The cards correctly placed a 7-valued card with an active/masculine suit in the lower left, but of the two such cards, selected the wrong one. Try the seven of swords instead (and those are feelings about you rather than feelings about the relationship with you, in case you're tempted not to make that distinction).
Traditional Rider-Waite imagery shows the figurehead of the card dancing between two focal points. On his left there is the establishment of a community, where home is. To his right, there is a small cluster of people, seemingly in deep discussion.
Note how our figure points his head (the seat of our senses - hearing, smelling, tasting, seeing - although, note the eyes are closed) to the gaily colored tents - where the community is established. Yet, his entire body points in the opposite direction.
Here we see the first interpretive hit leaning towards impulsivity, and an unheeding nature. We must ask ourselves, why does the figure walk with eyes closed? And why is he moving in the opposite direction of where his senses are pointed?
Do you get the sense of blind indirection in the seven of swords card? Our figure cannot know where he goes without projecting his senses in that direction first. The message: "There is no hope of finding our true path if we give no consideration to the direction we are taking first."
Is this card wrong, too?mirandaaskewSeptember 28 2010, 20:38:10 UTC
The card in the lower left represents how your partner sees you. Seven of Wands (Valor): Standing courageously for your beliefs in the face of adversity. Fear of failure overcome by the will to succeed. Great obstacles met with heroism and determination. Inner strength brought to bear at a critical moment.
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Note how our figure points his head (the seat of our senses - hearing, smelling, tasting, seeing - although, note the eyes are closed) to the gaily colored tents - where the community is established. Yet, his entire body points in the opposite direction.
Here we see the first interpretive hit leaning towards impulsivity, and an unheeding nature. We must ask ourselves, why does the figure walk with eyes closed? And why is he moving in the opposite direction of where his senses are pointed?
Do you get the sense of blind indirection in the seven of swords card? Our figure cannot know where he goes without projecting his senses in that direction first. The message: "There is no hope of finding our true path if we give no consideration to the direction we are taking first."
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love to you.
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