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t nature to discover this natural cycle of life — from the new sprout that emerges in the spring, to its flowering over the summer, followed by the release of petals in the fall and its death during winter, only to re-emerge in the spring.</p><h1 id="b911">The Devil</h1><figure id="7aee"><img src="https://cdn-images-1.readmedium.com/v2/resize:fit:800/0*IpkWsctUvRRveY1G.jpg"><figcaption>The Devil in the Rider-Waite-Smith tarot deck. Public domain image.</figcaption></figure><p id="02e2">This is definitely a scary card if you don’t understand what it symbolizes. It’s also one of the reasons some people believe the tarot to be evil or the work of the devil.</p><p id="3c7e">It shows a grotesque figure sporting wings and horns. The upper half of his body is human while the lower half consists of furred legs and clawed feet. He’s perched atop a black pillar to which are chained a nude man and woman.</p><p id="7e65" type="7">Note: Nudity in the Rider-Waite-Smith tarot deck isn’t sexual in nature, but symbolizes the fact that nothing, including clothing, obscures one’s true nature which is innocent and pure.</p><p id="cc1d">Remember that the Christian devil used to be an angel, but was cast out of heaven. In this card, he represents the absence of a spiritual foundation and the total focus on the earthly plane.</p><p id="7bae">When you have no spiritual foundation, you look to the physical world for support and love. This can often lead to addictive behaviors and/or abusive relationships.</p><p id="0d8a">The Devil is a reminder that the behavior or relationship aren’t healthy and need to be changed or abandoned in favor of ones based on loving-kindness and compassion toward self and others.</p><h1 id="20f5">The Tower</h1><figure id="856d"><img src="https://cdn-images-1.readmedium.com/v2/resize:fit:800/0*3CW_ebHaX_YgQcoR.jpg"><figcaption>The Tower in the Rider-Waite-Smith tarot deck. Public domain image.</figcaption></figure><p id="aac1">The Tower depicts a burning structure being struck by lightning and two people tumbling to the ground. The base of the Tower is cracked and crumbling. The crown that was once perched on top has been flung away, along with the two people headed for the ground.</p><p id="e95f">It’s a pretty destructive scene and may very well represent some kind of physical destruction.</p><p id="8cd8">However, symbolically, it represents the existence of a weak foundation or structure in your life — a set of circumstances or even a mindset — that can no longer support you.</p><p id="0067">It’s time for needed change, but you’ve been resisting it, even though, on some level, you know it’s necessary. As a result, circumstances arrange themselves to force the change, and it feels like a rug being pulled out from under your feet

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. The longer you resist, however, the worse the destruction can get.</p><p id="63ff">On the upside, when the old structures are released, new ideas, points of view, and circumstances emerge that would not have been possible because those old structures kept you from seeing them.</p><p id="e1b6">You’re surprised and delighted and realize that things aren’t as bad as you once thought they were. It’s been a difficult journey, but it will pass, and the more you cooperate with this change, the quicker that passage will be.</p><h1 id="4e18">Not So Scary After All</h1><figure id="a8ab"><img src="https://cdn-images-1.readmedium.com/v2/resize:fit:800/0*jjaCUgA8SORa0q69"><figcaption>Photo by <a href="https://unsplash.com/@brett_jordan?utm_source=medium&amp;utm_medium=referral">Brett Jordan</a> on <a href="https://unsplash.com?utm_source=medium&amp;utm_medium=referral">Unsplash</a></figcaption></figure><p id="f6f2">The primary message of these cards is to let go of what no longer serves you so that you can move forward toward a new life of promise and opportunity.</p><p id="c018">If they should come up in your reading, let it be an opportunity to discover what needs to change and how this change will benefit you in the long run.</p><p id="7c74"><i>© Patrice Walker 2023, All Rights Reserved</i></p><p id="2fbb"><a href="https://tarotempowers.com/scary-cards-in-the-tarot-deck/"><i>Originally published in TarotEmpowers.com on June 26, 2018.</i></a></p><p id="650c"><i>I hope you enjoyed this story. If you’re new here and looking to read more great stories, consider signing up for a Medium membership. It only costs $5 a month, and it grants you access to everything, as well as giving me the opportunity to earn some bucks when you read, highlight, clap, and comment.</i></p><p id="41fe"><i>You can also <b>subscribe to get my stories via email</b> (the little mail icon on the right) as soon as I publish them. And if you really like what I’ve written, <b>consider leaving a tip </b>(the palm-up icon holding a heart next to the email icon) to let me know. Thanks for your support!!</i></p><div id="a89d" class="link-block"> <a href="https://patrice-walker.medium.com/membership"> <div> <div> <h2>Join Medium with my referral link - Patrice Walker</h2> <div><h3>Read every story from Patrice Walker (and thousands of other writers on Medium). I receive a portion of your monthly…</h3></div> <div><p>patrice-walker.medium.com</p></div> </div> <div> <div style="background-image: url(https://miro.readmedium.com/v2/resize:fit:320/0*iYsgcOF44FWCfL79)"></div> </div> </div> </a> </div></article></body>

Don’t Let These Tarot Cards Scare You!

Mainstream media’s distortion of their true meaning certainly hasn’t helped.

Death from the Rider-Waite-Smith tarot deck. Public domain image.

Certain tarot cards are guaranteed to show up in books, movies, and TV shows that have a tarot card reading scene.

These cards are Death, the Devil, and the Tower.

More often than not, they are used to foretell physical death, the coming of evil, and destruction respectively.

Not only do these overused clichés that, quite frankly I’m tired of seeing, distort the true meaning of the cards, this portrayal doesn’t convey the unique ability of these major arcana cards to teach important life lessons.

I want to dispel these inaccuracies and explain why you don’t need to be afraid if one or more of them should appear in your tarot card reading.

Death

In the image above, the Death card shows a skeletal figure arrayed in black armor, mounted on a white steed. He holds a pennant in his left hand that depicts a white flower against a black background.

The steed is stepping over a King and moving toward a child, a woman, and the Pope himself. In the background, the sun appears to be rising behind two towers.

The message? No one escapes death, no matter how noble or anointed. But dawn always follows this perceived darkness.

Photo by Andrea Caramello on Unsplash

There’s a lot more going on in this card (e.g. the graveyard on the shore of a river; the boat sailing down the river; the cliffs on the other side of the river). But the card’s main symbolism is all about the inevitability of death and the rebirth that inevitably follows.

The death this card represents, however, does not have to be physical death and usually isn’t. It’s letting you know that something in your life needs to “die” in order for something new to emerge.

You can delay this death but you can’t stop it. So you might as well cooperate with it and let go of whatever no longer serves you.

Death is an integral part of life and shouldn’t be feared (easier said than done, right?). We simply have to look at nature to discover this natural cycle of life — from the new sprout that emerges in the spring, to its flowering over the summer, followed by the release of petals in the fall and its death during winter, only to re-emerge in the spring.

The Devil

The Devil in the Rider-Waite-Smith tarot deck. Public domain image.

This is definitely a scary card if you don’t understand what it symbolizes. It’s also one of the reasons some people believe the tarot to be evil or the work of the devil.

It shows a grotesque figure sporting wings and horns. The upper half of his body is human while the lower half consists of furred legs and clawed feet. He’s perched atop a black pillar to which are chained a nude man and woman.

Note: Nudity in the Rider-Waite-Smith tarot deck isn’t sexual in nature, but symbolizes the fact that nothing, including clothing, obscures one’s true nature which is innocent and pure.

Remember that the Christian devil used to be an angel, but was cast out of heaven. In this card, he represents the absence of a spiritual foundation and the total focus on the earthly plane.

When you have no spiritual foundation, you look to the physical world for support and love. This can often lead to addictive behaviors and/or abusive relationships.

The Devil is a reminder that the behavior or relationship aren’t healthy and need to be changed or abandoned in favor of ones based on loving-kindness and compassion toward self and others.

The Tower

The Tower in the Rider-Waite-Smith tarot deck. Public domain image.

The Tower depicts a burning structure being struck by lightning and two people tumbling to the ground. The base of the Tower is cracked and crumbling. The crown that was once perched on top has been flung away, along with the two people headed for the ground.

It’s a pretty destructive scene and may very well represent some kind of physical destruction.

However, symbolically, it represents the existence of a weak foundation or structure in your life — a set of circumstances or even a mindset — that can no longer support you.

It’s time for needed change, but you’ve been resisting it, even though, on some level, you know it’s necessary. As a result, circumstances arrange themselves to force the change, and it feels like a rug being pulled out from under your feet. The longer you resist, however, the worse the destruction can get.

On the upside, when the old structures are released, new ideas, points of view, and circumstances emerge that would not have been possible because those old structures kept you from seeing them.

You’re surprised and delighted and realize that things aren’t as bad as you once thought they were. It’s been a difficult journey, but it will pass, and the more you cooperate with this change, the quicker that passage will be.

Not So Scary After All

Photo by Brett Jordan on Unsplash

The primary message of these cards is to let go of what no longer serves you so that you can move forward toward a new life of promise and opportunity.

If they should come up in your reading, let it be an opportunity to discover what needs to change and how this change will benefit you in the long run.

© Patrice Walker 2023, All Rights Reserved

Originally published in TarotEmpowers.com on June 26, 2018.

I hope you enjoyed this story. If you’re new here and looking to read more great stories, consider signing up for a Medium membership. It only costs $5 a month, and it grants you access to everything, as well as giving me the opportunity to earn some bucks when you read, highlight, clap, and comment.

You can also subscribe to get my stories via email (the little mail icon on the right) as soon as I publish them. And if you really like what I’ve written, consider leaving a tip (the palm-up icon holding a heart next to the email icon) to let me know. Thanks for your support!!

Divination
Symbolism
Life Lessons
Art
Tarot
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