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Death Tarot Card Meanings

Death tarot card meanings Key Words for the Death Tarot Card Meanings

* Change
* Exposure
* Transition
* Termination
* Inevitability

Introduction to the Death Tarot Card Meanings:
All of us stop and shift in our seats when we come upon the grim reaper. Many of us equate death as an ending, like getting called out of the game of life. Thankfully, that is not what this card is about.

The Death card speaks of a major conclusion in an area of our lives. Often when this card shows up in a reading it means the querent has had, or will have a change that is monumental - an ending of circumstances that were dragging on for far too long and the only way to make a clean break is to have a sharp ending. The key point to remember here is that where there is an ending, there is also a beginning.

The Death card also exposes us to the inevitabilities in our lives. Everyone has heard the old adage "the only thing you can count on is death and taxes." The quote left out one other inevitable occurance: Change. We can alway count on change. No matter how long we've been at our jobs, how long we've been married, or how long we've lived in one location - fact of the matter is that everything changes. We may remain in the same house all of our lives, but our lives will always change. Life is in constant motion and this is the irony of the Death card. Death is never the end - it is simply a motion in a different direction.

Please note: The historical nature of the Tarot is steeped in allegory. As such, this occurance of this card rarely indicates actual physical death.

Key Symbols Relative to Death Tarot Card Meanings:
This section focuses in on a few select symbols that can help us further define the Death Tarot card meanings.

Death tarot card meanings of the skull Skull: Long seen as a symbol of humanity's mortality - the skull is a symbol that all things change and transition. Some cultures see the skull as the seat of the mind - the home of our thoughts. In this case, we can translate the skull to mean the death of unwanted thoughts.

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Death tarot card meaning of the sun Sun: More irony with this card! The sun is a symbol of life and growth. The sun in this case serves as a symbolic reminder that where there is an ending, there is always a new beginning. The sun will rise again, and tomorrow is another day.

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Death tarot card meaning of the rose Rose: A long-standing symbol of purity, promise, and beauty. In the case of the Death card, this rose represents the promise of new beginnings. We must also take the thorns into consideration - with the promise of new hope, we may have to endure a few stinging thorns (painful ordeals) along the way. Such is the way of life.

http://www.tarotteachings.com/death-tarot-card-meanings.html
 
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Death is numbered thirteen and is the most feared card in the deck. We see the Grim Reaper depicted as a dark and powerful figure, sometimes on horseback and at other times on foot. He usually carries a scythe and leaves bodies, limbs and so on in his wake. Whoever we are, Death will claim us eventually.

The Death card signifies endings, but not necessarily shocking and disruptive ones. In any case, endings always lead to new beginnings and Death itself symbolises a sweeping away of the past. If we rid ourselves of past garbage then we are free to set out on an entirely new path

When Death appears it almost always signifies a major change in one's life. Sometimes the change will appear disruptive and unexpected, sometimes it will be a breath of fresh air - clearing away obstacles and allowing you to surge forward. So do not assume that Death is a negative card - it is often just what we need in order to progress when fear is holding us up.

I wonder if there is a more-feared card in the Tarot deck? Yet Death is, in many ways, a hopeful and refreshing influence if only we will let it be. It is the major card for change and alteration in the entire deck. Since life itself changes constantly, in order to harmonise ourselves more completely with it, we too must be in a state of constant change - working toward our goals, attempting to fulfil our dreams and developing the quality of our spiritual understanding.

When Death comes up as Card of the Day, the first question we need to ask ourselves is - what is it that needs to be changed or finished up? What situations have been lingering on well past their sell-by date? What should we have dealt with before, that this day challenges us to face and finish?

Imagine, for a moment, that your life is a plot of land. If it is completely overgrown, covered with unwanted and untended undergrowth, you cannot plant something beautiful and fruitful in it can you?

The Death card requires that we spend a bit of dedicated time cutting away the undergrowth, and clearing the debris so that our lives are clear and open, ready for fresh planting.

Sometimes a Death card day won't be one in which we need to do, so much as one in which we need to think. Most peoples' lives are very busy indeed these days. So busy, in fact, that we often tend to put off thinking about the difficult or demanding issues in our lives. Yet often it is exactly this type of issue that causes emotional and mental deadwood to accumulate, if we allow it.

If life is created by what we think, what we expect and how we feel about things, our deepest emotional urges, our wildest dreams, our highest ideals require a great deal of thinking about, don't they? If not, we stagnate, never creating new channels through which to direct our energies, never determining when a habitual action has run its course, never assessing what is useful, and what is not.

So, sometimes, a Death card day needs to be a day in which you re-evaluate the general patterns of your daily existence, and re-appraise your goals. You'll know if it's that kind of day by measuring how dissatisfied you currently feel. If you are largely happy and comfortable, then the Death card day is one for clearing the decks in a physical sense.

Affirmation: I welcome change into my life, embracing it fearlessly and hopefully.

http://www.angelpaths.com/majors/death.html
 
DEATH

* ENDING
* TRANSITION
* ELIMINATION
* INEXORABLE FORCES

ACTIONS

ending
closing one door to open another
bringing something to a close
completing a chapter
concluding unfinished business
putting the past behind you
having a parting of the ways

going through transition
changing status
moving from the known to the unknown
being cast adrift
waiting in an in-between state
being in the middle

eliminating excess
cutting out what isn't necessary
shedding old attitudes
getting down to bare bones
concentrating on essentials
getting back to basics

experiencing inexorable forces
being in the path of sweeping change
being caught in the inescapable
going through what cannot be avoided
being part of a powerful movement
riding your fate
accepting the inevitable

http://www.learntarot.com/maj13.htm
 
Transforming Death with the Tarot
an article by Jennifer Moore originally printed in Spirit of Change Fall/Winter 1991

In the Tarot Death represents change and transition. Death is not usually a sign of a physical death or illness, but represents the death of a part of oneself and the birth of a new one. By learning to perceive Death as a process of transformation, we can affect our view of reality, seeing life as a continuum that is constantly shifting and flowing from one state of being to another. Nothing can be truly destroyed, only transformed into a new shape, a new life.

Death in the Tarot offers an alternative viewpoint which helps us find ease in accepting change in our lives. By considering its meaning, we can find ways to welcome change without feeling as though we might lose ourselves. This is a basic human fear, however true death does not bring loss but gain. It brings us deep knowledge, allows us to come into our power and returns us to the truth of our Selves. Ultimately, Death is about releasing that which is not truly you. Death distills us to our truest essence. Death brings us back to the core, to the basis of what we are. We change as we lose the unnecessary patterns in our lives, but we are not really changing so much as we are beginning to realize our truest self. The more we focus inward to our heart and soul, the less violent Death seems and the more it reflects the truth of our being.

Death can be a process of willing surrender to change, but we generally change only when we're sick and tired of being sick and tired. At that place of frustration, only when we're willing to accept all possible consequences, does change really come about. Life is eternal when we are willing to grow, but when we get stuck in meaningless tradition or old habits, we end up dying because we cease to move with the Life Force. Death is a card of following the Life Force. We must accept the natural pattern as it is. We sustain ourselves by yielding to the natural flow of the world.

During this process of change we might consider areas of possible resistance. What is our relationship to change? How much are we resisting it? How are we avoiding it? Frequently, our perceptions of change are of radical, churning, violent, 180-degree turns that leave us exhausted and raw. However, when we truly surrender to change it stops being a violent catharsis and we learn to accept life exactly as it is, on its own terms. Change can occur gracefully and gradually, like the slow growth of new plants in Spring. It's not change, but the resistance to change that brings pain. Praying for or seeking "the willingness to be willing" can dissolve huge amounts of resistance.

It is ironic that the fear of change or "death" is usually the thing that kills. When we are fearful of change, we become rigid and lose our connection to the shifting flow of life. For example, imagine a village located near a clear, fresh spring. For hundreds of years, the people of the village have flourished next to this spring. Their gardens were bountiful and the people were prosperous. One day, the spring started to dry up. Most of the people in the village decided to move and find a new water source. A few said to themselves, "This is my home, and I'm not going to leave here. I grew up here, my parents grew up here, my grandparents grew up here, my great-grandparents grew up here, and I'm going to raise my kids here. This is the way things have always been, and I refuse to move." They stay, and their water source vanishes. Their crops wither, and they die because they refuse to accept that things have changed.

As human beings with free will, the way we choose to deal with change is up to us. In this context, Death sharpens the experience of change by offering us the choice to either grow or die. Many people get so stuck in expectations of how they want their life to be that they are not able to surrender to a natural transformation, and the results of that process. When we are not willing to surrender, when we are not willing to change, we die. We cease to exist because we are not being replenished or allowing new possibilities to arise.

Instead of the traditional image of the Grim Reaper which is portrayed on most Tarot cards, I have sought to find an image that represented the continuum from life to death to rebirth. While leading a guided meditation, I discovered a view of the Death card which later manifested as an image for "The Healing Tarot". I saw Death as a huge gateway of bones which, once entered, would suck away all that was not one's truest essence. It distilled the soul to its core. Here is an excerpt from my guided meditation to Death:

"Before you looms a huge gateway made entirely of bones. As you walk towards the gate, the air becomes drier and drier, taking all the moisture out of your breath, drawing you out and towards the gate. Come towards the gate. Walk past the vast bones of the earliest creatures of this planet. Walk into the heart of this gate of transformation. Look around you at the bones of civilization, the bones that remain in Death.

Stand in this gate and allow all that is not your truest self to be taken from you. Feel the parts of yourself which you no longer need pour out of you. Allow yourself to let go to the power of the gate. Feel your truest essence, all that remains within you.

Move deeper through the gate and go to the very heart of the power, to the place where life and death begin and end and begin again, to the source of all life and beyond. Reach into this core and take what you need to complete your soul, to complete your change. Walk through the core. Let yourself be blessed and transformed by the power. Keep walking through to the other side, walk past this now-living gateway, alive with plants and flowers and the matrix of all living beings. Walk through this gate of life..."

In the image of Death in "The Healing Tarot," the Lady of Life and the Lord of Death stand in the vortex of the Death Gate where the spark of new life dwells. Here, Life takes essence and gives it form, and Death takes form and transforms it into essence. Life and Death dance with each other, inextricably woven together in the pattern of destiny. This is an image of Death as change, and of change as a natural process, an alchemical transformation.

The process of change, of death, is inevitable, but the way that change occurs is forever in flux. Our attitude towards change and our willingness to accept it dictates the ease with which our transitions happen. By contemplating the Death card in the Tarot, we can find new ways to accept change in our lives.

http://www.bluewitch.com/healingtarot/deathcol.htm
 
Tarot Cards - Death



Death (La Mort)
The Child of the Great Transformers; The Lord of the Gate of Death

Card Number: 13
Key Number: 24
Rulership: Scorpio
Hebrew Letter: Nun
Translation: Fish
Numerical Value: 12

Divinatory meaning
Upright - The beginning of a new life. As a result of underlying circumstances transformation and change. Major changes. The end of a phase in life which has served its purpose. Abrupt and complete change of circumstances, way of life and patterns of behaviour due to past events and actions. Alterations.


Ill Dignified or Reversed - Change that is both painful and unpleasant. A refusal to face the fear of change or change itself. Agonising periods of transition. Inertia. Lethargy. Mental, physical or emotional exhaustion.

http://www.paranormality.com/tarot_death.shtml
 
Tarot Death Card - 13

Published by jenwhitten at 6:00 pm under Paranormal and Supernatural Edit This

Happy Friday the 13th, dark passengers! As I discussed in yesterday’s post, Friday the 13th has some pretty dark associations and the number itself has the notorious honor of being the most widespread superstition out there. Today, we have a special guest to tell us about The Death Card in Tarot. (Wouldn’t you know it just happens to be the number 13?)

So without further ado, here’s Deb from Everyday Tarot:

~~~~~
As if the number 13 doesn’t already have a bad enough rap, the folks that designed the Tarot - whoever they may actually be - went and made the 13th card in the Major Arcana the Death card. With all the bad press that the number 13 gets, you’d think they’d have been a bit smarter about it, wouldn’t you? Either that, or they must have had a powerful reason for placing Death as the 13th card of the Tarot deck. I’m betting on the latter explanation.

Death is easily the most feared card in the Tarot deck. From the well-known Steven Wright reference - you know, the one about playing poker with a deck of tarot cards? I got a full house and three people died? - to serial killers marking their kills with the Death card from the Tarot, the associations of the Death card with actual physical death are hard to escape. Yet anyone who reads Tarot cards at all will tell you that the Death card refers more to an ending of something than to physical death. Even deeper, the Death Tarot card hints at transformation, and life beyond death - it is, after all, only the 13th card in the deck. What follows the Death card is a series of cards about spiritual transformation that culminate with Judgment and The World.

The best known interpretation of the Death card was drawn by Pamela Colman Smith for the Rider-Waite Tarot deck, the most popular Tarot deck in the world. Smith’s original drawing for the card is at the head of this post. There’s an amazing amount of symbolism drawn into the card, much of it very subtle. Some of the major points to notice are:

1. Death rides a pale horse. Throughout history, the forces of good and truth and faith have ridden white horses.
2. His standard bears the White Rose of spiritual awakening.
3. In the background of the card, the sun is rising between a pair of towers, signifying a journey into the light of a new day.
4. The card’s number, 13, is the last lunar month of the year, the month of death and rebirth.
5. Death’s armor is black, the color of mystery and mystics.
6. On his chest is a barely discernible cross, the symbol of the Knights Templar.
7. Behind Death, a ship with red sails travels on the water, a symbol of continuing life.
8. The card that precedes Death is The Hanged Man, a symbol of sacrifice for the purpose of spiritual enlightenment.
9. The card that follows Death is Temperance, the alchemical process by which one substance is transformed into a stronger, more valuable substance.

It’s important to note that Waite imbued the most commonly known Death card with his own visions and views of Death, and those are heavily influenced by his background with the Knights Templar, the Rosicrucians and the Order of the Golden Dawn. Other decks use other symbols to represent similar ideas without the heavy-handed symbolism associated with those orders.

If you’re interested in learning more about the symbolism used in the Waite deck, and how it was influenced by Waits’s own beliefs and background, you’ll find a great deal of information at Tarot Passages.
~~~~~

Very interesting how the Knights Templar keep popping up whenever 13 is mentioned…

To learn more about Tarot, make sure to pop over and see our guest over at Everyday Tarot. Also be on the lookout for my guest post over there on the Christian misconceptions about Tarot.

Jen

“Let your dark passenger come out to play…Be your own nemesis!”

http://darkpassenger.today.com/2009/03/13/deathcard/
 
Für heute sind es die neun Stäbe

ganz interessant im kontext zur vorhergehenden karte;
hier geht es um dein energie level; das kann auf den koerper bezogen zb
das immunsystem sein, oder aber auf anderer ebene, die (korper)kraefte,
die man mobilisiert, um gesund zu werden. es geht also um das wie...

wenn man bdenkt, wie der koerper antikoerper bildet, gibt das aufschluss
ueber einen ansatz der genesung. mal ueberlegen...
 
Kaum ist man mal nicht da, treibt Luo ihr Unwesen...zzzz:Dder Tod hat dich wohl heute zur Höchstform angetrieben;)

So, meine Dienstagkarten sind wie folgt:

Vordergrund: 4 Kelche
Hintergrund: Herrscherin
QS Wagen

Oki doki....bin mal wieder verdrossen und ziehe mich zurück. Ich bin unzufrieden...ja ja, ich weiss auch warum. Meine nervigen Arbeitskollegen...mir fehlt die Behaglichkeit, die die Herrscherin normalerweise um sich rum hat. Die möchte ich nämlich und krieg sie nicht im Büro.

Damit soll ich mich aber garnicht lange aufhalten, sondern einfach dranvorbeirauschen.

Man kann sich doch echt alles zusammendeuten, wie mans braucht.;)

Alles Liebe!
 
Werbung:
heute hab ich den turm... der koennte mich heute auch zur hoechstform anspornen...
und wenn ich spaeter ein wenig mehr zeit habe... werde ich es wieder auf die spitze
treiben... bis es bricht...
 
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