Cunningham’s classic introduction to Wicca is about how to live life magically, spiritually, and wholly attuned with nature. It is a book of sense and common sense, not only about magick, but about religion and one of the most critical issues of today: how to achieve the much needed and wholesome relationship with our Earth.
Many suggest that the tarot evolved from an ancient book containing the prototype of a perfect spiritual journey. Some see it as an extension of astrology and celestial interpretations. And still others view it as merely a game with uncanny relevance to life and life events. The Elemental Tarot is the perfect distillation of all these thoughts. An extraordinary deck of stunning cards, it revitaliz
Lay your future out before you with tarot cards. Once you know how to interpret them, you can understand yourself and others better and be able to accurately predict what's going to happen in the future.This is an accessible and simple guide that teaches you how to use the tarot. Fenton's guidelines combined with the reader's intuition make using the cards easy and fun. She provides the meaning of
Heavenly Bodies Astrology is a hand-illustrated, 51 card deck and guidebook plus keepsake box. It can be used as an oracle to communicate with spirit guides, a tool to learn astrology or as a visual aid to decode astrological placement (hello Full Moon lovers).
This is an all-round manual for those who want to read the runes for personal guidance or even as part of a professional consultant's package of divinatory skills.READING THE RUNES includes the official rune course material for the British Astrological and Psychic Society. It covers the history, mythology and meaning behind each rune and explains combinations within readings.Farnell, also, offers
This easy-to-use reference provides a handy dictionary and overview so you can readily check card meanings and interpret the symbols for different occasions. Included are the number, glyph, astrological attribute, general meaning, what the card encourages what it warns against, and how you can use it if you draw it as your card for the day or card for the year.
Think of the last time you did a tarot reading or had one. How many of the cards were reversed? Close to half? Well, of course! So why do so many books treat reversed cards in what is basically a cursory manner? Joan Bunning to the rescue with Learning Tarot Reversals--finally reversed cards get the attention they deserve!