Beginning to Read Playing Cards

This Fascinating Skill is Highly Accurate in Predicting the Future

© Deborah Leigh Ketner

It's easier than you think to read playing cards!, Microsoft Office Clipart

Using ordinary playing cards as the focal point for intuitive perception, you can learn to accurately read them for yourself and others in a few easy lessons.

To learn to read playing cards, you will, of course, need a deck to get started. Choose a brand-new deck, preferably one of the more expensive poker decks available, keeping this deck reserved for working on your card readings only.

As you become proficient at this skill, you’ll become attached to the same deck as you work with it. That one deck will represent an important “door opener” for your own intuitive perception. The higher in quality it is, the longer that deck of cards will last. You also won't want to play card games with that deck, nor will you want others to play games with them, either.

This is an important point. You will become intuitively, emotionally and spiritually keyed (psychically connected) with that deck. As the deck ages, you’ll use it until you simply can’t shuffle it properly any longer. At that point, replacing the deck becomes mandatory.

Be sure to choose from the start whether you will use a deck that is oversized or contains jumbo-sized print as opposed to the standard decks on the market. It can be difficult to adjust to different sizes. Select only one style and type of poker cards for the learning process.

Becoming More Intuitive

If you are a newcomer to the skill of reading playing cards in general, you may seriously question your own ability to intuitively read cards successfully at this point. Equally, if all you've known thus far is what you've learned from reading Tarot cards, the following can help acquaint you with this method.

Your own perception of life and the Past, Present and Future as you take this course will reflect your own moral, emotional and spiritual values. The emotional "feelings" you attach to the cards - individually and collectively - will ultimately belong to no one but you.

To illustrate, imagine you are being handed a color sample right now that says, "This is the color Green."

Each person will see that "green-ness" in your own distinct way.

Some will instantly love the color and feel inexplicably drawn to it. On a deep inner level, you've lived your lives acquainted with your own emotional connotations attached to that shade of green. You, therefore, understand that "green-ness" well within the context of your own life.

Maybe it symbolizes lovely times that you characterize as happy “green” moments. Perhaps it signifies simplicity, harmony and peace - a blanket of comfort and security characterized by that shade of green.

You may not even be able to consciously understand why you find the color so easy to positively interpret emotionally. It simply is - again, within the context of your own distinctly individual lives.

Negative Emotional Symbolism

Others, however, will feel compelled to dislike that particular shade of green immediately.

Perhaps it represents a room you were forced by an unloving stepparent to endure punishments in at a young age. It may emotionally resurrect the memory of a green car a family member was killed in during a horrible accident, a green house you lived in that burned down leaving your family homeless years ago.

Yes, such early experiences do impact personal perceptions later in life.

Whether you react positively or negatively to a simple shade of green is a good example of how you will come to intuitively feel about most of the cards in the deck as you learn them and later, conduct readings with them.

Ultimately, you will also bring the same essence of your own inner being to your perceptions whenever you view an aspect of the Past, Present and Future in readings.


The copyright of the article Beginning to Read Playing Cards in New Age is owned by Deborah Leigh Ketner. Permission to republish Beginning to Read Playing Cards must be granted by the author in writing.


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