear markings and inscriptions. The practice evolved from Babylonian ritual and was handed down to the Greeks and Romans, who employed an official called the haruspex to oversee the ritual. The idea behind the practice was that when an animal, and in some cases a human, was sacrificed to a deity, the god or goddess would absorb the essence of the animal and a link was created back to the priest or priestess. When the animal was opened up they were looking into a god’s mind and could therefore interpret the future or answer a question based on the size, shape and appearance of the entrails. Haruspicy is still practised today in areas of Africa, Borneo and Southeast Asia and forms part of