The Incidental Tarot - "A posse ad esse"  From possibility to actuality

The Talismans

The Talismans

The Talismans: Labyrinth & Ariadne

The Incidental Tarot includes two extra cards, unnumbered and independent of the Major and Minor Arcanas.  You can think of them as “wild cards,” or as I prefer to call them, Talismans.

This unusual pair of cards was added to the deck after much consideration, by both myself and the audience that witnessed the unfolding of the Incidental Tarot over the course of 2011.  Ariadne was the first to be chosen.

She came out of my daily art challenge whilst traveling, my sweetheart and I being in the midst of a road trip through Oregon.  We were looking for a place to camp for the night, and not having made reservations ahead of time, we weren’t sure where we were going to end up.  A local ranger directed us to a wooded gorge where there was supposed to be a good number of pack-in pack-out sites along the Molalla River.  When we arrived in the area somewhere around 3pm, every site was packed along the 2+ mile stretch of river.  Discouraged, we drove to the end of the forest service road and parked to discuss our options.  We decided to give it one more try, to drive back up through the camping area and give it the once over for anything we might have missed.  Sure enough, on the way back one of the first campgrounds we passed had been vacated, aptly named Osprey, which tickled my sweetheart, an avid raptor-phile.  I sat down on a log with my little drawing kit as he unpacked our gear and out came Ariadne, as easy and flowing as the river beside us.  I had finished the line drawing in less than an hour, and I knew right away she was going to be a favorite.  I added the serene blue and hints of color to her once we came home from the trip, and I quickly came to rely on her image as the avatar on my Facebook arts page.

When the deck was completed two months later, I decided to include space for two extra cards.  I would choose one, and let my audience choose the other.  I offered them a vote from 5 different drawings, and Ariadne came out the winner.  But when I put her next to the card I had chosen, to my surprise something about the pairing just didn’t fit.  So I went back through the almost 300 drawings I had done over the course of the year, and there was Labyrinth.

Labyrinths are ancient and powerful paths that lead one between the worlds, into the realm of magic where thoughts can be manifest. To enter a labyrinth is to step out of the mundane world and into a magical space…the Otherworld.  The meditative steps around and back and around again lead us into a trance state where we can access divine insights and cross the thresholds of time and space through our subconscious. No one knows where the concept of the labyrinth was born, but its mysterious curves and sinuous pathways have been found in countless ancient cultures, and are still created as the centerpieces of many modern sacred landscapes.

Labyrinths have always been special for me.  Where I live, there is a string of primitive stone labyrinths set up along a hiking trail in our local park woodlands, which also happens to be a volcanic preserve.  It’s clear when walking these wall-less labyrinths that sacred space here has long been established.  At the center of each circle, a small altar is composed of stones, trinkets and notes left by local “pilgrims.”  Part of my ritual of walking the labyrinths is to acknowledge the “offerings” left by others before me.  I pick up the trinkets and stones with gentle fingers, knowing that someone brought these things here for a purpose…to pray, to give thanks, to ask advice, or simply to offer a gift to the natural world.  I quietly read the notes, often scribbled on scraps of paper or random business cards, whatever the walker happened to have on their person at that moment.  Some of the writings I have found were profoundly moving, and I believe the act of reading them lends support and energy to their purpose.  It is a way of silently helping to send the intention forth, with no connection or bias to its original messenger.

I too have left offerings in the labyrinths, and experienced the magical calm of walking a well-trodden path to its center, where mundane objects become sacred and thoughts are transformed to the vibration of prayer.  It is a beautiful ritual, and one that can have the power to open the heart and reconnect you to the world.  It is almost as if the winding path of the labyrinth is an invisible umbilical cord, leading you back to the center of yourself again.

Labyrinth stood out immediately as the companion talisman to Ariadne.

In ancient Greece, Ariadne was the daughter of King Minos of Crete and his queen Pasiphaë. When the king refused to sacrifice his precious white bull to Poseidon, Aphrodite caused Pasiphaë to fall recklessly in love with the bull to shame her husband. Pasiphaë had a hollow cow constructed, into which she climbed in order to have relations with the bull. From this union was born the Minotaur: a monstrous creature, half bull and half man who could only be sustained by consuming human flesh. This was King Minos’ lasting punishment. He imprisoned the Minotaur in a labyrinth, and was forced to sacrifice seven youths and seven maidens to the creature every nine years to keep his kingdom from further demise.

Theseus, who would later become the founder and king of Athens, volunteered to enter the labyrinth and slay the Minotaur. Ariadne fell in love with Theseus, and secretly gave him a ball of red string that he might find his way out of the labyrinth. Not only did Ariadne save the man she loved from being lost in the labyrinth (or the Otherworld, if you consider it an allegory), but she also helped to save her people from continuing to be victims of the disgraceful sacrificial ritual brought on by her father’s arrogance.

So you see how these two images naturally came together as the Talismans for the Incidental Tarot.  In a sense they are both keys to the Otherworld: Labyrinth is the way in, and Ariadne is the way out.   Within that magical and sacred space is a twofold chance to journey deep into the unseen realm of your own heart.  Here can be found an amazing opportunity, but also perhaps great danger.  The beast within, the incarnation of your sins is hidden in this place, and must be faced, acknowledged and overcome.  Ariadne is there to remind you of your own courage, your highest purpose…and to help you find your way home again.  She is the power of Love itself.

These cards are always to be read right side-up; they are not intended to have reversed meanings. To receive one or both of the Talismans in a reading is a very special happening.  It signifies a rare opportunity to experience the deepest magic of pathworking, and to know that someone or something is watching over you to guide you on your journey.

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1 The Red King

The Red King…such a compelling gentleman, isn’t he?  He holds within his hands a flask containing the essence of the red rose (magic in earthly form); he is crowned by the fiery golden rays of the sun, the cosmic expression of his spirit.

The Red King is the first numbered trump of the Incidental Tarot, thus he is equated with the Magician of traditional Tarot decks.  The Red King is a magician; simultaneously an alchemist and the incarnation of his Work.  He embodies the alchemical phase of rubedo, or manifestation.

Rubedo is the phase of alchemical work associated with the transmutation of the spirit into purified physical form.  Metaphorically, we can view this as the union of body and soul: the quintessential dream of Immortality.  The full work of alchemy is infinitely complex (to modern scholars) and layered with spiritual allegory, but the archetype of the Red King in simplest terms signifies the union of spirit with matter.  The Red King represents the ability to manifest the intangible energy of the unseen world; to bring forth and manipulate its power on earth with a knowing hand.  He is associated with the element of fire, sulfur, the Sun and the masculine active principle of energy.  The Red King of the Incidental Tarot represents magic made manifest.

Magic, in its purest form is spirit.  It is the energy unseen which permeates all of creation, waiting to be tapped and channeled into whatever form the magician denotes.  The Red King is the conductor of this energy, a master of magic; he himself has risen from the darkness of chaos, been purified into spirit and then born (with this knowledge) into the physical reality of this world.  He is both the magician, and magic made tangible in the world of the elements.

The Red King denotes mastery over the forces of the unseen.  He has constructed his world steadily and carefully through the phases of the Work, all the while striving to harmonize his own higher purpose with the role he has been given in the greater Cosmic Work.  He understands the consequences of foolish pursuits, and directs his personal action with the same purpose that he channels the greater energies of the unseen world.  His spiritual work is in perfect harmony with the work he directs in the physical world; thus he is a master of both.

In a reading, the Red King represents great potential in the hands of the querent.  He or she is poised to be a direct channel of Magic, and to become a powerful conduit between the unnamed, unseen forces of the universe and those that function in the physical world.  This is a position not to be taken lightly; it is a role that requires balance, responsibility and conscience, for the work of the Red King affects the destinies of all those whose lives he touches.  The querent is in a position of great advantage, with all the tools necessary to succeed in the Work, and can proceed with confidence, strength and a sense of empowered responsibility.  Action is the key to this card; the magic is already in you and need only be tapped.

To define the Red King in a word:  MANIFEST.

REVERSED.  Misuse of power, arrogance, spiritual weakness, squandering of resources.  Inability to assume authority, irresponsible action.  Manipulation without conscience.

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Happy New Year from the Fool!

The Fool

The Fool of the Incidental Tarot

It is the first day of 2012, and what better day to introduce you to the official Incidental Tarot website!

Now that my ACEO Challenge of 2011 is complete, I can focus on the final touches of the Incidental Tarot project…namely the building of this website and finishing the companion book to the deck!  The deck is currently being printed, and while we’re all itching to get them into our hot little hands, I invite you to follow this blog, share with your friends, and please be welcome to comment and discuss anything and everything Tarot-centric here!

Along with the virtual ribbon cutting *cue champagne popping* ceremony of this blog and website, I thought it most appropriate to begin this phase of the journey with The Fool.

The Fool is the first and the last of the Major Arcana; the alpha and the omega. He represents the most perfect potential of any person or situation.

The Fool wears the guise of a traveler and carries a small pack with only the essentials needed to survive on his journey. He has everything he needs to fulfill his life path, which is primarily to understand the nature of what it is to be human. A banner flutters from his pack inscribed with “a posse, ad esse: from possibility to actuality,” the Fool’s motto. He represents the ultimate potential of destiny ready to be manifest in the world. The Fool also represents the higher self, the intuitive spirit that guides us when the trials and tribulations of life muddle our sense of purpose. If we can remove the mental, emotional and physical clutter of our chosen paths, the purity of the Fool’s vision will guide us through times of confusion and shifting paradigms.  And isn’t that most appropriate now, with the impending transformations of 2012 at our doorstep?  Let us hereby banish the shadow of 2011 and welcome the light of a new year with the clarity and freedom of the Fool’s message.

The Fool took a long time to be “born” as I worked my way through the Major Arcana.  It is a card I had never felt a strong kinship with…perhaps something to do with my inherently serious and perfectionist Saturnine nature.  I just had trouble relating to it.  But eventually I found I did have a very strong vision for this card, and that came from my favorite Mark Twain novel, The Mysterious Stranger.  The story (within a story) centers around August, a young printer’s apprentice in renaissance Austria.  He lives and works in a castle replete with colorful characters, and longing for adventure as any boy would.  One day, a mysterious stranger shows up at the door of the castle and all manner of curious and magical things begin to happen.  Without giving away the beauty of the story (which I highly recommend, by the way), the stranger shows August that anything is possible, and that life is a dream that can be dreamed in an infinite number of ways.  He shows August the potential and the freedom of his own consciousness.  To me, that is the message of the Fool.

The mysterious stranger on the card itself carries the emblems of all four elements, the arrow for fire and action, the rose for water and emotion, the quill for air and intellect and the acorn for earth and the body. These are the gifts (and tools) of earthly existence, and he follows the colorful hummingbird, a symbol of the fifth element of spirit, or the soul. Is he about to catch the hummingbird, or has he just released it?

In a reading the Fool represents pure spirit; the querent need only let go of earthly attachments and conflict to see the insight of his destiny.

To define the Fool in a word: POTENTIAL.

REVERSED. Willful ignorance, irresponsibility, disregard of consequences. Allowing oneself to be ruled by whims. Unable to form coherent plans for the future.

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