Major Acana Flashcards
The Fool stands for the innocence of the child. So he means openness and playful approach to life as well as the not-realising of danger and naivity. The openness and innocence of a child can be refreshing, making new experiences and mental suppleness possible. But these characteristics can become dangerous if they turn into starry-eyed credulity. Furthermore, the Fool`s playful approach to everything he meets can incline to irresponsibility and the disability to keep to engagements. On a more abstract level the Fool means the beginning, the starting point. He is the begin of life, the begin of the development of a human being. The card 0 The Fool is the starting point of a long journey of which the card XXI The World is the final point
The Magician symbolises the ability to influence the course of life, the world. He symbolises the power that is gained by knowledge and competency. Thus, he stands for constructiveness and initiative. The Magician means that mastership is there, that the own fate can be mastered actively.
Dangerous the Magician can be if he misuses his power, his knowledge and his charisma to manipulate others.
The High Priestess stands for intuition and (intuitive) wisdom, for empathy, forebodings, patience and understanding. She does not need to intervene at once when things don’t go according to her will or not well at the moment - she knows that everything happens in cycles and that bad things will pass and good things will come again and the other way around. The High Priestess can sit still and watch changes with compassion and serenity. She can devote herself - to others, to her feelings, to her inner voice. She strives to touch the world with her soul and become one with it.
In her exaggerated, perverted form the High Priestess can be a manipulating sourceress or fall into deep depression.
The Empress is the archetype “Mother”. To her meaning all that belongs which is associated with “Mother. She means growth, vibrance, furtility, physicalness, nature, the forces and cycles of nature, creative and spontaneous constructiveness, the “lioness-mother” who defends what and who she loves with superhuman strength and with her live, the unconditional love of the mother which does not have to be earned, and many positive aspects more. The Empress can be a warm-hearted, strong-willed, empathic and protective ruler. But she has negative aspects also. She can destroy as suddenly as she creates - nature does not only mean warm sunshine and soft rain but also destroying forces. Just as she sometimes loves unconditionally and without cause she sometimes does hate without cause. Her love cannot be gained by good deeds. The Empress can be possessive, suffocating, a sitting hen, a cruel tyrant with no sense for rationality.
It is important that she represents the “female” form of rulership - she is the female counterpart of the Emperor.
The Emperor is the archetype “Father”. To his meaning all that belongs which is associated with “Father”. He means law and order, duty, responsibility, rationality, self-confidence and rules. Rewards and punishments are dealt out according to assignable criteria. The good will of the Emperor can be earned with achievments. He represents stability, structure, discipline, organising ability and many positive aspects more. The Emperor can be a strong-willed, just, rational and assertive ruler. But there are some negative aspects also: rigidity, strictness, disability to show emotions, coldness of feeling, missing connection between mind and soul and/or mind and body, despotism and disability to be creative or spontaneous. The Emperor can be a cold, indifferent, merciless tyrant.
It is important that he represents the “male” form of rulership - he is the male counterpart of the Empress.
The High Priest represents the Holy, the Saint. He stands for the search of and the finding of meaning and truth, he stands for religiousness, believe and comprehension. Furthermore, he means deep trust, protection and good advice. He asks us to follow our calling and to trust in life/the Good/our Buddha Nature/God… He warns us against hypocrisy and a smug holier-than-thou attitude.
One of the many meanings of the Lovers is indeed the state of being in love of a new couple. But the main aspect of the card’s meaning is best described as the love of a couple who live with each other from the time of their comming together until their death, full of respect and loving care for each other. This is the love of two people who have decided to choose each other, and who have the will and the strength to keep to this choice even in difficult times. So this cards essentially stands for the full-hearted decision, for the unconditional “Yes”. In many cases this will indeed be the Yes to a romantic relationship, but it could also be the Yes to a child, to more responsibility in your job, to a spiritual path, to a house you want to buy… But always it is a Yes that implies the willingness to take responsibility for that which you have said “yes” to, the willingness to treat it with care and mindfulness, to protect it - to treat it with love. And all this means (at least where a relationship is concerned) that you fullheartedly agree to do this forever.
The Chariot symbolises the energetic, hopeful departure of the hero into the unknown, into adventure, into life. He sets off, all ready to assume a risk, to find the pot of honey at the end of the rainbow, to dig up the treasure, to kill the dragon, to rescue the princess. This is the attitude you need to get out of a gridlocked situation, out of a confining relationship. This is the attitude you need to make a true new beginning, to truly broaden your horizon.
The danger is, of course, to out of high spirits take risks which end fatally - like Phaeton who let the chariot of the Sun get out of control and crashed down to earth. Adventuresomeness and courage is not the same as improvidence and overestimating one’s capabilities.
The card Justice means, well: justice. Thereto belong besides fairness also objectivity, dispassion, the ability to keep a clear, cool head, discernment and reason. For me it is escpecially important that Justice means the ability to discriminate between good and evil, right and wrong, and not to be shy of making these discriminations. Only those who can make them are truly responsible for themselves and for others. Justice also means to have a feeling for appropriateness, for balanced distribution. To be just means to want and actively boost a balanced distribution even if this means the loss of privileges for yourself.
The card is problematic where it stands for exaggerated black-and-white thinking, the non-tolerance of ambiguity, premature sentences and the missing of clemency.
The Hermit is the archetype of the Old Wise Man. He retreats into quietness and silence, he practises abstinence, self-restraint and asceticism and looks for guidance in himself rather than others. He strives to be authentic, to know and live his will, to not be influenced by others. The Hermit lives with himself, in himself, and out of himself.
The Hermit can be problematic when his habit of retreating drives him into insulation, makes him afraid of people or bitter and hard, or when he begins to over-estimate his wisdom and becomes smug.
The Wheel of Fortune stands for an experience which every human being makes sooner or later: There are so many things we cannot influence. Blows of fate happen to us “just like that”, imperatives force us onto certain paths, lovingly and carefully prepared plans are baffled. We are happy, our needs are met, we feel safe - and suddenly the Wheel turns and we fall very deep.
The Wheel of fortune tells us to learn to deal with the insecurities and necessities, the ups and downs of life in an acitve, positive way. If we can see and treat defeats, blows of fate, and suffering, as a source of learning, of understanding, and of wisdom, we won’t feel at fate’s mercy anymore. If we are conscious that good times are a gift and that bad times might come soon, we will enjoy and cherish the good times much more. If we don’t learn to productively deal with the fateful, the coincidental, we will soon resign, develop fatalistic ideas and live in constant fear.
This card stands for the balance between the Virgin and the Lioness in us, the balance between body and mind, between intellect and passion, rationality and instinct. If our Virgin part, the mind, becomes too strong, we become passionless, cold and top-heavy. If the Lioness part takes prevalence, we fall into addictions and incline more and more towards self-destructive and aggressive behaviour. We must learn to let the Virgin keep the Lioness under gentle control, not letting her have her way all the time but nevertheless not suppressing her. The lioness must be cherished, and the Virgin must know when to let her bare her teeth. If we manage this, we have inexhaustible energy and strength for everything, we are passionate, both with body and mind present at what we are doing, and we have charisma and assertiveness.
The Hanged Man is the archetype of the Prisoner or of the Prison or of the Victim. He stands for stagnation, for being gridlocked, for being passive and in the mercy of an oppressive situation; he can mean illness and abandonment. The positive side of the Hanged Man is that forced deadlocks, illnesses and abandonment can lead to completely new views - even new world outlooks. Many people tell that just before their change of life to the good they experienced an extremely painful phase of deadlock, of stagnation. So the Hanged Man can mean that it is necessary to “turn round”, to “turn upside down” - to radically change one’s views and ways of living. Else we will remain hanging, being caught and suffering.
I know it probably sounds strange, but: Death is one of my favourite cards. For if you have learned to let go, to not try to hold on to that which is already passing, then you will realise that the painful process of something’s ending can be a great relief and also the begin of something new and beautiful. The card does not mean that you or a loved one will die. Of course: if your question was about the mortal illness of someone you know, the card can indicate that you should look into the subject of death and dying. But the main meaning of Death is the natural end of something. This can be the end of a life; but mostly it will be the end of a long-cherished but wrong conviction, the end of a way of life or of a phase of life, the end of a friendship or a relationship, or even the end of an addiction. The important thing is that this end is a natural end - there is no way to avoid it. You could probably try to avoid it, but then you’d soon begin to feel not-alive and numbed. If you want to be reborn you have to die first. This is of course a painful and frightening process. But only those who go through it all the way will be able to begin something which is truly new.
The most important meaning of Temperance for me is balance. Balance in your way of life, in your emotions, in the way you treat your body, in dealing with others, in your job, in love - balance in all the spheres of your life. The card also stands for serenity, peace of mind and humility. Temperance does not know excess, exaggeration, bragging or aggression. She has no need for them: she is filled with peace and with contentedness with what the moment has to offer.