QUOTE(Edunpanna @ Jan 29 2007, 08:55 PM)
[Greetings Mezu,
Why don't we start with the fool and work our way through the trumps?
What does the Fool represent to you?
Peace
TASHI DELE (that's hello (IMG:
style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif) in Tibet) Resident Jester (any relation to the Fool?)
The main character in my forthcoming medieval fantasy historical is the fool, my favorite of all Tarot Trumps because it contains within it, the essence of ALL OF THE OTHER trumps (that's not my humble opinion, it's Crowley -- who was anything but humble I suppose).
I've spent a lot of time with Crowley's 777 and other correspondences, and worked hard on making a west to far east (in my case Tibet) (and lately Tao) link in terms of correspondences. While Crowley and most practitioners worked hard to align the minors to the sephira of the Tree of Life and the paths to the trumps, I've taken that core "archetypal truth" and aligned it to my passion for all things Tibetan.
So, first and foremost, the Fool to me corresponds directly to Gautama himself ( (IMG:
style_emoticons/default/blablabla.gif) before enlightenment -- I more or less associate Shakyamuni Buddhi, the historical buddha, to THE HANGED MAN). Why Gautama? Because here is Prince Gautama in search of cosmic truth and englightenment, utterly couragous, caring nothing for his own physical wellbeing. I've mapped out all the Buddhas, bodhisattvas and Tibetan deities to the Tree of Life, and Crowley's correspondences to make it easier to bridge east to west (not that it's entirely possible, fortunately Crowley incorporated and studied many eastern systems from Tao to Tibetan magick).
Also, because I associate Gautam Buddha with Crowley's Spirit of the Aether, and correspond directly to Aleph, the herbrew letter, and the path on the tree of life that joins Kether to Chokmah, crown to wisdom... that's how I think of Gautama.
Unlike other decks, Crowley and Lady Harris rendered the fool as he clearly should be... not as a vagabond, but as a mysterious and awesome character. The essence of the Fool's number ZERO basically makes him the profound riddle of creation itself. In fact Crowley claimed the fool "is more than God." And DuChetter went further, "The Fool is the nothing e refer to when we say "Nothing created God. Nothing is beyond God. Nothing is greater than God." ZERO. The fool is perfectly empty, ready to receive enlightenment.
Crowley said it this way: "The aAtu of the Fool symbolises the beginning. The Fool is the negative issuing into manifestation, while the Universe IS that manifestation. All the cards that lie between exhibit the Great Work in its various stages."
So, to me, The Fool is the most powerful, awesome and delightful card in the entire deck. It contains a cornucopia of images, all sacred, and is one of the most magnificent cards to meditate on. In Crowley's fool, unlike the "primitive" RW versions, the FOOL bursts into existence on the very card, from the three depicted swirling rings, which Duchette called the three veils of negativity (in Qabalistic terms, the singulaity of creation). In Christianity, I'd call this the Holy Spirit, and you can see the Holy Grail in one hand. In Eqyptian correspondence, MAUT. Crowley described the card as "the glyph of the creative light"
This is one card that truly speaks to me when he turns up. In spiritual divinations, he would mean to me creative thought, spirituality (of the Chaotic sort -- in other words inventive spirituality), and transcening phycal -- enlightenment. In a physical (material) reading I might read it as eccentricity or unexpected turns (unexpected results), but I tend to take The Fool as a fairly positive card depending on where he falls.
I use my own spread style, I call the Three Pillar Tree of Life... so it depends which pillar The Fool falls on, how I might read. But that's a whole other subject.
Originality, sudden creative impulse, creativity, changes that are unexpected, there are many ways to read this magnificent favorite card. But I always feel happy when I see the Fool, the Gautama before enlightenment, the world before manifestation, the courageous creative idea.
Desciption... Very, very green, because clearly THE FOOL is spring, creative force bursting forth. Other correspondences from Crowley: "Parsifal" "Hoor-Pa-Kraat, the Egyptian lord of silence", In Crowley's deck he has horns, crazy eyes, grapes and ivy, making me think of Dionysus Zagreus, the horned son of Zeus.
An important symbol on the card, the SUN covers his genitals, and the moon is also visible over the head of the crocodile (who clearly respresents Sebek, the Egyptian Devourer. So, I've never read an essay on these portrayals. Here's my take. The sun, brilliant energy, often associated with male divinity and the essence of earthly life, here exploding from the genitals of the creating nothing. Very yin/ yang.
Kale Phe