Understanding the Tarot Deck
A standard tarot deck contains 78 cards divided into two groups: the Major Arcana and the Minor Arcana. Together they form a complete symbolic system that reflects every aspect of human experience — from spiritual awakenings to everyday situations.
Preparing for a Reading
The quality of a tarot reading depends greatly on your inner state. Cards reflect your energy, so approaching a reading with clarity and intention produces the most meaningful results.
- 1 Find a quiet space. Remove distractions. Dim lighting, candles, or soft music can help shift your mindset into a reflective state.
- 2 Form a clear question. Open-ended questions work best: "What do I need to know about..." or "What energy surrounds..." rather than simple yes/no questions.
- 3 Hold the question in mind. Focus on it as you handle the deck. The intention you set acts as a guide for the cards that surface.
- 4 Ground yourself. Take a few slow breaths before you begin. A calm, centred state connects you more deeply to the reading.
Shuffling the Cards
Shuffling is how your energy enters the deck. There is no single correct technique — what matters is that you are present and intentional throughout the process.
- 1 Overhand shuffle. Transfer cards from one hand to the other in small packets. Gentle and intuitive — a good choice for beginners.
- 2 Riffle shuffle. Split the deck and interleave the halves. Thorough and random, though it can bend cards over time.
- 3 Spreading on a surface. Spread all cards face-down and swirl them together with your hands, then reassemble. Highly random and deeply personal.
- 4 Stop when it feels right. There is no set number of shuffles. Stop when your intuition says the cards are ready — or when a card falls out, which many readers treat as a message.
Drawing Your Cards
Once shuffled, cut the deck or simply draw from the top — both are valid. How many cards you draw depends on the spread you choose.
- 1 One-card draw. Perfect for a daily message or a simple yes/no reading. Pull a single card and sit with its meaning.
- 2 Three-card spread. The most common beginner spread: Past · Present · Future, or Situation · Action · Outcome. Three positions, one clear narrative.
- 3 Celtic Cross. A classic 10-card spread covering the situation, obstacles, past influences, hopes, fears, and outcome. Best used for complex questions.
- 4 Place each card face down first. Lay all cards in their positions before flipping any. Reveal them one by one to build the story gradually.
Upright and Reversed Cards
A card drawn upside-down (reversed) carries a modified meaning. Many readers work with reversals; others read every card upright — both approaches are perfectly valid.
The Four Suits of the Minor Arcana
Each suit governs a domain of life and corresponds to one of the four classical elements. Recognising a suit at a glance tells you the broad territory of the card before reading its specific meaning.
Tips for Beginners
Reading tarot is a practice, not a performance. Give yourself permission to learn gradually.
- Pull one card each morning and journal what comes to mind. Over time patterns emerge and your intuition deepens.
- Trust your first impression. Before reaching for a guidebook, notice what you feel when the card appears. That reaction is data.
- Start with the Major Arcana only. Limit your deck to 22 cards while learning their archetypes, then introduce the suits one by one.
- Avoid reading for the same question twice in one session. If a card's message is unclear, sit with it rather than reshuffling for a different answer.
- Context shapes meaning. A "difficult" card like The Tower or The Devil is not a bad omen — it simply marks an area that needs attention or honest reflection.
- Tarot is a tool for self-reflection, not fortune-telling. The cards show possibilities and energies — the future remains in your hands.
Explore all 78 cards in depth, or try a spread and draw your first cards right now.