hsw logo heart shaped world

tarot
card meanings [home |  tarot | astrology | shop | free newsletter | about me]
fool the magician
high priestess empress emperor hierophant lovers chariot justice hermit wheel of fortune
strength the hanged man death temperance the devil the tower the star the moon the sun judgement the world
The Tower
the tower tarot card vitoria deck

Are you thinking of ending something - a relationship, business or job? Maybe you need to remember that nothing is 100% secure and that bolts from the blue can and do happen.  Tarot readers are fond of long lectures about secure foundations and not building on clay, but come on, what is going to stand up to 5 thunderbolts hitting simultaneously?

All this card wants to do is remind us that we are not immortal and not invulnerable.  Asks us to think what if life were to come crashing apart at the seams? What have we learned? Are we taking risks? Do we have contingency plans? Insurance?

As with all Tarot cards this is not a prediction of something about to happen but a reminder about the things that can go wrong.

the tower tarot card marseilles deckWhat we build and imagine to be safe and secure, nature can strike down in an instant. This is an unsettling card which forces us to consider our frailties – health, finances, security all the things that can be compromised turning our lives upside down and inside out.  The relationship we’d believed was forever, the investment that seemed so secure, the trifling rash that turned out to be something more serious ~ The Tower does not mean that any or all of these things are about to happen to us or to someone we care for, but that we should build on foundations as secure as we can make them – to factor in the possibility, to insure against it, to be prepared for a worse-case scenario whenever possible.   ‘Yes’, says the Tower, ‘I see what you have achieved, but have you considered this…?’  And it can relate retrospectively – people often consult the Tarot after the thunderbolt has struck.  The message is, of course, What have you learned?  Finally, in some instances – context and placement is everything – it is possible for the questioner to actually be the disruptive force wielding the thunderbolt. 

    The Tower shows that we can wall ourselves into an area of supposed security that can suddenly start to waver. This is very much a matter of structures and dimensions that have become too small and narrow for us. Convictions and basic principles of life could be affected by this, as well as our thoughts of security in the professional and financial sense. Last but not least, our personal friendships and other partnerships could also be influenced. In every case, the Tower stands for a concept that used to give us a reassuring measure of security, perhaps even a feeling of safety. But now we have grown out of it. These old concepts are usually toppled by surprising experiences, sometimes even true flashes of genius. Since this is a matter of the supposed basis of our security, these sudden changes are often first experienced as catastrophes. It is only when the first shock has been overcome that we sense with relief that we have been freed from old burdens. This breakthrough can be triggered through our own perceptions as well as external events.

The I Ching says in this regard: "The storm with its thunder and lightning overcomes the disturbing tension in nature."




 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


© Jeremy Rogers 2007 Document made with Nvu return to top