For your ally, the Queen of Wands, emotions transform the spiritual will, resulting in greater openness and generosity. Her dress suggests the brightness of the sun, her golden crown is sprouting leaves, and her scepter is a sunflower, revealing not only her love of light and beauty, but her ability to manifest them both. She herself embodies the Fire within nature that manifests as splendor and abundance. Of all the Queens, she is the only one with her legs apart, revealing that she is open to the life-force. She is warm and passionate, though sometimes--because of the intensity of her energy--dramatic and impulsive, but she sits solidly on her throne, channeling her impulses in a positive and productive way. Two lions, symbols of the element of Fire, stand rampant behind her, but she is also like the affectionate, self-contained and insouciant cat in the foreground, basking in the sunlight. She attracts, in a magical way, the joy that she radiates.
   The cards, in other words, help you to "change your mind and change your life." Creating a living image of the Queen of Wands, for instance, if done effectively, will help you to radiate and attract joy. The more you radiate, the more you'll attract. If, on the other hand, you enjoy being cynical and negative, you will continue to attract more negative energy. Who needs it?
   A lot has been said about the “astral plane" that has tended to mystify it. Quite simply you are in the “astral plane” every time you dream, daydream, or imagine something. More importantly, whenever you use your imagination, you have the potential to affect the astral plane, or, in other words, to awaken the genie. A strong emotion, along with an image in your mind, affects the subtle astral “substance” underlying the physical plane and makes things happen in ways that sometimes appear magical. The key is that you are more likely to get your wish if you sustain a desire in your soul and know that it is going to happen. Notice, I said “in your soul,” not “in your head.” If you consciously lust after a result you are more likely to continue receiving the lack of what you desire because you are focusing on what you don’t have.
   This distinction is absolutely critical and goes to the heart of what I mean by "willpower." I have a friend who recently told me that he always had a strong desire to be an artist. He sustained this powerful desire in his soul, and the universe (or, if you prefer, the genie) responded: No matter how poor he was, he always found that he had the materials and the technology that he needed. In fact, people would often simply give him what he required in ways that over time came to seem magical to him. Notice that my friend was very clear about his desire and never doubted himself when he was not successful. In other words, the genie kept responding both to his clear desire and to a deep “knowing” in his soul about his purpose. My friend didn’t think about it--he just knew it. If he had consciously worried about his career and doubted himself, the genie would have dismissed the desire due to both a lack of focus on the goal and a lack of clarity. This knowing in the soul is strongest form of willpower.
   There is some truth in the slogan, "If you can dream it, you can be it." Translated into esoteric terms, it means that if you can effectively fashion something on the astral plane and fill it with energy, it will eventually manifest on the physical plane, as long as it does not violate the laws of nature. As I suggested before, your link to the astral plane is the subconscious mind, which understands images and emotions and is "convinced" by repetition. For instance, as a child, if you were told over and over either that you would fail or succeed, your subconscious would begin to believe it. If you are like me, you tell yourself every day both positive and negative things that your subconscious believes and then manifests in the external world as aspects of your personality.
   Positive affirmation sometimes works because eventually you convince the subconscious to believe what you are telling it. Combine affirmation with creative visualization and strong emotion and you have the necessary links to the astral plane. You will succeed in becoming what you want to be as long as you know without a doubt that you can be it, and as long as you take the necessary steps on the physical plane to make your dream a reality.
   For cynical or skeptical people, knowing something "without a doubt" is no easy task. Self doubt can become the greatest obstacle to success. I, for one, was one of the most cynical, skeptical people in the world before I began having visions during meditation of symbols and archetypes related to the Tree of Life. My pessimism had anchored me in poverty consciousness, illness, and depression, and my skepticism undermined my half-hearted attempts to make positive changes in attitude and circumstances. After my spiritual emergence, Tarot archetypes continue to ripple out into my life and have helped me to become one of the most positive people on earth. I still lapse into cynicism, but my outlook has essentially changed, and best of all, I am essentially happy, no matter the circumstances.
   This practice can help you make a positive shift in attitude through creative visualization, positive affirmation, invocation, and through elimation of negative energy. Of course, this takes effort. Everything worthwhile takes effort. But you can also have fun in the process.
   The practice of creating living images is intended to affect you at a deep level of the psyche. A Greek word meaning "soul" or "breath," psyche is the base of the words "psychology" and "psychism." In Greek myth, Psyche was a beautiful girl, a personification of the soul loved by Eros. From the Latin, psyche has come to mean "animating spirit." Psychology as a scientific discipline has developed into the study of the totality of consciousness, but it still essentially means "the science or study of the soul." Psychism is essentially the use of subtle senses, or "soul" senses, to access knowledge not perceptible to the five physical senses, through what is commonly known as clair-voyance, clair-audience, clair-sentience and intuition. This practice is intended to affect you positively on a psychological level, strengthening your mind and opening your subtle senses.
   Most people are psychic to some degree, far more so than many would like to admit. For instance, you have probably sensed someone was looking at you, a feeling verified by simply turning around. Or you might have sensed that someone was thinking of you, which was soon confirmed by a phone call or letter. You might have developed a lightning fast connection with another person or might have discovered that you and another person often inexplicably think of something at the same time. You might have sudden intuitions about people or situations. These are all common instances of psychism. Less common, perhaps, are unexpected images in the mind's eye or a wise voice in the mind's ear or sensations of being touched. You can become more sensitive to subtle influences simply by paying attention, without dismissing them. Real subtle forces contact you but you only know it if you are open to them. One obstacle to opening the subtle senses is the deluge of negative energy and random information that overwhelms people in modern societies, but effective purification techniques exist to help you focus and let go of negativity and limiting beliefs.
   Throughout history, cultures have created different pantheons of Gods and Archangels that represent the subtle forces. In other words, a God symbolically represents a force or power that exists in the spiritual dimension of the cosmos. One God might represent the force of expansion, another the force of restriction, another the power of thought, another the power of love. Jesus, for instance, is a Savior that finds his rightful place in the sixth sphere of the Tree of Life, known as Tiphareth, along with other sacrificial Gods. Each culture has similar Gods because the same forces have existed inside of people throughout history, only different forces have been emphasized in each culture based on its needs. One culture might emphasize the courage and energy and strength of Mars while another might emphasize the intellectual power of Mercury while another might emphasize the power of love and beauty represented by Venus. Unfortunately most people do not realize that each individual, without a priest interceding, can access the cosmic force symbolically represented by a God or Savior, and each person can establish a channel or correspondence with that energy because each individual also contains the energy. As above, so below: the goal is to elevate the mind and open a channel to the cosmic force. Using the figures in the Tarot, you can form living images in the imagination, creating a channel that allows the cosmic forces to pour into your soul. This process exalts consciousness and enables a person to understand and internalize spiritual principle more easily. leading to feelings of joy, harmony, magnificence and abundance.
   Creating living images with the Tarot and the Tree of Life is a way to elevate and strengthen the psyche, not a conventional form of worship. An important goal of the “Yoga of the West," as the Qabalah is known, is to “build the Tree in the aura," that is, to internalize the symbols and archetypes that channel the cosmic energies. The Tree of Life of the modern Qabalah reveals the forces in an inclusive way through symbols of the planets, astrological signs, and elements. This helps to avoid dogma by eliminating an emphasis on any particular religion, but make no mistake--those same energies are represented (and too often distorted) in different ways by mainstream religions. Free of limiting beliefs, this practice is essentially a method of building the Tree in the aura, and you do not need a guru or an adept or a secret society looking over your shoulder. You can do it completely by yourself or with a partner or with an informal group. In the process of forming spiritual allies through the creation of living images, you will learn and internalize the major symbolic correspondences of the Tree of Life and open a channel to powerful (and positive) subtle forces.
MAGIC AND THE TAROT
   As already mentioned, the Tarot dove-tails in every conceivable way with the Tree of Life, each card having a specific position on the Tree itself. Moreover, each Tarot card embodies an energy related to a planet, an astrological sign, an element, or a combination of the three. Astrology unfortunately has a bad reputation nowadays, but we can thank astrology at least for symbolizing the cosmic forces in a kind of neutral, nondogmatic way, free of religious mystification. The symbols represent real cosmic forces, and, for the purposes of this practice, it is most helpful to think of these energies as corresponding to feelings within you. For instance, the Two of Pentacles shows a person who resembles a carnival fool juggling two pentacles inside of a green strip. Once you learn the symbolic associations, you can identify the basic feelings associated with the figure to create an emotional connection that makes the figure a living image that can become your ally.
ALLIES
   All of the figures in the cards are potentially positive allies, even the ones in horrible circumstances. All of them contain different energies of the cosmos that you can identify and activate inside yourself. For instance, the juggler in the Two of Pentacles resembles the Fool in the Major Arcana card, Trump 0. The Fool remains open even to the harshest experiences because he knows the infinitude within. The version of the Fool in the Two of Pentacles presents an eternal child who effectively balances dynamic life forces. He responds with innocence and resilience to all of the rhythms and vicissitudes of life, no matter how grim or tragic. The juggler in the Two of Pentacles is caught up in the perpetual dance of life and revels in the contrasts. These symbols of child-like resilience and innocence, of rhythm and harmony, and of the awareness of the eternal within can help you evoke the same feelings within yourself. You can find a description of each card containing the symbolic associations, and once you have a basic understanding of the card, your goal is to create an emotional connection with the character. Once you can summon the feelings, say, by identifying moments in your life when you experienced them, you can focus your feelings to create a living image, which becomes animated in your imagination, like you animated the "Happiness Kitty." Then the living image projects the feelings back to you until you create a strong, unbroken channel of pure, joyful innocence and resilience. Not only is it fun, but it can help you overcome chronic negative feelings of pessimism and helplessness. In other words, if ever you experience the negative feelings again, you can always go back to the figure in your imagination and without any sense of guilt or fear reopen the positive channel.
   The Tree of Life reveals the cosmic energies that we channel into our personal sphere known as the aura or the personal energy field. The Tarot cards are doors that you can open so the energies pour into your soul. The Tarot represents all the energies of the Tree of Life, in other words, all of the energies of the cosmos that affect us as human beings. The Tarot archetypes are the symbolic connection to the subtle forces.
MOVING BEYOND LIMITING BELIEFS
   Science has revealed an abyss of the infinitely small and an abyss of the infinitely large. With the five senses, humans can only perceive a small fraction of the known frequencies of energy in the universe. Is it really a leap of faith to believe that other dimensions exist beyond the physical realm? Why is it so hard to believe that beyond our perception and the perception of all scientific devices are subtle forces? Time and again spiritual forces intrude on our collective sense of reality, resulting in what we label as paranormal experiences.
   The Eight of Swords powerfully depicts the effects of limiting beliefs on the psyche. A woman stands still on a shore, blindfolded and bound by loose strips of cloth. Eight sharp swords are positioned around her. Behind her a castle towers on a cliff, suggesting the intimidating power of authority. No one else is in sight. Her legs are not bound, however, and though the swords might be sharp, she is not actually imprisoned. Her blindfold looks like it might fall off any moment. The castle, which suggests an authority that demands obedience and keeps people down by conditioning them to believe in their own powerlessness and limitations, is way off in the distance.
   The card’s symbolic associations reveal other influences at work. Each number card is associated with a planet and ten degrees of the zodiac, known as a decan, or decante. Each card is also associated with a sphere on the Tree of Life. The Eights, for instance, are all associated with the eighth sphere on the Tree known as Hod, the sphere of Mercury, the God of the intellect. Each card also has an alternate title. The Eight of Swords is known as “Lord of Shortened Force.” In other words, thoughts are types of mental forms that limit or “shorten” the force of feelings, and one negative consequence of this mental ability can be a limitation by thoughts and beliefs. In other words, her own beliefs may have created her sense of imprisonment.
   The decan association is Jupiter in Gemini. Jupiter is the God of expansive, orderly, upbuilding force, and Gemini is a zodiac sign that suggests the dual nature of the mortal and immortal contained within each person.
   The woman stands on the shore without being able to see the ocean. She is in a state of restriction, limitation, and imprisonment that contains the potential for freedom, openness, and expansion. The cloths that bind and blind her appear so loose that they are about to fall off. She could easily walk away. No one is guarding her. Whatever “authority” put her in that position is off in the distance. The ocean, suggesting the subconscious and vast cosmic forces, is close enough to touch. It seems the influence of Jupiter could easily liberate her so that she has an abundant life and is aware of the infinitude both within and without her. This, unfortunately, is the kind of archetypal figure that we too often feed with the energies of the mind and heart--not the “Happiness Kitty" or The Queen of Wands or the Two of Pentacles! And it gives the same energy back to us, as we feed it, until we are truly imprisoned by our beliefs....
   Compare the figure in the Eight of Swords to the Queen of Cups:
   Your ally gazes intently at her cup, which looks like both a church and a strange sea creature, the angels on either side of the cup resembling lobster claws. Her foot touches the water, which seems to flow up her dress into her cape and back down onto the colorful rocks at the foot of her throne. She is receptive to the vast cosmic energies symbolized by the sea, and because of her sympathetic, intelligent connection she receives the gift of vision. Her cup resembles the spiritual forces that she channels, suggesting that true spiritual power is often wild and astonishing, even bewildering, manifesting in unpredictable, disconcerting ways. Spiritual art throughout the ages has tended to rely on conventional forms--your ally's imagination provides a sympathetic connection that embodies the inner and outer forces in bold, original form. Though on land, enthroned in the conscious mind, her ability to connect emotionally enables her to invoke the cosmic spiritual forces and manifest them in a fresh, startling way. The cherubic mermaids on her throne suggest her playful, childlike openness--she allows herself like a child to be embraced by the powerful, subtle forces. Your ally is a magician and an artist of both heart and imagination. Both qualities are needed if creative work of any kind is to have a significant impact.
   A good way to move beyond the limiting beliefs shown in the Eight of Swords would be to create a living image of the Queen of Cups. But the Tarot provides many ways to overcome limiting beliefs--you are only limited by your imagination. You could, for instance, also banish the figure in the Eight of Cups and then invoke Jupiter using the Fours (The cards associated with the fourth sphere, Chesed, the sphere of Jupiter), in a Tarot Pentagram Spread.
   In this practice, no outside authority dictates your choices. You can make living images by yourself or with a group, creating a powerful group mind. You can “build the Tree” from the bottom up or focus on related paths through the Tree. You can focus on different phases of a given element by invoking the figures in the Court Cards in each suit. There are many ways to do this--Your path is entirely your own. And you can have fun by playing games while learning more about the Tarot and the Tree of Life.
ADVERSARIES
   We experience a spectrum of energies in the physical and subtle realms every day. Think of these energies as existing on a pole, with extremes at both ends. Obvious examples include hot and cold, light and dark, love and hate. These opposites are often referred to as “polarities." People usually attach moral values to them. Love is better than hate, courage better than cowardice, truth better than deceit, and it is not uncommon to see these polarities labeled as either virtues or vices. On the Tree of Life balance is the key. Almost every sphere on the Tree contains a force related to a planet. The virtue, or ideal balanced force of Mars, in the fifth sphere, for instance, includes courage, discipline, and strength. The negative pole, or unbalanced aspect of the force, includes cruelty and destructiveness.
   An Adversary on the Tree of Life is a personified, unbalanced force that represents the negative pole. In other words, just as positive forces can be given form, or “personified" as the people or angels or gods that you find in the Tarot and the Tree of Life, the negative, or unbalanced forces can be personified as well. The expansive, up building force of Jupiter, for instance, can become unbalanced and nasty. The negative, unbalanced force is called “The Breakers into Pieces" because the force at the negative pole breaks things down instead of building things up.
   The Tree of Life is a system of checks and balances, so if a lack of harmony caused by too much energy exists in one sphere, then a focus on the opposite sphere should bring the energy back into balance. The Planets represent energies that exist in the cosmos, and more importantly, inside of you as well. Planetary energy is one key to the practice since most of the spheres on the Tree manifest the energies represented by the planets in one way or another. For instance, the Two of Pentacles represents both the dynamic, stimulating energy of the second sphere, Chokmah, and the expansive, up-building planetary energy of Jupiter (in Capricorn). A lack of balanced energy causes the “Breakers into Pieces"--in other words, Jupiter’s personified, unbalanced force--to manifest. Focusing on a Tarot card with the energy of Mars, in the sphere opposite Jupiter, should help to bring the energy within you back into balance if you effectively invoke the positive forces of Mars. Mercury balances Venus, Mars balances Jupiter, the Sun balances the Moon, and vice versa. Saturn, who is the father of the planets and symbolically the source of planetary energy, can also be used to balance or restrict energy as well, but it’s always better to focus on the energy of the opposite sphere first if a lack of balance occurs.
   This practice requires common sense, self-awareness, and mental stability. Inviting too much energy of any given sort will lead to a lack of balance, which can have disastrous consequences for an individual, a family, a community, or even a whole society. For instance, if you already have a lot of Martian energy, yet you insist on inviting even more of the energy of Mars into your psyche, you will get “burned”--you will be inviting “The Burners” into your life. You will, in other words, tend to become destructive and cruel, which nobody around you will appreciate--I guarantee it. No one will mind too much if you burn your own fingers, but if you burn down the houses of other people, you are bound to suffer severe karmic consequences. Invoking the energy of the opposite sphere known as Chesed, which is the sphere of Jupiter, should help to bring you back into balance. You need to take a good long look at what you need and what you don’t need in order to benefit from this practice, but as in all other aspects of life, your karma is your own....
   Some of the most respected Tarot practitioners have based their interpretation of the cards on the appearance of the characters, not on the astrological and elemental associations, which is a mistake, in my opinion, that has led to many fascinating but misleading interpretations. Often a Tarot reader will interpret a card during a divination based on an intuition about the querent, which is fine for divination, but for the creation of living images a knowledge of the primary energies symbolized by the card is crucial. For instance, the figure in the Four of Pentacles may on the surface appear miserly and controlling, but the symbolic associations, the Sun in Capricorn and Jupiter in Chesed, suggest otherwise. The pentacles are not blocking the energies of the crown and heart, they are revealing them. Based on the symbolic association, the figure is grounding the powerful energies of the Sun, using the life-force, like Jupiter, to build and expand, establish harmony, maintain law and order, and protect the community.
The Tarot and the Tree of Life
   The Tarot corresponds in every imaginable way with the mystical "glyph," or composite symbol, known as the Tree of Life, which reveals both the energies of manifestation in the cosmos and in the individual. The Tree of Life reveals ten states of reality as spheres, with the top sphere, the Crown, representing the "highest" spiritual energies in manifestation, and the bottom sphere, the Kingdom, representing the densest physical manifestations, all emanating from one Source. These spheres, known in Hebrew as “Sephiroth,” or Emanations (“Sephira” singular), are considered objective states of being and are treated as the first ten “paths” of the Tree of Life. Twenty-two other paths (eleven through thirty-two), treated commonly as "subjective" states, connect the spheres.
   One version of the Tree of Life shows "The Path of Lightning” zigzagging through the ten spheres from top to bottom, revealing how the cosmos evolved as the states of being emanated from each other. In another version, The “Path of the Serpent” reveals the spiritual path of the individual back up the Tree of Life to the Source. Nechushtan, the healing serpent of Moses, coils up the Tree to the top, revealing the journey to enlightenment--paths thirty-two through eleven.
   Since the Tree of Life as a symbol is constantly evolving to include new personal experiences with symbolic associations, it is only appropriate that the Tarot also evolves to open up new avenues of spiritual development. Over the centuries people have linked the Tarot with the Tree of Life in various ways. The twenty-two trumps of the Tarot’s Major Arcana, for instance, have come to represent paths eleven through thirty-two on the Tree, and the number cards of the Minor Arcana, with ten cards in each suit, have become linked with the Sephiroth, the Aces in each suit associated with the top sphere, the Twos in each suit with the second sphere, and so on, down to the Tens in the tenth sphere. Also, the suits--Wands, Cups, Swords, and Pentacles--have come to represent different levels of reality within each sphere of the Tree: the “elements of the wise,” Fire, Water, Air, and Earth, or the spiritual plane, the mental plane, the astral plane, and the physical plane, respectively. Practitioners have also associated the Major Arcana paths with the twenty-two letters of the Hebrew alphabet, which has opened up other spiritual meanings.
   Perhaps most significantly, the Major and Minor Arcana paths are also associated with astrological signs, which makes the Tree of Life an inclusive symbol that allows the incorporation of the pantheons of Gods and Angels from diverse religious traditions. As an inclusive symbol, the Tree of Life can be used to classify and understand the elements of all spiritual traditions. The creation of living images is usually quite fun and entertaining, but the practice transcends its entertainment value, revealing the profound spiritual principles linked to the Tree of Life.
   For instance, the Major Arcana card “The Magician” is associated with the second letter of the Hebrew alphabet “Beth,” which means “house.” The card is also associated with the planet Mercury, creating an association chain that links diverse times, cultures, and traditions. “Beth,” the second letter of the Hebrew alphabet, is the first letter of the Old Testament, suggesting that a Source exists behind manifestation--before the Word was spoken and the “house was built,” so to speak. Mercury, the messenger of the Gods, is the Roman version of the Greek Hermes and the Egyptian Thoth, and Thoth is a powerful God of magic considered to be the Logos, the heart of the Sun-God Ra. “The Magician” on one level therefore personifies the Logos who continues the original act of creation throughout the cosmos every moment, and on another level represents the human being who heroically participates in the same act of creation within his or her own sphere.
   I have combined one of my own personal rituals, which I call the Tarot Pentagram Spread, with the Supreme Invoking Ritual of the Pentagram, the most effective esoteric ritual that I know, to create powerful living images. I have included a description of each card, as well as games to help you become more familiar with the Tarot. As the original creators of the Tarot must have realized, a game with spiritual symbols and archetypes can inspire spiritual development on a path that avoids dogmatism and persecution. You are invited to begin your own journey....
1) Fortune, Dion. Applied Magic. Samuel Weiser, Inc., 2000: 17-18.