Best divination books according to redditors

We found 773 Reddit comments discussing the best divination books. We ranked the 355 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Subcategories:

Crystal divination books
Fortune telling books
Graphology books
Numerology books
Palmistry books
Prophecies books
Rune divination books
Tarot books

Top Reddit comments about Divination:

u/DruidofRavens · 64 pointsr/occult

https://www.amazon.com/Taking-Up-Runes-Complete-Divination/dp/1578633257

This is the best guide to runes currently on the market. It's written by a Heathen (Norse polytheist) priestess and witch who specializes in rune work. Even some of the more conservative Heathens who won't variate from the lore recommend it. The book is both a guide to divination and rune magic all in one.

u/New_Ketone · 30 pointsr/TumblrInAction

This mirrors the argument of "if you eat meat, you believe in oppressing women." I had a friend who had a book about feminism and vegetarianism, called The Sexual Politics of Meat. I actually did think the book was interesting, and it made some interesting points about the weirdly sexual ways in which meat products could be advertised, as well as certain cultural practices surrounding the consumption of meat (the book was chocked full of drawings of "sexy" cuts of pork, etc, and brought up how men and women in certain scoieties were proscribed from consuming certain parts of animals).

But, like a lot of academic work, the author veered off into completely beyond reasonable territory, conflating meat eating in and of itself with the oppression of women.

I actually do think that there are arguments against our food system and it's heavy reliance on meat (and dairy, and eggs). The amount of water and grain that has to go into feeding these billions of animals is putting a great deal of strain on our resources. Seven billion people cannot consume lots of steak and ham and chicken.

u/DarkxCrackerx · 16 pointsr/Anarchy101

The idea is that animals are sentient beings capable of pain and are self aware and thus should be included in the organizing of society along anti hierarchial lines and should also be given at least basic respect such as not being enslaved. exploited, killed or being the property of another needlessly. This is split within anarchism some viewing it as a logically consisent step others not so much. Some short good readings are animal liberation and social revolution by Brian Dominick as well as many other essays and zines that are easy to find. For more indepth long book i would suggest

Making a Killing the Political Economy of animal rights http://nkatz.org/animaliam/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Bob-Torres-Making-A-Killing-The-Political-Economy-of-Animal-Rights-2007-1904859674.pdf

The Sexual Politics of Meat: A Feminist-vegetarian Critical Theory- http://www.amazon.com/The-Sexual-Politics-Meat-Feminist-vegetarian/dp/1441173285

For a whole bunch of free ebooks try these two torrents

https://onebigtorrent.org/torrents/23299/Animal-Rights-Animal-Ethics--eBook-Collection--1-0-Oct-2013--Various-Authors--104-Books

and

https://onebigtorrent.org/torrents/23446/Animal-Rights-Animal-Ethics--eBook-Collection--2-0-Jan-2014

With those you should find books on any subject related to animal rights you could ask most unfortunatly not with a anti capitalist perspective but most easily fitting along with a anarchist worldview

Now to answer your specific questions

What are we allowed to do to them and under what circumstances?

I view anything that doesnt exploit them , murder them, treat them as property etc... as acceptable so for example your current relationship with your dog can probably stay although we have to reexamine the concept of ownership

Can we use them for labor in any circumstances?

Directly I dont think so although there are some animals such as horses where as long as they are allowed free roaming i see no problem with riding again as long as it follows the criteria i see no problem

Is there anything that could justify eating them/their flesh?

If there was no choice either eating them or dying or starvation I think it would be justified otherwise it should be avoided at all costs

Will anarchist society neccesarily have to be vegan (assuming no in-vitro stuff has been invented) in order to be morally consistent?

Again this is a split within the anarchist movement but I would say yes as I see no reason being less intellegent should exclude non human animals from critics of hierarchies

Can animals really consent to anything at all?

Animals can be said to consent to some things even though they cant communicate with langauge they can in other ways and it can be obvoius when an animal is being pleased with its circustances and when they are not even though they dont vocally communicate they still get their opinions out in other ways

I hope I helped and feel free to ask any more questions you have

u/Jparsner · 15 pointsr/Glitch_in_the_Matrix

You should have pried up the wood of the stairs... it may have slipped through and ended up inside the stairs. Seriously.

David Wilcock talks about this in his book; Source Field Investigations

The theory is well explained in his book but I'll attempt to sum up as quickly as possible. All atoms are essentially vibrating at very near the speed of light (as we perceive it for the third density state) and when they speed up just a little bit, they transition into time/space rather than space/time.

He talks about how many times in tornadoes, they will find objects embedded deep into other objects but not with the normal signature trace of an impact... best example, one researcher finding a clover leaf that had been found pushed into a stucco wall, as if the wall had become soft and spongy to allow it to slip in without any damage to the leaf.

He talks of many other examples; wooden boards or props going through walls without breaking, pieces of straw embedded into concrete, all sorts of weird things were matter seems to blend into one another.

It's similar to some aspects of the Philadelphia Experiment with the U.S.S. Eldridge... they talk about the matter itself become soft/spongy/dematerializing and then people getting stuck within the walls.

His theory is that the vortex energy from the tornado excites the molecular makeup and causes some of the atoms to shift from space/time to time/space; it loses the solidity and becomes soft and spongy. In this respect, a concrete block suddenly allows objects to pierce it without breaking... once the atoms settle back down, the object is now embedded within the concrete.

Might have been an error in the sense of the energy of the drop coincided with a small vortex of energy already in progress on the stairs... mouse slipped through and is quite literally under the stairs somewhere.

Or there was no mouse to begin with... and the glitch is that you and your mom thought all that time that you had a mouse when in fact, you never did! That's more extreme... but has to be considered as well hah.

u/jooleeyuuhh · 15 pointsr/tarot

It's the "thoth" tarot. I'm loving this autocorrect though lol

Thoth Tarot Deck https://www.amazon.com/dp/1572815108/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_OoL0DbFGQWQEZ

u/putainsdetoiles · 13 pointsr/wallstreetbets
u/Blemish · 12 pointsr/rage

I kid you not

The Sexual Politics of Meat: A Feminist-vegetarian Critical Theory, 20th Anniversary Edition


This book (another bestseller) is in its 20th anniversary. Amazon has a nice summary along with reader comments:

>Many cultures equate meat-eating with virility, and in some societies women offer men the "best" (i.e., bloodiest) food at the expense of their own nutritional needs. Building upon these observations, feminist activist Adams detects intimate links between the slaughter of animals and violence directed against women


Also look at this quote:

http://djinaunchained.tumblr.com/image/48863264552


Seriously, one CANNOT SIMPLY MAKE THIS SHIT UP !

u/erl_queen · 10 pointsr/pagan

Many people I know who seriously work with the runes will periodically stain them with their own blood as an offering. The runes are considered to be independent spirits by many, rather than just a divination "tool" and should be treated very respectfully and cautiously. Remember that they are embedded in a cultural context and it's important to understand Heathen cosmology and theology properly to work with them. A few recommended resources: this book, this one and this site.

u/oneofyourFrenchgrrls · 9 pointsr/tarot

this is a good book about working with the Thoth tarot

u/Adventureous · 9 pointsr/AskWomen

More or less, yes. There are a lot of great resources out there. I did have a friend who read them, but even though she got me into them, I really taught myself.

First, discard any and all nonsense about "you have to be gifted your deck" or "you have to bury your old deck in the ground." It's bull, really. A lot of Tarot "myths" like that are, mostly born from traditions passed down, I imagine. But you can absolutely buy your own deck, and used decks too. It's a great way to see if you like a style of deck without dropping a ton of money for nothing.

Some people recommend never reading for yourself, while others swear that they can only read themselves. In reality? Read for whoever you want.

The main thing is to realize that Tarot really is what you make of it. So many people have so many ideas of what it is, from communing with spirits/collective unconscious/gods, to psychology and Jungian archetypes, and I don't think any one way is right or wrong. Tarot is Tarot, whatever that means to you.

There are also a lot of decks out there. "Tarot" isn't limited to just Tarot; there's actually a lot of different types of cartomancy out there, like Lenormand and Oracle cards. I don't know Lenormand myself, and am only beginning on working with an Oracle deck.

And then you have different types of Tarot itself: Thoth Tarot decks and similar ones, mostly "invented" by Aleister Crowley; Rider-Waite/Rider-Waite-Smith decks, sometimes called RWS, commissioned by the Order of the Golden Dawn; historical decks, based off the tarrochi card game popular in the Renaissance; and some decks just barely following a Tarot deck and pretty much created by the author. None of them are better than another, it's all just based off of what you like and what you feel drawn to/comfortable with.

For good or for bad, there are many, many resources out there. Always critically examine what you're reading from.

Aecletic Tarot is a good first stop. Not only does it have listings of decks, from popular to rare, with pictures and sometimes reviews, but it has a lively forum section where you can find just about anything related to Tarot there.

Biddy Tarot is a site I have used in the past. Careful, though, it seems that they have been promoting their online Tarot course more and more. I've never taken it, so I can't say whether its bad or good, but I always feel a little wary about Tarot courses. I feel like you never know what kind of instructor you'd get -- there are some people out there who are a little too... "fluffy bunny" as it can be said at times. That is to say: no scholarship or scholarship based on poorly-researched books, often promoting an unbalanced and inaccurate worldview on the Roma people or Wiccans or anything else. I digress: if you stick to the free parts of the site with card meanings and spreads, its pretty good, and generally the first place I hit when I can't quite get the feel of a card.

Next, there's always reddit's very own /r/tarot. It's not terribly active, but there's good people there. Ask questions, read what is posted, and you can learn a lot. Everyone has different opinions, though, so keep that in mind. And plenty of people trade free readings there, so it's a good place to practice as well!

There are some wonderful Youtube channels out there as well. I'd like to link you this one in particular, because it's a great place to start learning how to discern sources. I also love Rose from The Cackling Moon, and she has a great Tumblr blog that could point you to a ton of good diviners there as well.

As for actual books, I had some around here, but its been so long since I read them that I don't know where they've gotten to. I know one was Tarot for Dummies, which was okay for a start. The other was Complete Book of Tarot Spreads, which I'd peg at intermediate. (That's probably the level I'm on myself). One I want but have yet to get is Seventy-Eight Degrees of Wisdom by Rachel Pollack. Again, Aecletic Tarot has a good list going, and you can always ask /r/tarot for their favorite books as well.

A few tips for getting your first deck:

  • As I said above, there are so many out there, so pick one you like the best. That said, most resources out there are for Rider-Waite-Smith decks and their clones, so you might find that its easier to start out with in that. But there are a lot of varieties out there, so find a pretty one that draws you in. You'll be spending a long time studying them. For that matter, if you find one and don't "click," try another. I've had several different decks over the year, including one that I really ended up hating. I have one of my original RWS decks that I mainly read with, and it suits me just fine even after all these years.

  • The Little White Book (often referred to affectionately as LWB) is good for starting out, but can seriously hold you back. It's just simple keywords and phrases that can be associated with the cards, but honestly you'll find that there's so much more than what can be expressed in a few words, especially when you take in a whole context of a spread.

  • Conversely, don't be afraid to reach for resources when you do a reading. Seriously, don't put pressure on yourself to memorize all 78 card's meanings. Sometimes going through a couple different sources can a meaning stand out to you, especially when you start looking at the card less individually and more in combinations.

  • Keep a journal. Write down your spreads and your interpretations of them. Not only will you be able to look back and see what you found was right, but you'll find common themes in certain cards or card combinations.

  • Cards have different symbolism for different people. Sure, they may have general themes, such as The Tower being a card of disaster or sudden change, but we can all have an opinion or feeling of a card all our own. I highly recommend writing your thoughts on different cards down in your journal too: what jumps out at you, what you didn't notice at first glance, how the card makes you feel. Eventually, you'll impart your own meanings onto them.

  • Don't be afraid of certain cards, though. Media likes to play up cards like Death or The Devil, but they aren't evil or scary, and they don't mean your going to die or get possessed by the devil or anything. Generally, the meanings are symbolic: Death is an ending (or sometimes, a new beginning), and the Devil can mean you let your passions and vices control you.

  • No matter what they cards say, they are changeable. In fact, often the point of Tarot reading is to see where you are now and if you don't do anything, where you'll end up. It's generally a tool for great self-reflection more than predicting anything concrete in the future, I've found.

  • After you've been reading for a while and shuffling your deck (regular card shuffling is okay, but the method doesn't really matter as long as they're shuffled well) and you find it getting difficult to read the cards, try putting them in "order" like it was freshly out of the box. It's kind of a reset button. I don't know if its psychological or "magical" but it works for me. There's lots of ways to "cleanse" a deck, though, so do what you feel is best.

  • This one may be a tad advanced, but I feel like I should say something on it: research Tarot ethics. This is a big one when you start reading for other people. Ask yourself: what kind of questions would you be comfortable answering to the best of your ability? Generally, most readers avoid medical questions (including pregnancy-related) and legal ones, and many avoid reading about third parties without permission out of respect. And if there's a less than pleasant implication in the cards, how would you handle that? Would you tell the truth? What would you do if they reacted negatively? What would happen if they disregard it, it came to pass, and blamed you? It's a lot to consider. If you just read for yourself, obviously that's not a big deal, but keep it in mind if you ever read for someone else.

    Last but not least, I have to comment on your username... I love pugs! Sadly, the last pug in the family, my grandma's old guy, was put down tonight. I'm going to miss him, but it was his time to go to rest.

    Good luck with your journey into Tarot. I hope it pans out well for you, and that I was in some way helpful :)
u/lymantriidae_ · 9 pointsr/tarot

The Tarot is an entire spiritual path in itself, a superb tool to understand your sub-conscious and the world around you.

Can I suggest you look at Meditations on the Tarot by Anonymous, and, [The Tarot: A Key to the Wisdom of the Ages] (http://www.amazon.com/The-Tarot-Key-Wisdom-Ages/dp/1585424919) by Paul Foster Case.

Both will give you an enormous amount of wisdom. None of them are incompatible with your faith, in fact will reinforce and broaden it.

u/duckduck_goose · 8 pointsr/ShitRedditSays

Has anyone actually read the Sexual Politics of Meat A Feminist-vegetarian Critical Theory. It's super interesting though I haven't read it in a decade now. It was my vegan - feminist primer in the 1990s. I even wrote a huge feminist-vegan zine article about how abstaining from eating meat is a feminist political act using the book as a resource.

u/strums · 7 pointsr/tarot

I don’t know if it’s actually intended for communicating with the dead, but I have a Santa Muerte deck and it’s beautiful! The book comes with “Advice from the dead” with every card.

Here’s the link:

Santa Muerte Tarot Deck: Book of the Dead https://www.amazon.com/dp/0738754382/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_C1pGDb7QKCWVJ

u/RomanOrgy69 · 7 pointsr/occult

I always recommend to start with reading to develop an understanding before you completely dive in.

My favorite books for beginners are:

Liber Al vel Legis/Book the Law by Aleister Crowley - Book Crowley wrote in 1904 in Cairo. It contains, in my own opinion, the most supreme occult philosophy and theology.

Liber ABA/Book 4 by Aleister Crowley - Book written by Crowley that covers everything you may wish to know, from yoga to meditation to working tools to ritual to magick techniques.

The Mystical Qabalah by Dion Fortune - Arguably the most comprehensive and most easily understood on the qabalah to have ever been written.

The Book of Thoth by Aleister Crowley - Explanation of the tarot.

Circles of Power by John Michael Greer - An excellent guide to the hermetic magickal practices of the Golden Dawn.

Enochian Magick in Theory along with Enochian Magick in Practice - Great guides on one of the most popular systems of magick.

The Mystical and Magical System of the A .'. A .'. - Book on the methods of achieving enlightenment in the system utilized by the A .'. A .'.

u/tux68 · 7 pointsr/santashelpers

Well this idea is not 100% risk free, but would be something unique... a deck of tarot cards and a lil booklet on how to tell fortunes can be had for around $20 []. They're interesting to look at even if she doesn't ever try to tell a fortune with them. Of course, you don't really want her to take it too seriously, so maybe a lighthearted card would set the right tone.

Dunno. Either way hope you find something she's happy with.




[
] https://www.amazon.com/Rider-Tarot-Arthur-Edward-Waite/dp/091386613X

u/gregtwelve · 7 pointsr/occult

Rider-Waite is a good beginner deck.

My preference (especially awesome if you want a deck LOADED with rich symbology) is The Hermetic Tarot by Godfrey Dowson

IMHO this desk is also one of the greatest if you are interested in the relationship with the Tree of Life.

u/000000016a · 7 pointsr/vegan

Gary Yourofsky -https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=es6U00LMmC4

All My Heroes Still Wear Masks - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eDuBslRfXxg

McLibel - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sBpbaVJo9gE

Earthlings - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PCU1WUQXMbs

Lucent - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KArL5YjaL5U

SPECIESISM: THE MOVIE - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eTggRpTzcA0

OpenDoor - The Vegan Society 1976 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VlTYjaQLy2o

A.L.F. Behind the Mask: The Story Of The People Who Risk Everything To Save Animals - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FfKXq9BL29o

Vegecated - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=19qSsUI79Ro

Sharkwater - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CI1YBCMqbik

The Cove - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gp8-nAfsjCk

Paul Watson:The Whale Warrior-A Pirate for the Sea - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1nzbTsrOUxw

Bold Native (click watch film to see it for free) - http://boldnative.com

I AM AN ANIMAL - The Story of Ingrid Newkirk and PETA - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vx3VXmav0rk

Angels of Mercy - Animal Liberation Front - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5SooKjnaU4c

The Paw Project - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yihVLIkVRzo

Your Mommy Kills Animals - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x-wMecABC84

Meat The Truth - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hHCCFjB8M48

Vanishing Of The Bees - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u-JjQH_HUHQ

At the Edge of the World - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1286499/

Project Nim - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1814836/

Virunga - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt3455224/

The Elephant in the Living Room - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1111313/

An Apology to Elephants - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2836524/

Blackfish - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2545118/

Forks Over Knives - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1567233/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1

The Ghosts in Our Machine - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2654562/?ref_=tt_rec_tt

Food INC - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1286537/?ref_=tt_rec_tt

Emptying the Skies - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt3302498/

Skin Trade - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1576702/

Of Dogs and Men - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt4460258/

Revolution - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2350608/

Unity - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2049636/

Peaceable Kingdom - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0435715/


Cowspiracy: The Sustainability Secret http://www.imdb.com/title/tt3302820/

Eating Animals - Jonathan Safran Foer - http://a2zkaraokeshop.com/onlinepdfbooks/5may27.pdf

Consider The Lobster - David Foster Wallace - http://www.columbia.edu/~col8/lobsterarticle.pdf

Animal Liberation and Social Revolution - Brian A. Dominick -http://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/brian-a-dominick-animal-liberation-and-social-revolution.pdf

VEGANARCHY - Anti-Speciesist Warfare and Direct Action - https://animalliberationpressoffice.org/publications%20online/VEGANARCHY-Anti-Speciesist-Warfare-and-Direct-Action.pdf

Animals - The Hidden Victims Of War - http://www.animalaid.org.uk/images/pdf/booklets/war.pdf

Animal Liberation - Peter Singer - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_Liberation_(book)

The Sexual Politics of Meat: A Feminist-vegetarian Critical Theory - Carol J. Adams - http://www.amazon.com/The-Sexual-Politics-Meat-Feminist-vegetarian/dp/1441173285

Check Your Beer / Wine / Liquor - http://www.barnivore.com

Locate Animal Enterprises Near You - http://www.finalnail.com

Download Cruelty-Cutter to scan an item and have an immediate response about its animal testing status - http://cruelty-cutter.org

Read about the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_Enterprise_Terrorism_Act

Read about Ag-gag laws - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ag-gag

u/mandjob · 7 pointsr/tarotpractice

sure. i'll help you out. if you or your parents have an amazon account, make a wish list. then send me the link so i can buy you the gift through my account.

https://www.wikihow.com/Create-an-Amazon-Wishlist

i'll send you the deck of your choice and i won't need to know your address or anything. my treat to encourage the hobby :)

​

if you need some inspiration, here are some of my favorites:

the wild unknown

ethereal visions

the fountain

​

tbh though, i own about ... 30 or so tarot decks at this point and i'd guess about 25 of them i've purchased for myself, haha. i pick and choose what tarot "rules" to follow since i believe the cards will tell me what they will tell me no matter what :)

u/cedriczirtacic · 7 pointsr/tarot

Seventy-Eight Degrees of Wisdom by Rachel Pollack has been very useful to me as I'm still learning: https://www.amazon.com/Seventy-Eight-Degrees-Wisdom-Book-Tarot/dp/1578634083

u/thestarschasethesun · 6 pointsr/tarot

"Modern" is a pretty broad category -- it would help to know more about what kind of art style you're looking for. For example, are you hoping for something that's more minimalist, or detailed? colorful, or monochrome? digitally drawn, or painted? focused on figures, or more inventive with imagery?

That said, here are some decks in a pretty wide variety of styles that come to mind when I think "modern art." I personally own the first six decks on this list and can vouch that I like them; the rest I don't own but I know other people like them.

u/faeground · 6 pointsr/tarot

The Easiest Way to Learn the Tarot - Ever!! by Dusty White is an awesome book that helps a lot of people. I think most people shuffle the deck between each use, but it's entirely up to you. You can shuffle as many times as you like, lay down as many cards as you like (1 card readings are a thing too). It's really up to you!

As for tips, I would practice with the cards without looking up the meanings just yet. Your own interpretations of the cards will always be most accurate for you, and if you learn the textbook meanings first it's hard to shake those as a beginner when you're trying to intuitively read them at the same time. I would maybe even consider writing down what the cards mean to you and then you can start learning textbook meanings and see how you feel about them. Tarot journaling is a great way to do it too, just writing down everything you see in each card one at a time.

A good exercise is to pull 3 cards and read them like a story from one side to the next, then flip those around and read them in different orders. You can also read them in a simple 3 card spread of your choosing, like Past-Present-Future or Me-Them-Us, etc.

Also, do readings for everything as practice. Do a spread each morning for the coming day, at night, ask about your dreams, ask about school, work, your friends, etc. The more you practice, the better you'll get and the more you'll understand what the cards are trying to tell you.

Let me know if you have any more questions! :)

u/servant_of_the_wolf · 6 pointsr/tarot

You might consider Understanding Aleister Crowley's Thoth Tarot by Lon Milo DuQuette.

Edit: formatting

u/TryUsingScience · 6 pointsr/asatru

Diana Paxson's Taking Up the Runes is very well-regarded by almost everyone.

And if I can sneak in a bit of self-promotion, while learning the runes myself (not that I'll ever be done learning) I created a playing card deck with runes, images, and meanings on them. It's helped some of my friends learn as well. It's mostly based on the meanings given in Taking Up the Runes, plus a little bit of extra I've picked up here and there.

u/CinnamonSpiceBlend · 5 pointsr/tarot

Santa Muerte Tarot Deck: Book of the Dead https://www.amazon.com/dp/0738754382/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_RyVzCbMQT3GGC

There’s also a limited addition one that comes in a box shaped like a coffin but that’s not on the link I shared

u/ColorOfSpace · 5 pointsr/Psychonaut

If you really want to dig into this buy a Thoth Tarot deck, Crowley's book, and probably also Duquette's book to give you a good primer on Crowley.

Modern Tarot decks are visual representations of the Tree Of Life because almost all modern decks are based on either the Rider-Waite-Smith deck or the Thoth Deck. Waite and Crowley were members of the Hermetic Order Of The Golden Dawn which used the tarot as a tool for learning Kaballah(among other things). I'm suggesting the Thoth because it's better in almost every way and you will really appreciate the artwork. The small cards are the sephiroths (ace=kether, 2=chokmah... 10=malkuth, the suit of wands represents the tree of life in the kabbalistic world of atziluth(the classical element fire and the first Yod in the Tetragrammaton) etc...) and the major arcana represent the 22 paths between the sephiroths(Atu 0 The Fool connects Kether and Chokhmah, Atu 1 The Magus connect Kether and Binah, etc...). Here is some of the artwork The Magus, The Universe, The Ace Of Cups. The cards will give you more to meditate on then you could possibly get through in a single lifetime.

Also Malkuth means Kingdom and is related to the physical world. The Knowledge and Conversation Of The Holy Guardian Angel is attributed Tipheret.

I'm glad to see some conversation about the occult on here. I don't think anyone would argue that all occult and mystical practices arise from the type of shamanism the people in this forum practice. The two types of approaches go great together whether you are into Kabballah, Buddhism, Daoism, or any other system.

The Tree Of Life is just a map created by people who have been there before. It might be fun to just storm off into the wilderness without knowing where you are going, but your chances of finding something interesting will increase greatly with the help. I've had great luck performing a little ritual where I get into a trance, take a hit of hash, invoke one of the cards, and experience it's energy. It's much more powerful than just taking a drug to see what will happen and all kinds of interesting synchronicities will start appearing in your life.

Good luck! If you have any questions I can try to answer them.

u/Pachyphytum_Oviferum · 5 pointsr/SecularTarot

Wow that deck looks pretty groovy! Might I ask if you're also into psychedelic experiences?

I actually got into tarot because the art in the [Ethereal Visions](https://www.amazon.co.uk/Ethereal-Visions-Illuminated-Tarot-Deck/dp/1572819251
) deck is so beautiful.

I have also ordered but haven't yet received the Tattoo Tarot deck because American Traditional tattoo flash is one of my very favorite art styles.

u/Likeable_Username · 5 pointsr/occult

I got a great deal from 78 Degrees of Wisdom by Rachel Pollock.

https://www.amazon.com/Seventy-Eight-Degrees-Wisdom-Book-Tarot/dp/1578634083

u/azzy667 · 5 pointsr/tarot

For Rider-Waite deck I like the classic Seventy-Eight Degrees of Wisdom book by Rachel Pollack.

u/BabeOfTheAbyss · 4 pointsr/occult

Magick is for all, I would recommend working on the kabbalah for a start, or reading the liber 4, not necessarily in that order, maybe try liber 4 and then A Garden of Pomegranates by Israel Rgardie and Mystical Kabbalah by Dion Fortune. The Hardcover edition of Liber 4 is a great edition. I have it and it is amazing, and not as complex as most of his writings. This book has a lot of appendixes too, that helps. Having the Thoth Tarot deck and the Book of Thoth and studying its correspondencies with the tree of life is very helpful too.

Fascinating readings anyway.

About what he is in relation to mankind, better judge yourself from his writings.

http://www.amazon.com/The-Book-Thoth-Egyptians-Equinox/dp/0877282684/ref=pd_bxgy_b_img_z

http://www.amazon.com/Thoth-Tarot-Deck-Aleister-Crowley/dp/1572815108/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1422560601&sr=1-1&keywords=thoth+tarot+deck


http://www.amazon.com/Magick-Liber-ABA-Book-4/dp/0877289190/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1422560336&sr=1-2&keywords=magick

http://www.amazon.com/Garden-Pomegranates-Skrying-Tree-Life/dp/1567181414

http://www.amazon.com/Mystical-Qabalah-Dion-Fortune/dp/1578631505/ref=pd_sim_b_4?ie=UTF8&refRID=0TNF7RPG3Y67DX4G00QH

u/nickbus11 · 4 pointsr/tarot

Just the regular Rider deck amazon link

u/otterbot12 · 4 pointsr/tarot

I would suggest the Rider-Waite-Smith deck, which you can buy for pretty cheap on Amazon. Most other decks are based on this system and almost all books and websites for learning the cards use this deck. When you start to learn, the LearnTarot website is free and very helpful. Have fun! Exploring Tarot is one of the best decisions I have ever made.

u/Drapetomania · 4 pointsr/SRSsucks
u/inthedeepend · 4 pointsr/tarot

The Smith-Waite Centennial, the smaller tinned edition. I adore this deck. It consistently amazes and surprises me. I love the muted colors and the faux antique look of the deck. I like the tinned edition because it's smaller (about the size of a standard playing card), which makes it easy to shuffle and handle and easy to use for larger spreads when you don't have a lot of room, which I often don't. It also makes it easier when reading for other people, since I like to have them shuffle the cards a bit before the reading, and a lot of people have trouble shuffling larger cards when they aren't used to it. The metal tin makes it really easy to tote around too. I just wrap a rubber band around it and pop it in my bag without worrying about any damage to the cards. There is also a larger, standard size edition, which I would recommend over the tinned edition if size isn't a factor for you because it makes it easier to enjoy Smith's lovely artwork.

Forgot to add this - my other fave, and one I only use to read for myself at the moment, is the Druidcraft Tarot. Will Worthington's art is so lovely.

u/arieadil · 3 pointsr/TheArcana

Oh man, I have opinions lol So I've been collecting decks for about a decade now and have 13 total. I'll just unload... I hope this is helpful!

My all time favorite, the Mythic Tarot (all greek mythology), is super inaccessible though, unfortunately, but it was the one that I grew up with by some fluke of a chance and when I finally got it for myself (and for under $100 which is very rare) I about lost my mind. There's a new version of it with the same overall stories and art but the art style has greatly changed and it just can't hold a candle to the original.

My second favorite is the Wild Unknown. It's beautiful and boy oh boy is she rude. Sometimes you might notice after fiddling with a variety of decks that they'll have a bit of personality and this one pulls no punches in my experience and even for a few of my freinds who have the deck. Plus it's just a really stunning deck.

Another beautiful deck is the Linestrider. Watercolors. Like the gentle version of Wild Unknown. My Rider-Waite is the Pamela Colman Smith commemorative version and has really lovely back and vivid colors. Rider-Waite is easily the most recognizable of the decks and is very accessible. Also honorable mentions, since they're just beautiful decks: Wildwood, Mucha, Ostara (gilded edges!), and the Halloween Tarot.

  1. Mythic
  2. The Wild Unknown *
  3. Halloween
  4. Rider-Waite *
  5. Ostara *
  6. Wildwood
  7. Mucha
  8. Linestrider *
  9. Welcome to Night Vale
  10. Raven's Prophecy (Raven Cycle)
  11. Zombies
  12. Marseille
  13. New Mythic

    * - I think these would be particularly good for a first deck

    ​

    EDIT: If there's any these particular decks you'd like to see pictures of, let me know! I'll see what I can do. :)
u/sugarcookiebunny · 3 pointsr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

I'm a traditionalist, so i've been using rider-wait for a long while, but I would like to save up for some prettier decks! Linestrider is a popular favorite, but really, for all the right reasons... It's so gorgeous! Etheral Visions is also a fav of mine... I'm a huge sucker of that kind of style. I also wish I could remember the name of the deck, but I remember a really nice foresty-themed one that had like a deer-man on it! I want to say it was something-something irish woodlands? I'm probably 99% wrong knowing myself.

and this is me being a large nerd more than anything, but I would love cardcaptor sakura cards!

u/ChefSnowWithTheWrist · 3 pointsr/tarot
u/viciarg · 3 pointsr/thelema

> And does anyone know which meanings Crowley personally ascribed to the cards?

Check out the Book of Thoth.

The Thoth Tarot is special in that its genesis in symbolism and meaning is very well documented through the letters Crowley and Harris wrote during its creation, the Book of Thoth itself and by Crowley's other works which shed light on what he thought about some aspects of the Tarot and its various correspondences. Nonetheless reading the cards is a matter of interpretation. Individual, personal interpretation. You might have wondered why the chapter with the divinatory meanings of the cards in Lon's Understanding Aleister Crowley's Thoth Tarot is so short compared to the rest of the book. It's because these are Lon's interpretations, not yours or any kind of objective truths. Get to know the cards by heart, check out the correspondences on the Tree of Life and from astrology and alchemy, the connections between them and the symbolism depicted in the images. Of course be inspired by the interpretations of others, but do not consider these as truths. Rather try to reconcile the apparent contradictions in different interpretations and find your own way to read their message.

There's a reason why the cards are images, not text. They speak at a intuitive, asthetic level to us, beyond rationality, and they speak directly to you.

u/PeachPlumParity · 3 pointsr/tarot

Here are the basic, basic decks.

The Rider-Waite-Smith Deck, on which most decks base their symbolism. Has many different versions, such as the Radiant RWS or the Universal Waite Tarot. Most decks you find will be based on this one.

The Thoth Tarot by Aleister Crowley, which relies much more on occultism and knowledge of the symbols to read. If you want a project that you can really lose yourself in and study for, this is probably a good deck.

The Marseille Tarot which, unlike the other decks I've listed, does not fully illustrate the Minor Arcana (Ace-10 of Cups/Swords/etc). Instead they are called "pips" and don't show a scene, so you have to rely on your knowledge of the cards to read them.

These are the three most well-known tarot traditions for symbolism upon which most other decks are based, with RWS being the most popular in the English-speaking world. Marseille, as I understand it, is very popular in non-English speaking European countries, and the Thoth is just the Thoth.

You don't have to stick to these decks though. Choose any deck that you feel speaks to you. What's most important is feeling connected with your deck, that way you don't lose interest in the cards before you've learned all you can about them.

​

u/amoris313 · 3 pointsr/tarot

I've been studying Tarot and western mysticism for over 2 decades. My recommendation is that you ignore all the fancy decks out there and pick up some version of the Rider-Waite. It isn't the prettiest, but it's the one that almost EVERY deck for the past 100 years has been based on. If you can read a Rider-Waite, then you can read anything. Someone suggested the Marseille deck (of which there were a few from the 18th c. onwards), but I wouldn't recommend starting out with an older style deck like that. Older decks (Marseille, JJ Swiss, Visconti-Sforza etc.) were designed for Game Play - NOT divination. They don't have handy titles or pictures on the minor arcana (number/suit/pip cards).

Some decks you might consider:

Standard Rider-Waite. Can't get any easier than this.

Quick and Easy Tarot. This one has the meanings printed right on the cards! Easy to learn from, and based on Rider-Waite.

Golden Dawn tarot. This one was my favorite for a while. The colors are nicer than Rider-Waite, but it's still a traditional deck, and all the cards have titles and additional symbolism (Astrological/Qabalistic) so they're easier to read and remember.

B.O.T.A. deck. This one comes in black-and-white. You're supposed to color your own cards! I've used the link that includes the book with coloring instructions/descriptions. You can buy the cards by themselves here. Following the traditional (Qabalistic) color scheme and coloring your own (with markers, colored pencils, or maybe watercolors) will help you learn and remember them better.

Regarding the influence of Qabalah on modern decks, it's VERY hard to find a modern deck without it. A.E. Waite was a member of the Golden Dawn (19th c. Hermetic order), and they're largely responsible for the popular appeal of modern Qabalah-influenced decks. They drew on several 18th-19th c. sources (Levi, Etteilla, Court de Gebelin etc.) and put it all together into the tarot we know and use today.

Some books that may be helpful:

Mystical Origins of the Tarot. This is a very good book that talks about the history of the cards, all the way back to the 14th c. Extremely insightful. You can read this on Scribd, btw.

Qabalistic Tarot. The best book on how modern tarot fits onto the Tree of Life, and how the symbolism describes states of consciousness and aspects of Qabalah. When you're ready to scratch below the surface and use your cards for meditation, this book will help you.

This may be a good book to help you get started. I haven't read it, but it gets good reviews.

Related-topic: if you enjoy playing cards, I highly recommend trying out the traditional Tarot games that make use of either modern French or German style decks (which look like modified normal playing cards with extra cards) or older decks such as the JJ Swiss, Marseille, or even Lo Scarabeo's Ancient Italian Deck. Tarot games are quite fun! You can't use a divination deck for them, though. European or Italian folk games such as Scopa and Briscola are also quite fun, and they make use of decks that are distant cousins to Tarot. This link will explain other tarot type games if you're interested.

Anyway, I hope that helps you make sense of the Tarot. Go with Rider-Waite to start, and take your time. There's a lot to learn!

u/NXNDO · 3 pointsr/tarot

The Rider-Waite deck is pretty standard, I'm new also and almost all the youtube videos I've seen say it's the best deck to start with since the drawings and symbols help you memorize the meanings, and you can move on to more "fun" decks after you learned them all.

​

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/091386613X?pf_rd_p=8e0819a9-0ef1-44cd-9544-a7f28374af8b&pf_rd_r=02QFBEAQHWXQQK8JH2QG

u/BuckeyeBentley · 3 pointsr/DnD

I had looked online at actually buying one and on amazon at least they were suuuper expensive, so I bought a tarot deck, pulled the right amount of cards following this guide mostly. Then I tea dyed them and dried them off between paper towels and pressed by a heavy book and used some scrap fabric and a tassel to complete the ancient magic deck look.

If anyone wants to do the same, my suggestion to you is to do the tea dying in waves and not let them sit too long. I let the whole deck soak for a few hours in a pot of tea that had been made with 14 black tea bags and the glue separated on some of them splitting the backs from the faces. They stuck back together but I lost a few of the cards. Doesn't really matter I guess, but for anyone's future reference.

u/HonorableJudgeHolden · 3 pointsr/occult

Even though "The Golden Dawn Tarot" has a lot of semitic symbolism in it, it's by far my favorite. It's beautiful. I guess witchcraft/divination in the name of Yahweh purifies the Semitic influence on the deck - it no longer becomes trapped in the "traditions of men" as Christ called Jewish human sacrifice.

"And what do we burn apart from witches?"

Here is a link to the deck.

u/ChaoticCryptographer · 3 pointsr/TheArcana

I've personally always been a fan of the Thoth deck or the Hermetic Tarot. My main deck is a vintage printing of the Rider-Waite though. Basically just find one you resonate with and can easily interpret. Also as /u/somegermanlady pointed out, traditionally tarot decks are supposed to be a gift given wrapped in cloth.

If you want other deck recommendations, just let me know what kind of art you like and I can probably recommend something!

u/jsudekum · 3 pointsr/tarot

Well, to that end, I highly recommend The Qabalistic Tarot by Robert Wang. It's dense and rigorous, but not at the expense of subtle insight. The author successfully cuts through New Age mumbo-jumbo and gets to the heart of what tarot is about.

The Hermetic Tarot deck appeals to me most. It's nearly overloaded with imagery, which allows me to get completely lost in the experience of a card. The ultimate goal is establishing unconscious intuition, of course, but a strong intellectual base can only help.

As for this comment:

>Unfortunately, I have yet to consciously connect to my higher self.

I think the whole concept of a "higher self" is a bit of a misnomer and potentially dangerous. The term keeps people searching for some threshold moment, a cut and dry experience of Enlightenment. Anyone who claims to have attained this state permanently is lying and probably selling you something. The truth is that you ARE your higher self just as you are.

I finished Waking Up: A Guide to Spirituality Without Religion by Sam Harris a few weeks ago and I highly recommend it. If you're not familiar, he's a vocal member of the "New Atheist" community and is extremely critical of religion/mysticism. But despite this, he has profound insight into the nature of consciousness and how mindfulness practice changes the mind. And of course, what is tarot if not a form of mindfulness meditation?

If that seems a little too atheistic for your taste, Thou Art That by Joseph Campbell is a fantastic introduction to mythological thinking, which is crucial to understanding tarot.

All and all, every aspect of your spiritual and intellectual life will enrich your experience of tarot, so explore liberally!

u/[deleted] · 3 pointsr/vegan

The Sexual Politics of Meat by Carol Adams. She convinced me to give up meat because we objectify women in the same way that objectify animals.

u/Daleth2 · 3 pointsr/occult

"The Crowley Tarot" by Akron and Hajo Bahnzaf has I Ching correspondences for every card. The book is designed to go with the Crowley Thoth Tarot (second link below), but the correspondences should apply with any deck.

Book: https://www.amazon.com/Crowley-Tarot-Handbook-Cards/dp/0880797150

Thoth deck: https://www.amazon.com/Thoth-Tarot-Deck-Aleister-Crowley/dp/1572815108

u/_freakoffherleash_ · 3 pointsr/tarot

I've been loving the ethereal visions illuminated deck! I never fully connected to the standard RWS, and this gives me just enough of the symbolism with artwork that I really enjoy. The cardstock is also really good. If anyone is interested, here it is :) Ethereal Visions Illuminated Tarot Deck https://www.amazon.com/dp/1572819251/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_oCEYBb4CWWZS2

u/Straubreyncream · 3 pointsr/tarot

Have to agree with this, even though I'm a little bit deck crazy at times lol.

If that doesn't appeal to you, there are a few decks that are pretty closely based on RW. I like the Ethereal Visions deck a lot and wouldn't say it'd be a bad deck to start with.

u/battymcdougall · 3 pointsr/occult

Personally speaking, I use the Crowley Thoth deck. You are probably on the right track in regards to dumping the R-W deck for this colossus of Tarot. It is a bit intimidating to get all the symbols and their meanings in the Thoth deck but hang in there. Should you need any help along the way, there is this book-
http://www.amazon.ca/Understanding-Aleister-Crowleys-Thoth-Tarot/dp/1578632765
As well as other resources. So far as how it all relates, I think it relates somewhat nicely. There is still debate as to how the Tarot Cards got lumped together with the Tree of Life, but I'm not going to get into that. For me, I found the relation to the Paths a very helpful one. The meanings/relationship to the Tree of Life and the elements, from the Tarot are yours to interpret, yours to discover and make your own. This is what is both maddening and wonderful about the Tarot. In many ways, it's rudderless nature allows for the person working with it to make up the story for themselves And there's the beauty! No need to worry about forcing meaning when it is not relevant. If it feels relevant to you, meaningful to you, go for it. That's magic.
I'll give a quick example. To me, Tiphereth/Beauty is the highest human point on the Tree of life. Before that we have Netzach/Victory. Connecting the two is path 24 Death- which for all intents and purposes is Change. How do I connect these? Again, to me Netzach is a highly emotional Sephiroth, it's chief gods being that of Love- Venus, Aphrodite, etc. Love prompts one to feel a great deal of emotions, some good and some bad and some very very bad. This is why I equate it to this Sephiroth, among other reasons. Alright, so this isn't a short example but bear with me. So, how does one get to the higher Sephiroth Tiphereth? Death. Change. Killing those lower base things within us that hold us back. All the petty emotions; the ones that sully the name of love. Cut 'em down. Conquer your emotions, claim Victory over them. Then, one can get to a place of greater understanding; A place of Beauty- Tiphereth. Crowley, when writing about this card put it this way- 'The Universe is Change; every Change is the effect of an Act of Love; all Acts of Love contain Pure Joy. Die daily!'
To me, this makes sense. It carries meaning.
Hope this helps.

u/Skollgrimm · 3 pointsr/asatru

I would also advise patience. Runes are powerful symbols, runes convey messages, runes influence the world around us. Not being familiar with the runes could make you regret this decision for the rest of your life. This requires a lot more than a day to think about.

What actual message are you trying to convey? That would certainly help us help you. I'm not a runic scholar myself, in any sense. Although, I've heard great things about the first half of this book. I haven't read it myself yet but I did recently purchase it.

u/wolfanotaku · 3 pointsr/Wicca

My first piece of advice is to completely divorce in your mind the tarot and the runes. They are two completely different systems. The tarot were developed by Ceremonial Magicians in the late Victorian Age, and the runes are an ancient symbol set used by an ancient culture as a language and magical symbols. In fact the runes are a whole system of magic.

To really get started with runes you have to read up on each one and the history behind each. Divining with them is as simple as grabbing a few and scattering them and reading their meanings but you'll need to background about each letter for that to work. Here are a few sources that I like for runes.

http://home.earthlink.net/~jordsvin/Runes/Rune%20Of%20The%20Month/Index.htm - Ignore how this site looks. because it hasn't been updated in a while but each article on the runes is very well written by a couple who know the runes very well.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/1578633257/ref=mp_s_a_1_1?qid=1459023490&sr=8-1&pi=SY200_QL40&keywords=rune+divination&dpPl=1&dpID=51eexi1vgZL&ref=plSrch - A great book on the whole system of magic that the runes are. I really like this one as it doesn't try and "culture wash" the runes. Instead she frames each meaning historically so you can get a better understanding of why things are as they are.

http://www.amazon.com/Rune-Poem-Jim-Paul/dp/0811811360 - This book is a translation of the original Norse poems that the runes are mentioned in. It doesn't offer much in the way of interpretation so you are meant to take your own from it. It gives you a reference point to think about when meditating on the runes.

Hope this helps. Good Luck!

u/cornicelloselkie · 3 pointsr/tarot
u/RajBandar · 3 pointsr/AleisterCrowley

It comes with a small explanatory booklet. I'd say the best actual book that really encompasses the whole system (because obviously it's not just a mere fortune telling device) is Crowley's own The Book of Thoth (1944). https://www.amazon.co.uk/Book-Thoth-Egyptian-Tarot/dp/0877289506/ref=sr_1_2?crid=341Z03425G3GA&keywords=the+book+of+thoth&qid=1568848465&sprefix=The+book+of+thoth%2Caps%2C559&sr=8-2

However, if you're starting out with tarot or unfamiliar with Crowley's often convoluted and in depth writing-not to mention his oft made assumptions that we've all got a clue what the fuck he's trying to say- I can heartily recommend Lon Duquettes approachable, concise and easy to swallow Understanding Aleister Crowley's Thoth Tarot
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Understanding-Aleister-Crowleys-Thoth-Tarot/dp/157863623X/ref=sr_1_4?crid=341Z03425G3GA&keywords=the+book+of+thoth&qid=1568848843&sprefix=The+book+of+thoth%2Caps%2C559&sr=8-4

I'd start with the deck and Lon's book then move on to The Great Beast's volume, but I'd say they're both pretty much required reading for any serious student of the Thoth tarot. Duquette's book isn't exactly essential but it does make life a whole lot easier for us mere mortals!

Edit; there is a few other books of the deck out there but imho none come close to these two.

This will help greatly

https://youtu.be/DWhFaz415hQ

u/UpperPaleolithic · 3 pointsr/freemasonry

Thats taking initiative!

My group meets this Sunday. The most I've seen is a dozen attend at one time, but the roster shows 150+ members so I'll talk to the organizers and see if they can assist getting some of them onto reddit!

Content is king, crossposts to r/occult, r/philosophy, r/freemasonry etc etc. I'll put some more thought into it and see what I can come up with.

We've mostly been going through a relevant chapter together from:
https://www.amazon.ca/Tarot-Key-Wisdom-Ages/dp/1585424919

u/bexbum · 3 pointsr/occult

Paul Foster Case. The Tarot, a wisdom of the ages.

https://www.amazon.ca/Tarot-Key-Wisdom-Ages/dp/1585424919

u/PackyScott · 3 pointsr/tarot

I would recommend getting a Raider-Waite Tarot Deck. It's a great place to start and one of the most widely used decks.

Spend some time looking at the images and finding out what speaks to you. Just build an intuition with the cards.

If that's not enough a great introductory companion to that deck is Liz Dean's the Ultimate Guide to Tarot.

Liz Dean's an Ultimate Guide to Tarot

Raider Waite Tarot

u/cupcake917 · 3 pointsr/tarot

For Rider-Waite deck I use The Ultimate Guide to Tarot by Liz Dean. It has the best definitions and meanings of cards. (most accurate in my opinion) I have a bunch of tarot books and this is my go to one. This is it on amazon

https://www.amazon.com/Ultimate-Guide-Tarot-Beginners-Revealing/dp/1592336574/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1499005869&sr=8-1&keywords=the+ultimate+guide+to+tarot

u/seekingvocation · 3 pointsr/tarot


In line with the specific question I would suggest the following:

  • [This website is useful for beginners!] (http://www.tarotwikipedia.com/)
  • The Ultimate Guide to Tarot by Liz Dean

    Side note:
    The Pictorial Key to the Tarot by Arthur Waite is always worth checking out. It's not exactly purely a guide book, but it is one of the earliest books to accurately discuss the origins of tarot cards. It also discusses the general meaning and symbolism behind each card, and if you are a fan of the Rider-Waite-Smith deck, it's a wonderful read.
u/happinessinmiles · 3 pointsr/tarot

I had a lot of guidance from an intro book I bought. Highly recommend it! It's been great for learning the different archetypes.

Maybe we should do more beginner 1 card pulls on this sub? I know those help me a lot.

u/animistern · 2 pointsr/Psychonaut

Have you read this yet? The Universe tells me I should suggest it to you. I am not going to give you a summary, though, because I am not yet in a position to.

Anyway, here you go:

The Source Field Investigations

u/akashic_record · 2 pointsr/Drugs

This is a semi-random explosion of weird thoughts...a warning!

I ended up running into a lot of stuff after I found Strassman's book. Things just started pouring in from all over, and it all seems strangely interconnected and related.

But the problem seems to be that the paradigms that organized religions, science, and politics have been so established and hellbent on not changing, that any sort of "fringe" work is immediately thrown out and rarely pursued. Also, the fact that money is the "language" of the modern day, studies HERE would likely remain unfunded if there was any interest in the first place...or maybe some things are not allowed to be studied. ;)

So here is what I've been reading, and it is pretty fucking incredible if even a few of these things happen to be true.

The Source Field Investigations

Basically, a bunch of the research (on DNA and light especially) came from the Soviet Union from the 1950s until the early 1990s when it collapsed. I believe most, if not all, of this stuff was held at the highest top secret/national security levels. I don't doubt that some of this stuff is probably under the tightest lock-and-key type of secrecy in this country, too.

Recently, a lot of stuff poured in on Twitter and stuff about photons and virtual photons coming from "nothing", and then you have the neutrinos traveling faster than light (this was re-tested recently, again..) and a potential upset in quantum mechanics regarding the wave function. And that is just the start of it all.

  • Quantum theorem shakes foundations

  • The quantum state cannot be interpreted statistically

  • Light pulled out of empty space

  • The missing memristor found {small PDF}

    I add the last one because I feel that it is somehow relevant. A while back someone looked a bit closer at the equations for our accepted knowledge of electronics, and found that there should be another undiscovered component, essentially.

    The rub here is that it could function as both code/data/CPU/storage all in one...and dynamically...if done properly (I think.) HP has been working on this and trying to use photons I believe. Here is another description about memristors which is a bit easier to read.

    The thing is, they seem to be the closest mechanical equivalent to neurons in a way. There has also been recent observations on neuroplasticity...which is a little bit like the potential benefits of memristors in that a CPU wouldn't necessarily be a static computation device. The code and data could also be the CPU-in-place, and vice-versa. It would be a very weird departure of normal computation in CPUs.

    Is it possible that the whole of our existence and consciousness has to do with photons and DNA? And that normal neurons and neurotransmitters, etc. are closer to "permanent storage/memory" and also providing the organization for the 'real deal' so to speak?

    Is DNA sort of like the "memristor" in a way that it (DNA) is simultaneously the "program" or "code", the "real CPU"...by way of photon/virtual photon interactions, quantum entanglement, and possibly additional dimensions? Also, could the %90+ "junk DNA" claim about human DNA be bogus? Maybe that is also part of the deal...that DNA is both storage/memory, "computation units", and "program code".

    Also, I sometimes think of the role of something like DMT as maybe "running a new program", so to speak, or enabling the brain to simultaneously operate on many different things at once, but from the point of "intuition" or raw consciousness, rather than the internal monologue or "inner head voice" of the rational mind... One that enables a lot of profound interactions in the brain in concert with DNA. Sort of like the possibility that the brain is a combination of an electromagnetic/electrochemical/optical bio-computer. See bioluminescence and this especially. There were over 12,000 experiments done on this shit? WTF???

    Also, what is up with the recent unexpected changes in radioactive decay, neutrinos moving faster than light...again, etc.? Are all of those changes related to the possibility that the solar system may be moving through a strange, unexplainable magnetic field?

    Too many questions, and too many secrets out there I think.

    I'm no scientist at all, just intrigued. There is so much stuff that it is hard to speculate, but very weird shit has been happening all around. Of course, I could also be crazy. ;)

    lol

    One last thing... The recent paper on the quantum wave function, virtual photons from nothing, DNA possibly 'holding' light, combined with this particular theory called Orch-OR may have some implications? I have no idea, but it is all sure interesting...

    Here is a much more technical bit on Orch-OR:

    Consciousness in the Universe:
    Neuroscience, Quantum Space-Time Geometry and Orch OR Theory
u/PersephoneRisen · 2 pointsr/tarot

Out of all my decks, the Linestrider deck is the one I resonate with the most. I bought it a year or so ago, but I just checked on Amazon, and it’s still selling for about $20:
The Linestrider Tarot https://www.amazon.com/dp/0738748293/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_W9aUBbEQA4NHF

Things are really, really good! I’ve received so many birthday messages today and I feel very loved. Thank you so much for the good vibes and well wishes! :)

u/SparkOfDarkness · 2 pointsr/witchcraft

This is my absolute favorite deck. The illustrations are beautiful and it comes with a very thorough book explaining not just the cards but the suits, positions, and correlations to each card. I fell in love with it right away.

u/T--Frex · 2 pointsr/tarot

Super personal! I actually really like the Pagan Otherworlds art, I'm not sure it'd be easy for me to learn on but the subdued colors and style are very charming.

I think I have ruled out The Fountain as a first deck for now, same with Cosmic, Naked Heart, and Aquarian. Still art I'd like to own some day, but maybe not for me to restart the tarot practice on.

Unfortunately, I found a new deck I really like as well, so my contenders are now: Ethereal Visions, Thoth, and Revelations... Maybe Santa Muerte. I called my local metaphysical bookstore and they have demo versions of all their stocked decks and I know they at least have Revelations and Ethereal Visions there so I will try to get out there this weekend and take a look.

u/RockGnasher · 2 pointsr/occult

What are you interested in? Wicca, candle magick, hermeticism and alchemy, Setianism, Qabalah, tarot, mythology, astrology, goetia, esoteric christianity? A little bit of everything?

My recommendation is to start with something you're really interested in and pick up that one thing. If you're interested in Crowley, then you might be interested in tarot. My suggestion is getting a simple book by a laymen's author like Amber Jayanti on the tarot. As you read the book, circle, highlight or write down (or add to a shopping list) sources to which that author refers - Jayanti may cite Paul Foster Case a lot. Once you read some Case books, then you'll start to see Crowley pop up. Pick up Lon Milo DuQuette's book on Crowley's Tarot. Then you can probably read Crowley's Book of Thoth.

My other advice is not to worry about not picking up every little detail of every book. You won't have the schema necessary for every small detail in every book, and part of reading in the occult is rediscovering the deeper meaning of something you thought you already knew, like a spiral upward.

u/IAO131 · 2 pointsr/thelema

93 - I would look in Book of Thoth for a lot of symbolism as well as, of course, 777. I can tell you that the Vesica Piscis is understood to be a feminine symbol, composed of two intersecting circles, forming the Yoni. It is usually 'balanced' by various 'masculine' symbols, often those of the cross or some form thereof, in or around it. That one is fairly obvious.

u/keryskerys · 2 pointsr/tarot

I completely agree with your comment.

The Thoth tarot is wonderfully deep, if you are also interested in studying the occult symbology.

If you prefer a gentler approach to learning, then other decks - especially R/W are a good starting point.

I only came to love the Thoth deck after using RW for tarot for several years, and, in addition, studying occult disciplines. And I read The Book of Thoth before I read "Understanding Aleister Crowley's Thoth Tarot"

Rider-Waite is a fantastic learning tarot, and far, far more powerful as a teaching deck than most others on the market today IMHO.

u/vorpal_blade · 2 pointsr/Wicca

I disagree with the other reply - a fantastic book on Enochian is Enochian Vision Magick by DuQuette. For the runes, if you're taking a traditional approach, I recommend Thorsson's Futhark though it's certainly not everyone's cup of tea.

As for learning to write in another language - practice, practice, practice! The biggest help will probably be concentrating on learning one language, don't try to confuse yourself with too many at once. Once you've chosen one, just write out anything you can think of in that language. For me, just an hour a day of sitting down and writing things out, not even trying to translate it back to english, is the best way of learning. After two weeks or so, you'll be great at writing and re-translating, just because the letters are so ingrained in your head. My friends and I used to use Tolkien's Elvish alphabet as a secret code in high school, and I can still write in it to this day, seven or eight years later!

u/ryanmercer · 2 pointsr/witchcraft
u/Mr_Tarradiddle · 2 pointsr/tarot

I have that deck! See customer images in link:

https://www.amazon.com/Rider-Tarot-Arthur-Edward-Waite/dp/091386613X

u/lenore14 · 2 pointsr/occult

I completely understand and that’s why I always use my Rider Tarot deck. It’s simple nothing beautifully drawn or crafted, just the basics. The Rider Tarot Deck https://www.amazon.com/dp/091386613X/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_9fyXBbFK5VFG7

u/FraterAVR · 2 pointsr/occult

The deck is Dawson's Hermetic Tarot. It's one of my favorites, but some people complain about the artwork (occasionally it looks a bit amateur) and that it's not in color.

EDIT: Here is a PDF version of the cards.

u/Necrostopheles · 2 pointsr/occult

The Rider-Waite deck was intended to be exoteric. The Golden Dawn deck was for initiates and was intended to be esoteric. If you're going to study the GD system, this deck is definitely recommended.

The Golden Dawn tarot deck by Robert Wang

The Hermetic tarot deck by Godfrey Dawson

u/pufrfsh · 2 pointsr/tarot

The Easiest Way to Learn Tarot—Ever!! by Dusty White is a fantastic place to start. It’s a workbook that guides you through learning the cards intuitively and also provides lots of information on spreads, interpretations, history, etc. I love it!

u/Dog_of_Flanders · 2 pointsr/Tarots

I buy from Amazon. I like the Rider-Waite-Colman deck. As you'll see, it comes in many flavors:

http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_ss_c_0_12?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=rider+waite+tarot+deck&sprefix=rider+waite+%2Caps%2C220&rh=i%3Aaps%2Ck%3Arider+waite+tarot+deck

I recommend Dusty White's book, it really makes you interact with the cards and rely on your intuition to pull the meanings together. I believe he recommends that you also buy the jumbo-sized deck so you can really see the images.

http://www.amazon.com/The-Easiest-Way-Learn-Tarot/dp/1419692887

Joan Bunning offers a free class online. She also has a book.
http://www.learntarot.com/

There are numerous resources. I suggest you start with these to keep from getting overwhelmed. You're lucky to have a roommate with whom you can learn.


u/unoriginalcatlady · 2 pointsr/tarot

I have heard great things about this book from others new to tarot.

u/abbeynormal · 2 pointsr/SecularTarot

I have several decks that I'm eyeing right now!

The one that intrigues me the most is the Mystic Mondays tarot. I love the color palette and its aesthetic.

After that I'm looking at the Victorian tarot, because this falls right in with my fascination with the Victorian era, which was this great mix of propriety and religious leanings, but behind closed doors how everyone was just obsessed with the occult.

And I also love the Golden Tarot.

And though the imagery on these isn't fully conforming to RWS, I love, love, love the attitude of the Housewives' tarot.

Of course, my birthday is in a week, and I'm on a buying moratorium until after that. So I'm currently in a holding pattern on new purchases for myself!

u/ticklystarlight · 2 pointsr/infp

A lot of tarot readers are also deck collectors. :)

I order my decks online, typically. There is a Waite-Smith mini deck (in a tin) available from Amazon for only 10 dollars, and I highly recommend getting a physical deck if you can. The deck I linked has really nice coloring too, it's on my wish list. :)

Etsy has a lot of the fancy indie decks, but you'll be paying ~$40 and up for a deck.

Go to Aeclectic Tarot to find deck reviews, or look up "tarot deck collection" on YouTube if you want to see what people have in their own collections. YouTube is my favorite way to learn about decks!

Edit: You can also get nice decks from bookstores, even Barnes and Noble - that's where I got my Shadowscapes Tarot. Since you can't look at a deck in the store, I recommend looking it up online to see if you like the cards.

u/Bored_Schoolgirl · 2 pointsr/tarot

By Matt Hughes you can see pictures of his deck by searching and if you scroll down enough, you'll find this exact card

u/thatcatwhoeatsramen · 2 pointsr/witchcraft

I just bought this deck https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1572819251/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o03_s01?ie=UTF8&psc=1 and so far it's been super nice to work with. Time will tell, though, as we're just getting adjusted.

u/rawillis3 · 2 pointsr/tarot

Some years ago I read Lon Milo Duquette's book on the Thoth deck

https://www.amazon.com/Understanding-Aleister-Crowleys-Thoth-Tarot/dp/1578632765

and came away with the impression the king/queen/knight/page sequence is a matter of emphasizing, respectively, the fire/water/air/earth aspects of the particular suit energy. I read these as a matter of enacting or embodying these aspects, and I have (almost) completely gotten away from identifying, say, queen wands as a particular individual, but usually as an aspect of the querent, or a role she is undertaking.

Which I guess also means I am largely disregarding imagery, but that was sort of baked into my early experiences with a "dark" deck in which some of the imagery was literally so dark as to be almost indecipherable. These days I mostly read with playing cards.

u/OrionsArmpit · 2 pointsr/tarot

Crowley's Book of Thoth is also available online for free as it's now public domain. There's also an excellent thoth book by Don Milo that's almost required reading if you're into Crowley mysticism as it relates to the Thoth tarot: https://www.amazon.com/Understanding-Aleister-Crowleys-Thoth-Tarot/dp/1578632765

I'd recommend getting the large format Thoth deck, there's a ton of tiny detail that kind of gets lost in the smaller reprints.


That said, the Rider-Waite deck comes from the same Hermetic tradition and has much of the same symbolism. The imagery is a little less... dense? Surreal? and a bit easier to relate to at first (plus all the pip cards are illustrated, making the minor arcana easier to learn). There are also a bunch of excellent resources for the RW since its sort of the "default" deck.

u/SlCDayCare · 2 pointsr/occult

This is my favorite book on the Major Arcana.

http://www.amazon.com/The-Fools-Pilgrimage-Kabbalistic-Meditations/dp/0835608395

I think the author is Donald Tyson, but Portable Magic is a great book on constructing rituals for tarot.

As for learning card meanings almost any is fine to get yourself started. I usually recommend starting with whatever your local library has on it instead of spending money or searching for a .pdf.

However if you get a Thoth Deck this is the most reccomended book on it.

http://www.amazon.com/Understanding-Aleister-Crowleys-Thoth-Tarot/dp/1578632765


u/graidan · 2 pointsr/Divination

This is one of the best: https://smile.amazon.com/Taking-Up-Runes-Complete-Divination/dp/1578633257

She compares a bunch of different meanings provided by various people, explains the history and the uses, and generally gives you the clearest foundation.

Also: avoid Blum.

u/NoeTellusom · 2 pointsr/witchcraft

I would ignore almost all online sources for that sort of thing.

The most historically accurate source of runes, by one of the most respected authors, is here - https://www.amazon.com/Taking-Up-Runes-Complete-Divination/dp/1578633257/ref=sr_1_2?crid=5RT9VX1B0Q8U&keywords=taking+up+the+runes&qid=1572210026&sprefix=taken+by+mino%2Caps%2C197&sr=8-2

u/AllanfromWales1 · 2 pointsr/Wicca

For me, the key thing with divination is that you are trying to answer a question, not just looking for the book meanings of the cards/runes/whatever. So, at least to start, you need a fairly simplistic interpretation of what each tool means, and a lot of flexibility to apply that to the situation in front of you.
In terms of remembering what things mean, I found Tarot books most useful which start from the basis of 'the two's mean this, the threes mean this etc. when applied to the relevant suit', so there was some sort of pattern to follow rather than 78 individual meanings. My memory is poor these days, but I think Rachel Pollock's 78 Degrees of Wisdom was good for that. It is, in any case, one of the all-time classic Tarot books.

u/robbyhaber · 2 pointsr/tarot

By far my favorite is Rachel Pollak's Seventy-Eight Degrees of Wisdom: A Book of Tarot https://www.amazon.com/dp/1578634083/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_alPTCb8MYZDZ1

u/to55r · 2 pointsr/occult

I have enjoyed this one.

Probably not a beginner's book, and I don't agree with everything that's presented, but it has helped me make connections that I might not have come to on my own. Easily one of my favorites.

u/bukvich · 2 pointsr/occult

> I had especially in mind free resources from the internet.

All of these books are interesting in places: sacred texts tarot

The best ones I have read are not online:

The Thursday Night Tarot: Weekly Talks on the Wisdom of the Major Arcana by Jason Lotterhand
and
Seventy-Eight Degrees of Wisdom: A Book of Tarot by Rachel Pollack

u/t4rusky · 2 pointsr/tarot

Honestly one of the best books I've found for starting is Seventy-Eight Degrees of Wisdom by Rachel Pollack

https://www.amazon.ca/Seventy-Eight-Degrees-Wisdom-Book-Tarot/dp/1578634083

It gives a great fundamental look at the history of the cards as well as teasing some more advanced topics, so you can really take any topic from the book and go wild with your journey. It works with the RWS deck which most people start with I would say, but the wisdom is universal. It's a great resource and I've never stopped sourcing it even though I've gone through tons of other books since reading this one.

u/cabbagedave · 2 pointsr/tarot

My suggestion is to get a Rider-Waite-Smith deck, or a Rider-Wait-Smith Clone like the Morgan Greer deck or the Universal Tarot by Lo Scarabeo.

You can use the little white book that comes with them to learn the bare bones basics.
Also I've found that this book has A LOT of information on each card including reversals. https://www.amazon.com/Ultimate-Guide-Tarot-Beginners-Revealing/dp/1592336574/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1487351896&sr=8-1&keywords=ultimate+guide+to+tarot

u/duende60 · 2 pointsr/tarot

Google is awesome, so is https://www.biddytarot.com/tarot-card-meanings/ and https://www.incandescenttarot.com/cardmeanings. I liked The Ultimate Guide to Tarot and also Kitchen Table Tarot. I've also heard that WTF is Tarot, and How Do I Do It? is also good, but haven't read it myself.

u/pickleburns · 2 pointsr/taoism

Thanks for this perspective, and for some context from your lived experience. I am happy (and my wallet sad) that you have included a link to a translation of the Neiye. Also, the video you link to is helpful in explaining why the Yijing is important in the study of, for instance, the Daodejing, with a nice concrete example.

As for the Yijing, I have been working my way through the Alfred Huang translation after having read the Tao Teh Ching translation by John C.H. Wu, to try to get some more background. Thanks for the confirmation that I'm at least partially on the right track.

u/Magzy · 1 pointr/conspiracy

>Wilcock's unique philosophy connects the human species and the rest of the cosmos, proposing that it is in our power to usher in the Golden Age prophesied in so many ancient cultures and spiritual traditions. Unlike the doom- and-gloom viewpoints depicted in big-budget disaster films, Wilcock believes that 2012 may be a watermark for when a widespread acceptance of a greater reality will begin to occur-and in his book, he lays out many of the blueprints for such a Golden Age.

sauce

u/humanwire · 1 pointr/Meditation

Sounds like you may have connected to the "source field". I'm currently reading this and its incredibly fascinating.

u/heathenhag · 1 pointr/tarot

The Darkness of Light Tarot might be up your alley, maybe even the Linestrider Tarot (I don't think it scratches your Skyrim itch, but it's minimal and high fantasy-ish)

u/notanotherdonut · 1 pointr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

Oooooo I might take you up on that! I've had my eye on this set or the other set in the collection but never bit the bullet to learn... Maybe your reading will inspire me!

u/holybatjunk · 1 pointr/tarot

Seven Stars Deck of the Dead: http://www.aeclectic.net/tarot/cards/deck-of-the-dead/

Santa Muerte Tarot: https://www.amazon.com/Santa-Muerte-Tarot-Deck-Book/dp/0738754382

Marigold Tarot: https://shopamritbrar.com/products/the-marigold-tarot-classic

Depends on what you mean by "spooky." Obviously, I, personally, really like skeletons. If you have a specific flavor of spooky in mind, maybe we could get more specific?

u/viclucas · 1 pointr/occult
u/ThelemaAndLouise · 1 pointr/Wicca

here is the book

and here is the deck

also, here is a stylized reworking of the crowley thoth deck, which has illustrations for the pips and is a little simpler. I would recommend getting the original thoth, but if it simply does not speak to you, this is very close.

u/ThatWerewolfTho · 1 pointr/occult

It seems very boring to a lot of mystic newbs but I've been evangelizing the shit out of Qabalah lately. If you want to see the connections between all things and the machinery that runs the universe, this is the place to start.

Begin with something breezy that'll let you ease into the concepts: Lon Milo DuQuette's Chicken Qabalah. It's like an exegesis of Douglas Adams's Life, The Universe, and Everything.

Then dive in deep.

Dion Fortune's Mystical Qabalah

Aleister Crowley's Book of Thoth

This shit will blow your mind wide open. You can see how the 10 Sephiroth directly correspond to the 10 dimensions of the universe, how the first 4 correspond to actual space and the 5th to time as we understand it.

It'll show you the operating schematic for literally everything and how we are all connected and sprang forth from the same no-thing. Every new page I read blows my mind.

u/Nocodeyv · 1 pointr/occult

Not entirely sure if this is what you're looking for, but, there's a handful of books that people have written that attempt to explore the symbolism and meaning of Crowley's deck.

A friend of mine, a member of the local OTO Lodge and EGC, has several. I know these two are in his library for sure:

- Understanding Aleister Crowley's Thoth Tarot
- The Thoth Companion

There's also the old stand-by, Crowley's own exploration and essay about the deck:

- The Book of Thoth

Apologies if these aren't what you're looking for, and I hope someone comes along that can answer your questions more satisfactorily.

u/thepoliteslowsloth · 1 pointr/occult

Check out the Thoth tarot book for more info on reading the cards. I also recommend reading Lon Milo Duquettes book on understanding the Thoth Tarot. Also also, check out liber Theta from Temple of Thelema . There's also an explanation and analysis on divination with Tarot from Soror Meral in Temple of Thelema's periodical called In the Continuum.

book of thoth

understanding Thoth tarot

liber Theta

in the Continuum vol 1

You'll want to read issue no.7 for divination

u/AllanfromWales · 1 pointr/Wicca

Firstly, runes. The thing is, runes are usually thrown by shaking them up in a bag and then choosing, and a square shape isn't that great for this - most runes don't have sharp edges or corners. Could you round them off?
There are loads of books about runes. Because I'm old-fashioned I'd recommend Thorsson, but there's plenty of other options around.
I have absolutely no idea whether anything I deal with on the spirit plane is 'real', I don't even know what the term 'real' means. What matters to me is whether it works for me. If it does (and in many cases it does) I'll leave it to the philosophers to decide what it means. It looks like a duck. It quacks like a duck. If it's just a duck impersonator, I'll handle that when the time comes.

u/Oriolous · 1 pointr/Wicca

I personally use Futhark: A Handbook of Rune Magic by Edred Thorsson ( https://www.amazon.com/Futhark-Handbook-Magic-Edred-Thorsson/dp/0877285489 ) as my rune guide. It is a basic rundown of the lore and use for the runes, including the tools you would need and even goes into the numerology (which for me still makes my head spin but I enjoy the challenge of theorycrafting powerful rune charms via numerology) and color meanings.

​

In my opinion, it is really easy to understand as far as how the runes are, and if you just sit down and read it, it goes over how you can do coded notation and how to read that code as well, and it's really useful.

u/appothecary · 1 pointr/DMAcademy

My handouts were a hit at the table. I stained them using coffee, folded them every which way, even stuck them in some clothes which went through the wash.

If you have the time you can get Strahd's seal from AliExpress or for a little more money on Etsy if you need it sooner.

I actually really dislike the official tarokka deck. I think it looks tacky af with the 90's style tribal tattoos around the edge. I replaced mine with a tarot deck from Amazon. I can't find the exact link but there's a few cool ones (and a bunch more you may like). You'll just have to use the name on the card instead of the book but my deck had some pretty similar cards.

u/YashicasIntuition · 1 pointr/tarot

I love these 2.....

This one is the best value. It's a solid deck and comes with a book and a paper tarot spread. If you bought the deck alone it would be much more than this. I recommend this one to my students. https://www.amazon.com/Easy-Tarot-Learn-Read-Cards/dp/0738711500/ref=sr_1_2?crid=2492TY300PB54&keywords=guilded+tarot+deck&qid=1557425818&s=gateway&sprefix=guilded%2Cstripbooks%2C154&sr=8-2

I also really encourage them to start here https://www.amazon.com/Rider-Tarot-Arthur-Edward-Waite/dp/091386613X/ref=sr_1_2?keywords=rider+waite&qid=1557425881&s=gateway&sr=8-2

​

My last favorite that I tell them about is this one but it's a little more pricey https://www.amazon.com/Witches-Tarot-Ellen-Dugan/dp/0738728004/ref=sr_1_2?keywords=witches+tarot&qid=1557425951&s=gateway&sr=8-2

u/DeltaTarot · 1 pointr/tarot

For what it's worth, the deck I started with is the Rider tarot deck

u/placeholder · 1 pointr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon
u/iamkarnath · 1 pointr/Tarots

Amazon

"The Easiest Way to Learn the Tarot - Ever!!"

u/xDPHCx · 1 pointr/vegan

Gary Yourofsky -https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=es6U00LMmC4

All My Heroes Still Wear Masks - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eDuBslRfXxg

McLibel - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sBpbaVJo9gE

Earthlings - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PCU1WUQXMbs

Lucent - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KArL5YjaL5U

SPECIESISM: THE MOVIE - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eTggRpTzcA0

OpenDoor - The Vegan Society 1976 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VlTYjaQLy2o

A.L.F. Behind the Mask: The Story Of The People Who Risk Everything To Save Animals - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FfKXq9BL29o

Vegecated - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=19qSsUI79Ro

Sharkwater - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CI1YBCMqbik

The Cove - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gp8-nAfsjCk

Paul Watson:The Whale Warrior-A Pirate for the Sea - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1nzbTsrOUxw

Bold Native (click watch film to see it for free) - http://boldnative.com

I AM AN ANIMAL - The Story of Ingrid Newkirk and PETA - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vx3VXmav0rk

Angels of Mercy - Animal Liberation Front - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5SooKjnaU4c

The Paw Project - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yihVLIkVRzo

Your Mommy Kills Animals - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x-wMecABC84

Meat The Truth - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hHCCFjB8M48

Vanishing Of The Bees - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u-JjQH_HUHQ

At the Edge of the World - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1286499/

Project Nim - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1814836/

Virunga - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt3455224/

The Elephant in the Living Room - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1111313/

An Apology to Elephants - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2836524/

Blackfish - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2545118/

Forks Over Knives - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1567233/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1

The Ghosts in Our Machine - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2654562/?ref_=tt_rec_tt

Food INC - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1286537/?ref_=tt_rec_tt

Emptying the Skies - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt3302498/

Skin Trade - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1576702/

Of Dogs and Men - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt4460258/

Revolution - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2350608/

Unity - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2049636/

Peaceable Kingdom - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0435715/

Cowspiracy: The Sustainability Secret http://www.imdb.com/title/tt3302820/

Eating Animals - Jonathan Safran Foer - http://a2zkaraokeshop.com/onlinepdfbooks/5may27.pdf

Consider The Lobster - David Foster Wallace - http://www.columbia.edu/~col8/lobsterarticle.pdf

Animal Liberation and Social Revolution - Brian A. Dominick -http://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/brian-a-dominick-animal-liberation-and-social-revolution.pdf

VEGANARCHY - Anti-Speciesist Warfare and Direct Action - https://animalliberationpressoffice.org/publications%20online/VEGANARCHY-Anti-Speciesist-Warfare-and-Direct-Action.pdf

Animals - The Hidden Victims Of War - http://www.animalaid.org.uk/images/pdf/booklets/war.pdf

Animal Liberation - Peter Singer - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_Liberation_(book)

The Sexual Politics of Meat: A Feminist-vegetarian Critical Theory - Carol J. Adams - http://www.amazon.com/The-Sexual-Politics-Meat-Feminist-vegetarian/dp/1441173285

Check Your Beer / Wine / Liquor - http://www.barnivore.com

Locate Animal Enterprises Near You - http://www.finalnail.com

Download Cruelty-Cutter to scan an item and have an immediate response about its animal testing status - http://cruelty-cutter.org

Read about the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_Enterprise_Terrorism_Act

Read about Ag-gag laws - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ag-gag

u/shleepypie · 1 pointr/CurseofStrahd

Our next session is this Saturday. I think before the end of the session they should be at the Tser Pool for the card reading. I've purchased a tarot deck (https://www.amazon.ca/Golden-Tarot-Kat-Black/dp/1572814349) for the ready and have assigned meanings.

I'll be performing a card reading for immersion purposes but I have picked out the locations of the treasures. For the Ally, I've selected several interesting ones that will be chosen at random. I didn't really want the locations to be chosen at random. I much prefer a more thematic approach to the locations. I'm also considering for the "where you'll find Strahd" to just be a random location where they will definitely run into him during their adventure rather when the last battle will be.

I've decided to have them find the Tome at the winery, the Holy Symbol in Argynvostholt, and the Sunsword in the Amber Temple. I can't remember off the top of my head which of the cards I selected from the High deck to represent each place.. I think maybe Justice for Argynvostholt and Death for the Amber Temple?

I wanted them to find the Tome early on but have the more powerful items for later levels. I'm still debating whether or not I want the Holy Symbol in Argynvostholt or the Werewolves den though. I really want them to go to Agrynvostholt. If they don't, I'll likely come up with another reason for them to go then just for finding treasure.

u/apikoros18 · 1 pointr/chaosmagick

I'm a fan of this science deck depending on the vibe I'm going for. When on the opposite end of the feels, I go with the Tarot of Ceremonial Magick. I've also been known to use the Jungian Archetype Deck but it is very hard to read (IMNSHO) and I recommend Robert Wang's book to go with it.

I'll also dabble with a Thoth Tarot, too.

But, tell the truth and shame the devil, I get my best readings, both for myself and giving to others, with the good ole' Rider-Waite. Its the set I learned on, using the visuals adds to my read and its simple

u/demlegs_doe · 1 pointr/tarot

To me, the deck is cheeky. It's often blunt with a funny twist. I liken it to seeking advice from a good friend with a dark sense of humor who always tells me what I need to hear.

Since you mentioned the Hermetic Tarot was your first deck, and the Zombie Tarot is your first time branching out to other decks, I think it's important to mention just how different the Hermetic Tarot is from most other decks that stick more closely to the RWS style and meanings. If you've done the majority of your studying with the HT, almost any deck you add to your collection right now is going to be harder to click with at first. People who start with the Thoth Tarot tend to have the same issue.

I was actually pleasantly surprised by the Zombie Tarot considering it's a novelty deck. They did a really good job adjusting the cards into the context of a zombie apocalypse. Keep in mind, though, it also deviates quite a bit from the common RWS meanings and imagery. The Devil card is a perfect example with the cigarette machine. Of the multiple meanings for The Devil, the ZT has focused in on addictions, vices, and temptation. I would read that card differently than if I pulled The Devil from another deck.

That being said, my advice would be to not give up o the deck just yet. Instead, purchase a RWS style deck--the Centennial Edition is my favorite--and begin studying that. From there, decks like the ZT, Wild Wood Tarot, Deviant Moon Tarot, etc. will be easier to click with and understand. It's like knowing Spanish and trying to learn Portuguese.

Edit: Formatting.

u/azeara_starr · 1 pointr/tarot

i don't really like apps except as a reference, because it doesn't give you the option to draw your card of the day. i hold fast to the belief that divination in cartomancy is driven by the subconscious; how many shuffles you do, how you cut the deck, which cards you're drawn to. unless you have the option to do these things, i don't put much weight into the apps.

​

if you're short on cash you can always color your own deck, a book you can pick up at amazon. or you could find many of the less expensive decks, such as the smith-waite centennial deck, everyday mini deck, or the ceccoli mini deck. all these decks listed are cheaper than the coloring book, with the exception of the first they are under $10, and if you have prime they will come in two days with free shipping.

u/imightbejake · 1 pointr/tarot

I recommend reading books. There are a zillion books about the Waite-Smith deck. For the Thoth deck, this book is a must read.

Edit to add: This series was very helpful to me. The "Tarot Reversals" one by Mary K. Greer is the bomb.

u/skeggox · 1 pointr/Norse

Taking up the Runes, by Diana Paxson, is pretty good.

u/nyctipolos · 1 pointr/Wicca

The book that I found most useful is Freya Aswynn's Northern Mysteries and Magick.

A great source is also Diana Paxson's Taking Up the Runes.

Love your set. Enjoy your journey!

Edit: You may also find this site useful.

u/CrazyPlato · 1 pointr/Wicca
u/InsideOutsider · 1 pointr/occult

I recommend [Seventy-Eight Degrees of Wisdom] (https://www.amazon.com/dp/1578634083/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_Nsbyyb2ZCJ74A)

u/andrejevas · 1 pointr/Psychic

http://www.amazon.com/Seventy-Eight-Degrees-Wisdom-Book-Tarot/dp/1578634083

Just get a copy of that. It's fifteen bucks, get a common deck like the Rider-Waite. Another 10 probs.

Tarot is more of a personal learning experience. Paying someone a hundred bucks to pat you on the back isn't gonna help. Learn it with your wife maybe?

I enjoy it. I pull it out every so often and learn a bit more about the subconscious shit going on with me in my life. Meditation is similar.

btw, that book is the best.

u/IbisWalker · 1 pointr/tarot

Ok. Start with these books. And know that despite what you’ll learn, it is still 100% okay for you to enjoy Tarot without using them for divination. Lots of people do and that’s a wonderful thing.


The Tarot: History, Symbolism, and Divination

Seventy-Eight Degrees of Wisdom: A Book of Tarot

Tarot - The Open Reading

u/Foolness · 1 pointr/TrueFilm

Good advice. I recommend this and this for those reading this thread.

u/throwrainbowbatman · 1 pointr/tarot

The tarot can be for you whatever you want it to mean.

I've been doing it on-and-off for maybe about six years now, and every single time I return to it my method feels more refined and more "me" as I get older and learn more about myself.

For me, tarot is like a fun-house mirror. The same mirror can be held up to different people and they can have much different reactions to it. Some people go "Wow, I look funny!", and others can go "Dammit, my thighs are huge". People have different reactions and interpretations of the same readings.

I've met a tarot reader who would always un-reverse the cards because he doesn't like reading reversals. I've met another one who would only answer yes/no questions with a full tarot deck. Some people take the pictures on the cards as the only definition, some people depend entirely on books that are independent from the cards, and some people just make shit up entirely depending on their own personal experiences. Some people think they have supernatural properties, and some people (like me) think they're entirely random, but when people read them they put meaning into them based on their lives.

There's no wrong way to use a tarot deck, and there's no wrong way to view tarot or to interpret the cards. They're a subjective tool in that way, almost like an art. How you want to approach tarot will come in time as you practice and refine your methods and you come to figure out what the cards mean to you.

In getting to know them: that really depends on you. I started out with reading this book, completely unrelated to the tarot, but it helped jump-start my interest in it. I also give readings to other tarot readers, since I've found them more likely to "believe" and therefore less likely to argue, so long as they lean more eclectic. I also give myself readings frequently, just single-card readings to answer simple questions, or I toss out a card when I'm hanging out with my friends and they ask questions like "What would happen if I ordered pizza at three in the morning". I know a common method is to just draw a card each morning and dedicate that day to paying attention to that card, but I'm too scatterbrained to remember to do that, plus I feel it imparts too much importance to something that I don't take all that seriously normally. I also like writing so sometimes I do spreads for my characters or for story planning.

That's a lot, but I hope some of it helps!

u/ogmk · 1 pointr/occult

Paul Foster Case? https://www.amazon.com/Tarot-Key-Wisdom-Ages/dp/1585424919
I could be wrong, but this is the first time the cube of space was mentioned in a modern book

u/elizabethtarot · 1 pointr/tarot

Just buy a standard Rider Waite deck, and a book about the cards/what each one means like [the Ultimate Guide to Tarot] (https://www.amazon.com/Ultimate-Guide-Tarot-Beginners-Revealing/dp/1592336574) and dive right in! That's the fun of it - there's no right or wrong way to go about it. Eventually you'll be able to read for people once you know all the cards and their meanings.

u/ipproductions · 1 pointr/iching

Hexagram 10 is a tricky one, it denotes a dangerous situation, perhaps charged affectively by yourself. That's the proverbial tiger in it.

Regarding the changing lines and transformed hex: Devote yourself to probing the situation thoroughly before stepping, be dilligent, wary, try to have both internal and external clarity. Then act on it with integrity and will.

Use these resources for interpreting the castings:

- Amazing synthesis done by James DeKorne: The Gnostic Book of Changes

- Vastly superior to Willhelm's translation and commentary. Symbolically sound and historically informed (!): The Complete I Ching

u/rustybob · 1 pointr/lonely

i like your metaphors. there's a book that they reminded me strongly of, here. there's nothing specifically about loneliness, but it gives me a boost when i'm down.

u/saucercrab · 0 pointsr/reddit.com

I enjoy debating and apologize for being an ass at times; being on the defensive keeps my guard up. I really resent my "read a book" statement, as you - unlike gamewarrior - didn't throw the first punch. When baiting threads like these, I often have four or five arguments going at once and forget who's being facetious and who's genuinely interested in discourse. :)

Funny you brought the issue of my masculinity back up, I'm currently reading The Sexual Politics of Meat which directly addresses the issues of "masculine meat" and the neutering of any males that chose to abstain (among many other sexist issues).

u/AnimusHerb240 · 0 pointsr/tarot

I decided to cruise the town one day and check out all the local occult shops. One was mostly focused on wicca. I happened to put my address on their e-mailing list, and one day I received an e-mail from them about a series of beginner tarot classes that would be held nearby for $30, presumably taught by an acquaintance of the owner of the shop.

I didn't attend these particular classes, but my point is you might try finding local community stuff in a similar manner, by poking your head in an occult shop and asking around.

I have consulted these sources: