Centre your question
Tarot reflects the energy you bring. Phrase a clear, open question — about love, career, direction — and hold it in mind while shuffling.
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Tarot · Card Draw · Spiritual Insight
Draw from the ancient wisdom of 78 sacred cards — Major and Minor Arcana — and receive guidance aligned with your question. Bilingual, instant, and reproducible for the same intent on the same day.
Choose a spread, hold a clear question in mind, and reveal your cards.
Choose Your Spread
How It Works
Four small steps make the difference between a casual draw and a meaningful reading.
Centre your question
Tarot reflects the energy you bring. Phrase a clear, open question — about love, career, direction — and hold it in mind while shuffling.
Choose a spread
A single card gives focused daily guidance. A three-card Past–Present–Future spread reveals flow. A Celtic Cross gives the deepest picture for major life questions.
Read upright vs reversed
An upright card expresses its meaning openly. A reversed card shows the same energy blocked, internalised, or still developing — it isn't automatically bad, only more nuanced.
Interpret, then act
The cards describe patterns, not fixed fate. Notice what resonates, what you may have been avoiding, and what one small step the reading is inviting.
The Fool
New beginnings, leap of faith, trusting the unknown.
The Magician
You already hold the tools; focus and willpower make it manifest.
The Lovers
A meaningful choice in love or values; alignment with your truth.
The 78-Card Deck
A standard Tarot deck has 78 cards split into two groups. Knowing the difference helps you read what level of life the message is pointing to.
Major Arcana — 22 cards
These are the soul cards — The Fool's journey from innocence to wholeness. They mark turning points, archetypal life lessons, and karmic themes that span years, not weeks.
Examples: The Fool, The Magician, The Lovers, The Tower, The Star, The World.
Minor Arcana — 56 cards
Four suits — Wands (action), Cups (emotion), Swords (thought), Pentacles (material) — each with Ace through Ten plus four court cards. They speak to daily situations and the practical texture of life.
If your reading is mostly Minor Arcana, the answer is in your everyday choices. If Majors dominate, life is shifting at a deeper level.
Cups
Water · Emotion
Feelings, relationships, intuition, and the inner emotional landscape.
Pentacles
Earth · Material
Money, work, body, home, and the practical foundations of life.
Wands
Fire · Action
Passion, creativity, drive, and the spark that turns ideas into motion.
Swords
Air · Intellect
Thoughts, decisions, conflict, and the clear cut of truth.
Choose Your Spread
Different spreads answer different kinds of questions. Match the spread to the depth of what you are asking.
Single Card — Daily Focus
Best for: morning guidance, a single yes/no leaning, the energy of an upcoming meeting, or a quick check-in. Pull one card, read it, carry its theme through the day.
Three Card — Past, Present, Future
Best for: understanding how a situation evolved, where you stand now, and where it is heading. Also works as Mind / Body / Spirit, or Situation / Action / Outcome.
Celtic Cross — Ten Cards, Full Picture
Best for: major life questions — career change, marriage, relocation, healing. Each position covers a different angle: the heart of the matter, what crosses you, the foundation, the recent past, possible outcome, near future, your stance, outside influences, hopes/fears, and final outcome.
Best Practices
Set the space
Take a minute of quiet before pulling a card. Light a diya, take three slow breaths, or simply close your eyes. Even online, intent shapes the reading.
Ask open questions
Replace 'Will I get the job?' with 'What do I need to know about this opportunity?' Open questions invite richer answers than yes/no.
Journal the cards
Write down the cards, your question, and your first reaction. Looking back a week later often shows how accurately the reading captured the moment.
Trust your first read
The very first feeling a card gives you usually carries the truest message. Look up textbook meanings second, intuition first.
Reference
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Querent | The person asking the question — the seeker of the reading. |
| Significator | A card chosen at the start to represent the querent or the central question of the reading. |
| Spread | The pattern in which cards are laid out. Each position has a fixed meaning. |
| Reversed | A card that lands upside-down. Suggests blocked, internal, or developing energy of the same theme. |
| Court Cards | Page, Knight, Queen, King in each Minor suit. Often represent people or personality energies in your life. |
| Suit | Wands (fire/action), Cups (water/emotion), Swords (air/thought), Pentacles (earth/material). |
| Karmic Card | A Major Arcana card pointing to lessons your soul came to learn — Justice, Judgement, The Wheel of Fortune. |
Classical Source
Based on the Rider-Waite-Smith Major Arcana tradition.
Free Forever
Unlimited daily readings. No paywall, no signup.
Private
Your question is never stored or shared.
Common Questions
Tarot reading is an ancient form of divination using a 78-card deck divided into the Major Arcana (22 cards) and Minor Arcana (56 cards). Each card carries symbolic imagery interpreted to gain insight into the past, present, and possible futures.
Online Tarot reflects energies and possibilities rather than fixed fate. It is a powerful tool for self-reflection and gaining clarity. The accuracy depends on the openness of the seeker and how intuitively the meanings are applied to their situation.
A daily single-card draw for morning guidance is a common and beneficial practice. For deeper spreads, once a week or during important decision points is recommended. Avoid over-reliance — Tarot is most powerful when used alongside your own intuition.
It is best to wait until circumstances shift before re-asking the same question. Re-drawing the same day often reflects your anxiety rather than new guidance. Instead, reframe the question — ask what is blocking you, or what next step would help — and draw again with that clearer intent.
Cards like the Tower or Death can look frightening but they almost always describe transformation, not disaster. They highlight patterns ready to be released. Sit with the message, identify one area the card is pointing to, and treat it as an honest signal rather than a prediction to fear.
Yes. Many Indian readers use Tarot alongside Jyotish. Your Kundli describes long-term life themes and planetary cycles; Tarot gives a snapshot of the current moment's energy. Used together they complement each other — the chart gives the context, the cards give the nudge.