Holistic Tarot: An Integrative Approach to Using Tarot for Personal Growth
A**A
The Only Tarot Book You’ll Ever Need – Fast Delivery Too!
Holistic Tarot by Benebell Wen is an absolute treasure for anyone seriously interested in learning the tarot. It’s comprehensive, insightful, and incredibly well-researched. Wen manages to combine traditional meanings with intuitive and psychological approaches, making it a must-have for both beginners and experienced readers. The book is thoughtfully structured and filled with practical exercises, charts, and detailed card descriptions—it's truly a full course in one volume.I also want to thank the seller for their excellent service. The book was carefully packaged and arrived much faster than expected. Highly recommend both the book and the seller!
N**L
Excellent and deep compendium
Very well done! An excellent and deep compendium that is very easy to use. Well organized in a very systematic way. You can read it from beginning to end, jump around if you wish, but I think it works better as an ongoing resource for when you need to clarify any topic. It seems to be a labour of love from the author. And by the way, the supporting site is also excellent and a very nice add-on to the book.
M**Y
The best, most comprehensive book you can get
I am relatively new to tarot, having used the Zen tarot cards for myself for some years, but the Rider Waite deck not as often. As a professional dowser, I have many interests in intuitive techniques. I always wanted to learn to use tarot better, so I purchased this book. I am an information junkie and very analytical, although also very intuitive. This book is just what I needed. Some people might find it overwhelming, but just do one chapter at a time and take it slow. I've gotten through about 1/4 of the book at this point. I have not read straight through, but mostly. I have consulted the appendices and found the numerology summaries for Life Paths to be more useful to me than those in a book I have on Numerology. It's like you get these little surprise gifts as you go through the book.This book includes lots of useful information for practitioners who intend to read for others. I think if you ever intend to read for others, you must learn ethics, how to present what you've 'seen' in the cards and develop your intuition as fully as possible, since intuition is a key to reading. This book will help you do all those things. She also includes suggestions about things that aren't tarot, but will help you, like different meditation techniques and why she recommends them.I love the detailed explanations for the cards both upright and reversed. I'm not yet confident enough to read cards reversed, so for now, I'm sticking with all cards being upright. But she gives detailed meanings for reversed cards.The only thing so far that I haven't been able to find, and maybe it's me just missing it, is how you get reversed cards in the deck in the first place. She tells you about dealing and preparing yourself for a reading and all kinds of other practices, even cutting cards, but I can't find how you introduce a certain number of cards in reversed position. In fact, I haven't really found anything useful on that topic online or in the other book I have. It would seem to me that it matters which cards are reversed. For example, a Three Aces spread relies on mainly the aces, and it matters whether they are upright or reversed, yet I can't find how she says to compose the deck to make sure all your aces aren't one way or the other. I imagine it doesn't matter that much, but it's a lingering question I have. That said, it's the only thing I have been able to think of that she doesn't answer in detail. And I may just be overlooking it. It's a minor thing.This book is the one book I'd get if I only got one book on tarot. It will take me years to fully learn everything she teaches. If you are not an information junkie, or you are easily overwhelmed by deep, analytical explanations, maybe this isn't a good starting point for you. But it seems to me that in any skill or technique like this, if you want to master it, at some point you have to dive in deeply, think deeply and practice seriously. This book is not only loaded with the basic information you need to start using tarot for self-improvement; it has everything you need if you intend to master it completely.I have plans to order her I Ching book which comes out in 2023, because I am sure it will be equally complete and useful. I give this book my highest recommendation, and I have written over 20 books with my husband on dowsing and intuitive techniques, so I have experience teaching and presenting information and have experience in evaluating books like this. I'd be really proud if this were my book. It's a major accomplishment.
M**0
Where do I even begin...
This book was exactly what I was looking for to break free from the customary interpretations of the cards. I don't use them for fun or leisure, and I don't read for others. I use them for myself. After decades of going around and around, I really started to get frustrated with the same old thinking. Wen's book changed all that for me. She doesn't TELL you what the card means, she offers several different interpretations, branching off from the symbols on the Rider Waite cards. If something does not resonate, she offers several possibilities. But the best thing is, because she doesn't TELL YOU what to think about a given card, you can start to really flesh out interpretations as you work with them, and your readings become more concise FOR YOU. Which is really what tarot is all about, really. The only complaint I have about this book is that I didn't see an option for hardcover, and it's a beefy book that I will have for the rest of my life. I use it daily, and a hardcover would have ensured a longer life. I would have happily paid the hardcover price! Thank you Wen. After decades of reading that the three of swords mean heartbreak and that the seven of swords means lying cheating stealing, I am FINALLY FREE!! So many fresh perspectives, and even perspectives within perspectives if the card offers several figures. I love this book. For me, this will be the book that allows me to eventually put all books down, because I will have honed my mind to think of the cards in an intuitive way. OH, sorry one thing about the content of the book that I don't appreciate is the placement interpretations of the Celtic cross. They seem super outdated and out of step with her very modern interpretations of the cards themselves, and would like to have seen an update in that as well. BUT, it forced me to return to a habit that I abandoned (getting caught in the Celtic cross look keeps you on a hamster wheel!) when I was young, and that was devising my own placement means/spreads, which is something all readers should do anyway. This way I am able to really utilize the book to its full potential. As it is now, this excellent new perspectives get really limited once you throw them in the old Celtic cross placement meanings, which feels really, really wrong and incongruous and super confusing. It actually made me angry to try to employ her new interpretations within that outmoded spread. So, I guess it was a good thing because I'm much happier with my personal placements. I would like to see a next incarnation of this book remove all spreads altogether. This would remove the box completely and allow total freedom in our interpretations. If you are new to reading, you may not feel like you can do that, or you may not know how to go about doing that. So omitting them is to encourage unfettered access to our agency.***UPDATE: one final thing that I must contest about this book. So far the only perspective that I think is absolutely wrong (like, TOTALLY wrong) is the Hierophant. There are several interpretations of the cards, yes, but the interpretation of her Hierophant is ALL negative. I see the Hierophant as a traditionalist, but not necessarily to one's peril. Yes, tradition can be the downfall of those who perpetuate or follow religious dogma, but for students and knowledge seekers, the Hierophant represents education, the seeking of education. The crossed keys symbolize a balance of thoughts: that what is being taught, and how we receive it, or rather, how we filter it and thus integrate it within our own consciousness. The Hierophant is giving the sign of blessing. So, the seeker will find blessings in the fulfillment of self-edification. There is an emphasis on the importance of education and following the traditional path of education, as depicted in his height over his disciples. This could also indicate that an attainment of wisdom and now the ability to share his wisdom with others. This is all taking into consideration that the seeker doesn't get caught up in dogma. Pure education, and the wisdom to assess and process education and transform it into wisdom grants us the position to share this wealth with others. The two pillars represent a sort of 'upright' philosophy or upright morality. The crown is one of attainment not only of 'traditional education', but spiritual education. So far this is the only perspective in her book I avoid. It seems way out of left-field and incongruous with the book as a whole, and I think it needs to be revisited, or at least expanded upon to give contrast to the almost negative interpretation offered.
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