By day, Christopher
delaMaison is a mild-mannered computer instructor at a private
college in Wilsonville, Oregon. By night, he may be found doing
tarot readings or drumming for belly dancers at the local SCA
events. This summer, Christopher will be teaching beginning tarot
classes at the August 1st Seadog Nights/Gypsy Carnival, in
Marcola, Oregon. When not reading tarot or drumming, Christopher
can be found hanging out with his Sci-Fi friends planning the
upcoming 25th Anniversary of the Oregon Sci-Fi convention,
Orycon25. Check out this link for
details.
His web site: http://www.delamaison.com/
features a number of items which you simply have to see for
yourself. |
|
After agreeing to
participate in the Free Reading Network, I realized that I still, to
a great extent, tend to depend on a limited number of generic
spreads to deal with client questions. Working with simple two and
three card spreads was something I had done only on trial readings,
but never on a continual basis.
Having learned the
Celtic Cross spread first, I quickly learned how to frame all of my
client’s questions with that spread, whether appropriate or not. For
myself then, the hurtle to cross was to be able to associate various
types of questions with various card spreads. One text, which
outlines a wide variety of card spreads and questions they could be
used for, is the Illustrated TAROT Spreads, by
Heidemarie Pielmeier and Marcus Schirner.
This text fills an
important gap that occurs in the learning process of the beginning
tarot reader. Most beginning tarot classes focus on tarot card care
and handling, card interpretations, basic spreads (such as the
Celtic Cross), and perhaps tarot history. What is often times
lacking is information on how to make that critical jump from
constantly using the first successfully learned card spread, to
using spreads that allow the reader to explore a client’s question
without being bound by unnecessary framing.
Having a guide to refer
to for a variety of spreads gives a beginner the option to explore
new spreads, in an effort to deal with a wider range of client
questions. As a new reader gains experience, he/she learns that such
spreads can be (and almost always are) adapted to serve for a wider
variety of questions. Eventually, the experienced reader may create
card spreads that he/she can use to quickly and accurately address
their client’s questions. The trick to starting this learning
process is to kick the habit of using that original card spread, and
to make the deliberate effort to expand one’s repertoire of tarot
spreads.
To help the reader
facilitate this process, Pielmeier and Schirner have put together a
deceptively simple book, which sports some 78 card spreads and
associated questions. The book is a paperback, laid out in a
landscape format, that is 96 pages long, with 78 pages being devoted
to illustrated tarot spreads. Illustrated TAROT
Spreads was originally printed in Darmstadt, Germany in 1995
by Schirner Verlag. It was then translated and distributed in Canada
in 1999, by the Sterling Publishing Company.
This text begins with a
short introduction covering basic card handling and tarot history,
followed by fairly detailed tables covering card interpretations and
astrological correspondences. This simple and direct method of
communicating basic ideas is a welcome alternative to the usual
explanations present in most introductory texts. Providing basic
informational material in this manner allows the reader to quickly
find specific tidbits of needed data, without having to comb through
pages of written explanations. While some may not agree with a few
of the basic tips given, they are presented in the form of a
guideline from which a reader can develop his/her own personal
techniques, as their personal experience guides them.
Each of the spreads is
superimposed over a simple black and white drawing that complements
the idea behind the spread, without becoming a visual distraction to
the reader. Next to the spread diagram is a sample question for
which that spread would be suitable. Each question is divided up
into numbered sentences, which are matched to the numbered cards in
the spread. This allows a reader to quickly see how the spread is
“worked,” as well as demonstrating to the reader how to manipulate
card spreads to better suit a particular reading.
Pielmeier and Schirner’s
Illustrated TAROT Spreads provides a means with which
new readers can examine and experiment with new card spreads,
ranging from the very simple to several that are much more complex.
These spreads, and their associated questions cover a full range of
topics that every reader will, sooner or later, come across. As a
quick reference guide to a wide range of possible spreads, I would
recommend this text to both tarot instructors and new readers
alike.

Illustrated TAROT
Spreads is published by the Sterling Publishing Company, New York.
ISBN 0-8069-6345-X |