Nine of Cups

The meaning of the Nine of Cups in a Tarot reading, including definitions for both the upright and reversed positions.

A rather well-fed looking individual sits on a bench with his arms folded.  Nine cups line the top of a raised platform behind him.

Upright: This card indicates an individual who is rather smug and self satisfied.  He is very well pleased with his position in the world and doesn’t mind telling you about how great he’s doing.  There is a warning against going too far and appearing to be arrogant.

Reversed:  Indicates some small failures or set backs which should be easily remedied.

EXAMPLES:  Your neighbor with the giant flat screen television, the super gaming computer, the sports car, the trendy clothes and the dream job.

Your beautiful female friend who got married to a rich guy and has 2.5 perfect children, belongs to an upscale church where she sings in the choir, and is voted the most popular girl scouts den mother 5 years in a row.

“Just the Tarot,” by Dan Adair – a kindle ebook available on Amazon

Eight of Cups

The meaning of the Eight of Cups in a Tarot reading, including definitions for the upright and reversed positions.

A person in a red cloak holds a staff as he walks down a dark path.  It’s night and both a quarter and full moon hang in the sky above him.  Eight cups are stacked in the foreground.

Upright: A dark and confusing situation.  Fleeing from troubles. Stealing away in the night.  This isn’t a really pleasant card. It shows confusion, illusions, pain, false and misleading impressions.  The full and quarter moons, however, indicate that the situation will change, probably over the course of the 28 days.

Reversed:  The bad situation is ending.  Things will literally and figuratively lighten up and the path forward will be more clear.

EXAMPLES:  Leaving town because of a really, really bad relationship.

Checking into a shelter for abused women while you wait for the divorce to become final.

Seven of Cups

The meaning of the Seven of Cups in a Tarot reading, including upright and reversed positions.

An individual stands before a cloud containing seven cups.  Each cup contains a different image representing, variously, the opposite sex, the divine presence, knowledge, position, wealth, status, and power.

Upright: This card shows the choices and goals a person may pursue in life.  In this case there are too many of them. The questioner may be confronted with a multitude of possible options and unable to focus on any one of them.  Better to wait until your choices are clear rather than jump into a decision you may regret later.

Reversed:  The confusion is clearing up.  Options are coming into clearer focus.

EXAMPLES:  Trying to decide on a major in your freshman year in college.

Having several people around who are interested in you and not being able to decide which one you’re interested in.

“Just the Tarot,” by Dan Adair – a kindle ebook available on Amazon

Six of Cups

The meaning of the Six of Cups in a Tarot reading, including definitions for both the upright and reversed positions.

A young boy in a hooded cloak offers a cup full of flowers to a little girl.  Four cups of flowers are in the foreground and one is balanced on a pedestal. In the background a manor glows with golden light and a man with a staff is seen pacing down a cobbled walkway.

Upright: This is a sweet card of giving and receiving.  There is an innocence and lack of guile that permeates it.  This could indicate feelings of love on a very child like, trusting level.  The hood that the boy wears hearkens back to the major arcanum card The Fool and shows a pure and strong energy of joy.  The guard with the staff indicates that this may be a quiet time of sanctuary, of being safe and just enjoying a relationship.  It’s possible that the answer to a problem that has been vexing the questioner lies in her past.

“Just the Tarot,” by Dan Adair – available on Amazon

Reversed:  The time of sanctuary and quiet is over.  This stresses the need to act as a responsible adult and deal with your problems.

EXAMPLES:  Young love, your first crush, the first days of the first lover relationship that a person has.

Just feeling happy remembering an earlier, more innocent time in your life.


Five of Cups

The meaning of the Five of Cups in a Tarot reading. Definitions for both the upright and reversed positions are included.

A person dressed entirely in black stares at the ground where three cups lie on their sides, spilling wine upon the ground.  Two cups are behind him and a bridge can be seen in the distance.

Upright: As indicated by the black cloak this is a card of deep mourning and sadness.  The person mourns over the loss of the three cups, over the end of good and happy times.  His or her grief is so deep that she fails to see the two cups behind her and realize that there will be more good times and relationships in the future.  The bridge indicates that this is a transitional card, passing from one stage in life to another, but for the moment there is just huge sadness.

“Just the Tarot,” by Dan Adair – a kindle ebook available on Amazon

Reversed:  The sadness is slowly fading away and the individual is moving on with life.  Perhaps a new union, romantic relationship, or business venture.

EXAMPLES:  A person who has had a loved one die and is so deeply shattered that they can barely function, much less think about the future.

A really terrible break up that’s left one of the parties feeling totally broken and hopeless.

Four of Cups

The meaning of the Four of Cups in a Tarot reading, including upright and reversed positions.

A man sits on the ground, leaning against a tree, arms crossed.  He stares at three cups on the ground before him and seems not to see the single cup that is materializing in the air.

Upright: The individual is focused on the past, dwelling on happy times that are gone, and is ignoring or just doesn’t see new opportunities being offered to him.  May indicate a person who is unable or unwilling to get over a failed relationship and therefore can’t start a new one.

“Just the Tarot,” by Dan Adair – available on Amazon

Reversed:  The individual is letting go of old relationships and is starting over.  Perhaps a new love interest or romance.

EXAMPLES:  Your friend who’s stuck in the gloom and doom phase after she broke up with her boyfriend and can’t talk about anything but how much she misses her ex.

Someone who is obsessed with a business venture or project that failed and refuses to move on to another one.


Three of Cups

The meaning of the Three of Cups in a Tarot reading, including definitions for the upright and reversed positions.

Three women dance joyously together, chalices raised in a toast.  A pumpkin is in the foreground and ripened crops are in the background.

Upright: Fun, frivolity, celebrations.  A very sweet card indicating a period of happiness and joy.  The pumpkin and crops may indicate that a long season of hard work on a project has paid off.

“Just the Tarot,” by Dan Adair – a kindle ebook available on Amazon

Reversed:  A union or romantic relationship may be falling apart.  It could indicate relationships where there is too heavy an emphasis on sex and good times and too little emphasis on caring and romance.  Possibly indicates a sort of mindless group sex.

EXAMPLES:  The office Christmas party after all of the work has been wrapped up for the season and you’re ready to take time off and enjoy the holidays.

A housewarming gathering of friends and loved ones when the move is finally over, the moving boxes have all been unpacked, and you’re settled into your new home.

Two of Cups

The meaning of the Two of Cups in a Tarot reading, including definitions for both the upright and reversed positions.

The card depicts a man and a woman facing each other, the man’s right hand extended toward the woman.  They each hold a large chalice and a caduceus topped by a winged lion lies between the chalices.

Upright: Two people bonding together as partners.  This may indicate a budding romance or a new friendship with a great deal of affection and warmth.  The caduceus was the symbol of merchants and trade long before it became associated with the medical practice and so this may indicate a particularly good business relationship.

“Just the Tarot,” by Dan Adair – available on Amazon

Reversed:  This indicates a relationship that isn’t going to work out.  It may be a temporary, physical attraction to someone, only to discover that you really don’t have much in common.  In business it may indicate a partnership or joint endeavor that never gets past the negotiating phase.

EXAMPLES:  Your best buddy at work, someone who can crack you up with just a smile or a wink and you feel totally sympatico with.

A co-creator or music, art, or writing, a person with whom you can get completely into the same groove or on the same page and create some magic together.

Ace of Cups

The meaning of the Ace of Cups in a Tarot reading, including definitions for the Ace of Cups upright and the Ace of Cups reversed.

A ghostly hand appears out of a cloud.  It holds a golden chalice in its’ palm. A dove holding a eucharist in its’ beak descends toward the chalice.  Four streams of water fountain out of the chalice and pour their contents into a pool in which lotuses grow.

Upright: This card signals the appearance – perhaps very sudden appearance – of love in the questioners life.  It emphasizes the divine origin of love and how it flows into the world and nourishes all that it touches.  The lotuses echo the Buddhist symbol for the divine in the human spirit. They begin life in the mud and yet grow into the air and produce beautiful flowers.

In the Southern United States they might refer to this as being, “thunder bolted.”  It’s that lovley state of affairs when you realize that you are head over heels in love with someone.  The world seems bright and beautiful and new because you’re in love. A truly wonderful card to draw in a reading.

“Just the Tarot,” by Dan Adair – a kindle ebook available on Amazon

Reversed:  It’s possible that the questioner thinks he or she is love but the other person views it as just a friendship.  Another possibility is that there has been true love but it’s fading away.

EXAMPLES:  Your first, “puppy love,” growing into a real relationship with someone you adore.

You’re at a party when you suddenly see someone across the room and know that’s the person you’re meant to be with for the rest of your life.

What Are the Minor Arcana of the Tarot?

A brief discussion of the minor arcana of the Tarot, including the symbolism of wands, cups, swords, and pentacles. This looks at their function and meaning in a Tarot spread and is oriented toward beginners.

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So if you followed up on the suggestions in my previous post – Can You Learn to Read Tarot Cards?  – then you’ve looked at the various Tarot decks, picked a deck that resonates with you, and you’re looking through the cards thinking profound thoughts like, “What in the hell does THAT card mean?”

We’ll get to that.

In the meantime, when you look at the Tarot deck you’ll find that it’s divided into 5 different parts:  the 4 suits of cards, known as the Minor Arcana, and the 22  very, very, very symbolic cards known as the Major Arcana.

For today let’s just talk about the Minor Arcana.  You’ll see that the 4 suits are designated Wands, Cups, Swords, and Pentacles.  That’s the way that the Tarot divides up and analyzes the things in our world.

Wands represent ideas, intellect, the thought process, what we like to conceive as the thinking mind.

Cups represent emotions, feelings, and relationships with emotional content like friendships, lovers, family.  And that means ALL of the emotions from love to hate and everything in between.

Swords represent aggression, physical force, and mental force like dominance issues and power struggles in the family or the workplace.

Pentacles represent physical possessions, money, our various toys, and both the material world and materialism.

They have other aspects, as I discuss in my ebook,“Just the Tarot.”

Wands are often associated with travel.  Swords, by way of their cutting edges, may be associated with needing surgery.  But for now let’s concentrate on the four basic characteristics of the Minor Arcana:  ideas, emotions,force,and possessions.

Of course, we know by now that the human world is far more holistic than a simple 4 point division.  Every idea has some sort of emotion tied to it and physical or mental force often hides fear or phobias.  And the spiritual flows into the physical world and the physical world often blossoms with great spirituality.  Still, it’s a useful way of looking at the world and the human predicament.

And that’s what the Minor Arcana are all about:  the human predicament. The Major Arcana are all about MAJOR forces in your life:  birth, death, transitions, good, evil. The Minor Arcana are about all of the crappy little things (and good little things) that we deal with in day to day life.  

Each card represents a particular human situation that we experience as we journey through life.  And each reading represents a snapshot of all of the things that the questioner is going through at that moment in time.

Think of it this way:  if you could step outside of yourself (your SELF) and sort of hover around the ceiling for a while and REALLY look at your life objectively, what would you see?  You might see your work-self who is dealing with a crappy, overbearing boss. Then there might be your home-self who loves to paint or write or knit or listen to music and pet the cat.  Then there might be your relationship-self who is deeply in love or maybe has been hurt in the past and is afraid of love or maybe is a hopeless romantic who is in love with love. And how about your physical-self who might be a weight lifter or might be chronically ill or might be a long distance runner or might be in a wheel chair?

All of those separate, “selves,” make up the greater self which is you.  When you look at the Minor Arcana in a reading you’re looking at what’s going on with all of those different selves at that moment.  Home, work, romance, physical state of being, ideas,emotions,power,and possessions. And the magic happens when you see the reading come together as a story of the questioners life.  Yep, even day to day life is HIGHLY magical!

On to next lesson!

“Just the Tarot,” by Dan Adair – available on Amazon