The Pros + Cons of Predictive Tarot Readings

Should you use tarot for predictions? Can tarot actually predict the future? Here some things to keep in mind when telling the future with tarot.

Even though the tarot community often talks about tarot for self-reflection and inner work, tarot clients tend to know it as a future-telling tool.

Everyone wants to know what’s coming up down the road:

“Do you see love in my future?”

“Do you see my changing jobs?”

“Do you see if I will receive any unexpected opportunities?”

Overall, these are pretty common questions that people bring to tarot readers.

Everyone wants something to look forward to. A New Year inspires fresh hope and optimism that a turning point is around the corner.

And predictive readings can help to build that hope and anticipation for what’s to come.

But there’s also something very passive about these types of questions. Predictions can keep people waiting and wondering when and how a meaningful life change will occur.

In reality, though, many things that people are hoping to experience require action, not passivity.

Helping people take action is one of the things that I feel tarot readings are best suited for. And when tarot readings become gateways for change, it helps tarot evolve beyond the long-held misconception that readings are only about the future.

Predictions can have their time and place, but wouldn’t you rather know how to make something happen rather than sitting around waiting for it to come to you?

That’s why I encourage a more intentional approach to tarot throughout the year. When querents ask things like, “Will I move?” Or, “Will I leave my job?” I’m curious to know:

“What do you want to do?”

I want to know where the querent is amidst all of their questions: What is standing in between them and their desired path?

Just because it’s a New Year doesn’t mean we automatically get a whole new life.

You’re still you: Bringing the same passions, habits, quirks, and desires forward.

Sometimes the things we hope to achieve can’t be met until we address certain mindsets or circumstances first. If predictions promise great things, or spell doom and gloom, without addressing the root of how something can unfold or be avoided, then readings are not setting a firm foundation for a querent to stand on.

Which is why I always encourage anyone who is getting a tarot reading to choose an intention for something they would like to learn or resolve within the session. Even if it’s just one thing, big or small, it provides something that we can work towards together in the reading.


Until next time,


Liz

Categories: : predictive tarot