Highly Educated, Totally Analytical - But, No, You Don't Have to Rule Out Magic
Their faces freeze. That's the usual reaction too many clients for a Tarot reading have when The Magician card comes up. They are buttoned-down, academic-degree-heavy. And they came for a reading to get insight and hope, not to journey into the supposed occult. No magic for them.
That signals how misunderstood the concept is. In "Kitchen Table Magic," Melissa Cynova defines "magic" as the energy you possess to control your life. That is, this circles back to the reality that the burden is on us to create our, yes, "magic." Once we get that then we can focus on how we are blocking our energy.
Cognitive behavioral therapists, such as West Hartford, Connecticut's Amy Karnilowicz, would posit that a major energy-blocker are our negative thought processes. Cynova puts it this way: If we continually focus on what we supposedly can't do that actually hardens into a kind of spell. We are locked into being stuck.
In this upside-down era I am finding that another kind of energy-blocker is anxiety. That sucks up most of the available oxygen. Those caught in such a force field wind up on life-support, shut out from what it takes to go after what they want.
A third type of energy-blocker is obsessive comparisons with others. Of course, comparison is necessary to put together metrics about where we want to be in our personal and professional lives. The problem - and it's a big one - emerges when that sizing up ossifies into our sole definition of self.
Awareness of these is key. That's exactly why The New York Times saluted the Tarot as a tool for self-discovery back in April 2021. Once you have that "data," then you can begin to unclog. And, unleash the magic. There is really nothing magical about magic.
Tarot Card Reader. Medium. Intuitive Career Coach.
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