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Using the Tarot to Access Past Lives
This article was
written by
Mark McElroy
posted under
Tarot
CREATIVE COMMONS
LICENSE: Please note that the use of Llewellyn Journal articles
is subject to certain
Terms and
Conditions
Do you believe you’ve lived
before?
At a party I attended in 2006, I met a middle-aged man who
claimed to have recovered memories of a past life. After dinner,
he pushed back his plate of bread pudding and announced, “In a
former life, I was a black woman. I clearly recall giving birth
to a baby in the middle of a cotton field behind the railroad
tracks.”
Earlier the same year, I met a woman known for her ability to
help others glimpse their past lives. She darted around the
room, peering into people’s eyes and announcing what she saw:
You were a fish. Yes, definitely a fish. And you—you were a
horse. And you? You were a dancer in Russia, but you starved to
death before you could make your first performance.”
I’ve also met a young man who very quietly recounts his own
past-life story: “I dream about this place constantly,” he says.
“I lived in a muddy, rutted village. We were always cold. There
was something wrong with my teeth; I was always in pain. There’s
another man there—overweight and dirty and ragged. We work
together, but at some point, he kills me in an argument over
food.”
In 2005, ABC News covered the dramatic tale of James Leininger,
a six year-old-boy believed by his family to be the
reincarnation of James M. Huston,
Jr., a World War II fighter pilot. A number of people, including
Huston’s own sister, have been convinced by the vivid details
Leininger seems to recall of his life and death.
Some people believe stories like these are proof of the reality
of reincarnation. Others insist that “reclaimed memories” are
nothing more than half-remembered dreams or vivid fantasies.
While I don’t claim to have all the answers, I do know this: if
you’re interested in exploring the idea of past lives, your
tarot deck is a powerful tool for
doing so.
Reincarnation: A Secret Teaching of the Tarot?
Reincarnation has long been one of
the esoteric tarot’s “hidden teachings.” Over the years, many
writers have equated the
Fool with themes of life, death,
and rebirth.
Kabbalistic systems often equate
the Fool with
Kether, the crown and “The Source
of Life”—an assignment that suggest the Fool’s descent form the
world of potential into the world of distilled physical forms.
Many readers equate the pack over the shoulder of the
Rider-Waite-Smith (RWS) Fool as the repository of
memories and wisdom collected during previous lives. The Fool’s
number—when he’s given a number at all—is usually zero, a number
who’s shape suggests the idea of endless cycles. And, of course,
there are the
Majors, which achieve the
integration and enlightenment suggested by the
World, and then begins the
journey anew.
Reincarnation, then, would appear to be woven into the fabric of
the modern esoteric tarot. That fact, combined with tarot’s
unique ability to tap thoughts, memories, and stories long
submerged in the subconscious, makes the deck a powerful tool
for exploring past lives.
Gentle Words of Caution
If you plan to work with tarot as
part of an effort to illuminate past lives, please keep the
following cautions in mind:
- Past-Life exploration is a serious venture. Attempts to
peer into previous lives should not be taken lightly.
Proceed with this exercise only if you feel a compelling
need to make a connection with a prior self.
- Not all past lives are pleasant ones. Repressed memories
(whether forged in your current or your previous lives) have
often been buried for a reason.
- Past lives often don’t “perform on demand.” As a result
of dreamwork or meditative regression, you may wish to
explore a specific incarnation. The details uncovered by
this exercise may relate to that existence…or come from
another. Be open to whatever insights occur.
- Not everyone can be Helen of Troy. While you may fancy
having been the “face that launched a thousand ships,” you
may connect with a fairly mundane prior existence. Fame is
not necessarily an indicator of a successful incarnation.
The insights you achieve as a lowly shopkeeper may be more
important than those achieved in a more high-profile
previous life.
Stepping Back
This process of reviewing a prior
existence is simple but powerful. I recommend you perform this
experiment only when you have a minimum of one hour to pursue
it; otherwise, you may rush through the steps and neglect
important insights.
Step One: Preparation
Prepare for this reading by grounding
and centering yourself using whatever tradition you honor. Turn
off cell phones, telephones, televisions, and other
distractions. Do whatever must be done to avoid interruptions
during this work. The experiment may be undertaken in any
setting; however, you may find it useful to dim the lights,
light candles, play meditative music, or burn incense. You
should feel protected, empowered, and safe.
Step Two: Meditation on the Fool
From whatever deck you prefer, remove
the Fool (or its equivalent). Once you are seated comfortably on
the floor, take the card in both hands and focus on the
illustration. Clear your mind. When distracting thoughts occur,
acknowledge them, tell them, “I’ll deal with you later,” and
return your attention to the card.
With time, your focus will soften or your eyes will grow heavy.
When this occurs, allow your eyes to close—but maintain the
image of the Fool card in your mind. Think of this image as a
frame of film. When you feel ready, prompt your “inner
projectionist” to play the card’s “movie” in reverse.
If you are working with the RWS Fool, the young man in
the illustration will walk slowly backward. The clouds above him
will retreat toward the distant horizon. The rose he carries
will revert from blossom to bud. The white dog at his feet will
cavort in reverse.
Keep your inner eye on the Fool as he shrinks from your field of
view. When you can no longer see him, allow the image of the
card to slowly fade to black.
Step Three: The Reading
Gently open your eyes. Replace the
Fool in the deck and shuffle it. Beginning at the top, deal
eight cards into an upright column: three cards above, two
crossed cards in the center, and three cards below.
- Card One: Your
Gender. This card holds clues to your gender during a past
life. Don’t obsess on the apparent gender of the character
in the illustration. While this may be an indicator of your
previous gender, the really important question to ask is
this: what gender do you feel the card symbolically
suggests?
- Card Two:
Your Family. This card indicates something of importance
about the family into which you were born. The Ten of
Cups may suggest a large,
happy, loving environment. The
Justice card may point to a
strict, sterile household where rules were more important
than freedom. The Eight of Cups may suggest that something
was missing from your home environment, and could be read as
anything from “an absent parent” to “life as an only child.”
- Card Three:
Identity/Personality. This card provides insight into your
core identity during this previous lifetime. A Major in this
position indicates a behavior, belief, or would view that
dominated this existence. (The
Lovers, for example, might
indicate you spent this lifetime desperately seeking a
soulmate…or that romantic relationships were always a
challenge for you.
- Cards Four and Five:
Critical Situation. These cards
are a snapshot—a “Kodak moment,” if you like—of a critical
situation that arose during your previous life. The two
cards represent two energies, forces, or people whose
interactions created a climax of life-changing dimensions.
If you find the Eight of
Wands paired with the Four of
Coins, you might decide your
previous self received a sudden insight (Eight of Wands)
that prompted him to save food and money (Four of Coins) in
preparation for a coming disaster.
- Card Six:
Response. This card represents all-important response you
made to the crisis defined by cards Four and Five. The
Devil in this position might
indicate that the fellow from you previous example hoarded
his provisions for himself; the Six of Coins, though, might
suggest that he endeared himself to others by freely sharing
his resources.
- Card Seven:
Life Lesson. This card symbolizes the life lesson you
learned during this existence. Expect this card to refer, at
least in part, to the crisis outlined in cards Four and Five
and the response signified by card Six.
The Tower in this position,
for example, might indicate that, as a result of being led
to help others, you learned to escape the prison of
obsessive self-interest.
- Card Eight:
Influence on Your Present Life. This card will reveal how
the existence depicted in this
spread colors your thoughts,
feelings, emotions, and choices today. The King of
Swords in this position could
suggest that your cool handling of a past-life crisis
prepared you to be a present-day leader. On the other hand,
the Two of Wands might suggest today’s inability to stick
with a course of action is rooted in self-doubt left over
from a previous incarnation’s self-doubt.
Step Four: Follow-Up
Knowing about a past life is one
thing; knowing how to use this information to foster positive
change and growth is another.
Once you have genuinely opened up yourself to the revelations of
this reading, collect all the cards, shuffle them, and draw
three new cards, placing them in a simple horizontal line.
- Card One:
Honoring the Past. This card suggests something you can do
today as a means of acknowledging the work you performed in
the past. The Four of Swords might prompt you to offer a
prayer for the person you were, or the
Star card might lead you to
make a libation—a small offering of wine or water, poured
out over an altar of small stones—in recognition of a former
self.
- Card Two:
Putting Wisdom to Work. This card suggests a way you can put
your past life experience to work today. If you discover,
for example, that you worked as a successful craftsman in
the past, drawing the Eight of Coins might encourage you to
take up a handicraft you could use to enhance present-day
income.
- Card Three: Looking Forward.
Reconnecting with past lives can
be exciting, but your present life has lessons of its own to
teach! This card, which hints at your current life’s agenda,
will suggest a matter in the present that requires your
attention. (Drawing the
Hierophant, for example,
might motivate you to schedule more time for deliberate
spiritual practice.) Pondering how this card extends or
builds upon your past life experience will be both
satisfying and enlightening.
Additional Tips for Past-Life Explorers
- Take some time to explore the
insights suggested by this reading. Expect connections among
cards to reveal themselves in subtle ways. One good way to
expand and preserve the information you gather during this
exercise is to translate it into a journal entry by writing
a paragraph or two about each card.
- Want to explore a specific past life you’ve glimpsed
before? Choose cards deliberately to represent what you do
know; draw random cards to “fill in the blanks” and complete
the picture.
- If some cards remain inscrutable, or if you feel
uncertain about the information you receive, you can always
supplement your insights with commentary cards: additional
cards drawn to amplify or enhance the meaning of the
original card. Place commentary cards to the right of the
cards they modify; they will “extend” the story and allow
you to glimpse additional details.
- Even if your current beliefs do not embrace
reincarnation, this spread can still provide you with a
great deal of insight. After “generating” a past life with
the cards, try interpreting the story you’ve crated as
though it were a symbolic dream. What truths about your
present life might this “past-life experience” reveal
From Llewellyn's 2008 Tarot Reader. For more Llewellyn
Tarot titles and decks,
click here.
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Mark McElroy
After purchasing his first Tarot deck
in 1973, Mark McElroy began terrorizing other neighborhood
nine-year-olds with dire and dramatic predictions.Today, he
calls Tarot "the ultimate visual brainstorming tool," and shares
techniques designed to help... Read
more |
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