
Cards: The Hermit reversed, The Full Moon, Ten of Wands, The Star
Dear Searching, in my tradition, November is the month of holy darkness. โSkotiaโ is the epitaph used, which means โof the darkโ or โof the gloom.โ The Bible uses that word ,too, though it often gets translated as a dark that lacks Godโs light, a word for wickedness, or for hell.
While I donโt believe in the Christian version of hell, I do believe in an underworld (metaphorically, metaphysically) and that grief is an act of skotia. Grief has the power to dim all the lights, to consume and drain, to take a piece of your soul down to the underworld and lay it to rest.
While that might sound terrifying, itโs necessary. Things can fester and rot if we donโt mourn or grieve, and we can lose ourselves despite our best intentions. We all have to journey through the underworld to get to the other side at one point or another. But you, dear searcher, know this. And judging by your question, I think you know itโs possible to re-emerge from grief as a new person.
But the way out of the underworld is to be reborn, screeching and wailing and violently embracing life. And I know that can sound at best cheesy and at worst dismissive, but living is the antidote.
The Hermit reversed is the card guiding this spread, holding a lamp into the dark. Youโve been there for quite a long time, and to see the light, you must be present, which can mean following your unvarnished impulses for a bit. What do you want to do in the moment? What makes you feel truly alive? Fall asleep in the grass? Methodically break everything your ex gave you? Drive to the mountains? If itโs not hurting yourself or others, go for it.
You mention trying to be more in touch with your intuition, and thatโs great. But then you say you โlet things fall into place as they may,โ and I donโt think thatโs working for you.
The Full Moon is a card of energy and clarity. Donโt let things fall as they may. Be an active participant in sculpting the new life you want. Maybe that involves working with a therapist who specializes in grief or spirituality. Maybe it involves taking improv classes or learning to cook, or fleeing the country to start anew on a windswept moor as a shepherd. Tap into that energy to find what sparks your light.
I understand that all of this is easier said than done. Grief is not something to simply get over.
This past May, a dear friend of mine, the brilliant comic Samantha Berkman, died three weeks into her 31st year. She had cancer, a brutal thing that took her in about 15 months, but Sam was tweeting jokes from the hospital two hours before she died. She aggressively embraced life, said โfuck thatโ to going gently into that good night. She was the bravest woman Iโve ever known, and I miss her dearly.
The day after she died, her long-time boyfriend posted the motto of โDo it for those who canโt.โ Apparently, itโs a skateboarderโs phrase, but I thought that was brilliant, a succinct and true path through the dark, and a sincere way to honor such a kickass woman.
It isnโt easy to live for those we lost. Itโs far, far easier to lay down with them in the underworld. What is difficult is taking a part of them and living vivaciouslyโdoing it for them. The Ten of Wands is a card of hardships, but theyโre doable. Youโll feel like you’re getting crushed, that it will kill you, but itโs all smoke and mirrors. Youโll live. Youโll survive.
Because when we live, when we feel truly alive, the ivine can appear. Thatโs The Star in this spread. The image is of a woman at peace at a waterโs edge, pouring water into the water and onto the land. It is a card of harmony, of integration of the subconscious and conscious, and a feeling of true peace.
There is a sentiment in some faith communities that The Divine appears to you in ways you can comprehend. Perhaps at this moment, itโs in that balance when you feel both alive and at peace. Are there any times when you feel that way? Any activities that spark that?
If you arenโt opposed to organized religion, this might also be a time to read literature from different faiths or to Zoom into a meeting and see if anything clicks. The Unitarian Universalist churches host meetings for CUUP (Covenant of Unitarian Universalist Pagans), which might strike your fancy if integrating tarot and meditation are important to your spirituality. Iโm also happy to provide you with a booklist if you wish.
I am so sorry for your loss, dear Searching, on both accounts. It can be destabilizing, especially in a world thatโs experienced its own profound grief. Nevertheless, I hope that you find some of this helpful and that you find some moments of serenity as you move through your grief. It is the season of Holy Darkness, but I do not doubt that once again, youโll see the flame of light and be able to guide yourself out of the underworld.
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This article appears in Dec 2-8, 2021.
