Learn Tarot

Learn Tarot

Tarot study is not only memorizing 78 meanings. It is a practice of shaping a question, observing symbols, checking the card language, and writing your own reading notes.

Today’s Study Loop Draw → Observe → Check → Journal

Look at the image first, note the symbol that catches your eye, then compare it with the card meaning.

How This Page Differs From the Library

The card library explains each card. This study hub shows the order, habits, and reading criteria that help you use those meanings.

Go to Library

Beginner Study Path

01

Major Arcana

Follow the large story from The Fool to The World and read major cards as life themes and turning points.

02

Minor Arcana

Learn Wands, Cups, Swords, and Pentacles as practical language for action, feeling, thought, and material life.

03

Spreads

Match the spread to the size of the question: one card for focus, three cards for flow, and binary choice for comparison.

04

Reversals

Read reversals as blocked, excessive, internalized, or weakened expressions instead of automatic bad news.

05

Journaling

Record the question, first impression, card combination, and later follow-up to build reading intuition.

78

Card Library

Use the library when you need a card-by-card meaning, symbol note, or advice phrase.

Reading Criteria

Narrow the Question

A useful question points back to a choice, attitude, or pattern you can actually observe.

Write First Impressions

Before reading a guide, note the color, figure, direction, or object that stands out first.

Read the Combination

Cards change tone beside other cards. Compare contrast, repetition, and direction.

Avoid Final Answers

Tarot is a reflection tool for perspective, not a replacement for judgment or professional advice.

Practice

10-Minute Routine

A short repeated rhythm is better than occasional heavy memorization.

1

Write one clear question.

2

Draw one or three cards and observe the images first.

3

Check the card library and connect meanings to the question.

4

Save a note with your impression, interpretation, and follow-up point.