The Method
One card a day. That's the entire practice.
The Practice
Each day, you receive a card. You look at it—not for what it's supposed to mean, but for what you see. Then you write. A few sentences. A few words. Whatever surfaces.
You're not learning tarot. You're developing a relationship with your own perception. The cards are a focal point. The insight comes from you.
Over time—weeks, months, years—your interpretations deepen. The same card means something different at different points in your life. This is the practice.
Why One Card
Spreads are for performance. One card is for attention.
When you pull three cards, five cards, ten cards—you're managing complexity. You're trying to construct a narrative from multiple symbols. That's interesting, but it's not the same as depth.
One card, revisited over years, teaches you more than a hundred spreads. You learn to see what you missed. You notice how your perspective shifts. The card doesn't change. You do.
Why No Memorization
Traditional tarot asks you to learn 78 definitions, plus reversals, plus elemental associations, plus numerology. Before you can read, you have to study.
This method inverts that. You start reading immediately. Your interpretation is valid because it's yours. Over time, you can compare your meanings to traditional ones—and you'll often find yours are richer, because they come from lived experience.
The books will always be there. Your intuition needs practice now.
The Journal
Every interpretation you write is saved. Over time, you build a personal archive—your own tarot reference, written by you.
You can revisit past entries. See what the Four of Cups meant to you in January versus July. Notice patterns. Track your own growth.
The journal isn't a feature. It's the practice made visible.