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🃏 Major Arcana

Tarot Card Meanings

The 22 Major Arcana cards form the heart of the tarot deck — each one a doorway into a universal human experience. Explore upright and reversed meanings, guidance for love, career, and spiritual growth.

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What is tarot?

Tarot is a symbolic language of 78 cards divided into Major and Minor Arcana. The Major Arcana — 22 cards numbered 0 to 21 — represent the great archetypal themes of human experience, from innocent beginnings to wholeness and completion.

How to use tarot

Tarot works best as a tool for reflection rather than prediction. Each card offers a symbolic mirror — a way of seeing a situation from a new angle. The meaning that resonates most strongly is usually the most relevant one for you right now.

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Upright vs reversed

An upright card expresses its energy openly; a reversed card suggests the energy is blocked, internalised, or working more subtly. Reversed cards are not "bad" — they often point to the inner work or the shadow aspect of a card's meaning.

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FAQ

Tarot — common questions

Everything you need to know about tarot cards and how to work with them.

The Major Arcana is a set of 22 cards in a tarot deck, numbered 0 through 21. They represent the major archetypal themes and turning points of human experience — from the innocent beginnings of The Fool to the completion and wholeness of The World. When Major Arcana cards appear in a reading, they tend to carry greater weight and significance than the Minor Arcana.
Tarot cards work as a symbolic language — a system of images that reflect the full spectrum of human experience. In a reading, the cards drawn and their positions are interpreted in relation to the question being explored. Many people use tarot as a tool for reflection and self-awareness rather than literal prediction, finding that the symbolic meanings help surface insights and perspectives they already carry but have not yet fully articulated.
When a tarot card is drawn in its upright position, its traditional meaning applies directly. When drawn reversed (upside down), many readers interpret the energy as internalised, blocked, or working in a more challenging way. Reversed cards are not inherently negative — they often point to inner work, resistance, or a more subtle expression of the card's energy.
Different traditions emphasise different cards. The World is often considered the most positive card, representing completion and wholeness. The Fool holds a unique power as the card of infinite potential. The Tower is frequently cited as the most dramatically transformative. In practice, the most significant card in any reading is the one that speaks most directly to the question being explored.
Tarot is most helpfully understood as a tool for reflection and insight rather than literal prediction. The cards can illuminate tendencies, patterns, and possibilities based on current energy — but the future is not fixed, and tarot readings are better used to explore possibilities and clarify thinking than to determine outcomes with certainty.
Start with the Major Arcana — these 22 cards form the foundation of tarot symbolism and are the best place to build your understanding. Spend time with each card individually: study its imagery, read its meaning, and notice what it evokes for you personally. Practice with simple one or three-card draws before working with larger spreads.