Episode 58: The Future & Timing
I share a number of techniques for working with timing and the tarot including:
- Card Attributions
- Suits & Seasons
- Opening the Key
- The Calendar Spread
Super Project Lab
I was a guest of the Super Project Lab in their series called meet your Futurist.
Once again, truth and fiction collide when special guests from the Portland community share true, unrehearsed recollections from their lives. Their stories serve as inspirational fodder for each evening’s improv.
Friday Sept 21- Meet Your Futurist


The Eights by Ginny Hunt
Eights in Tarot are a mixed bag. They contain the solid sense of four yet without its enclosing, fearful walls. Eights are about moving beyond that structure, but still working within its rules. It takes the growth lessons of all the numbers that came before it and moves still higher, still striving towards the goal. There is the hint of a new beginning with the eight, but it’s more because the old ways weren’t working as well as you’d hoped. There is both building and destruction inherent in the eights, so it may be difficult at times to ascertain the meaning in the card.
Eight is one number beyond perfection and represents the infinity. The mathematical symbol for infinity, the leminscate is, after all, the number eight turned on its side. We see this symbol in various cards in the tarot: The Magician, the Three of Pentacles, but also, auspiciously, in the Major Arcana VIII Strength. More about this in a moment, because as we shall see, Strength fits very neatly into the symbolism of the number eight, with its multifaceted approach to challenges.
Eight was the number of the balance and cosmic order of the universe according to the Egyptians. In Mesopotamia, the eight-leaf rosette was also the emblem of the fertility goddess Ishtar and her planet Venus. This symbolizes the eight’s basic meaning of birth and death and rebirth, or building and destruction and new beginning aspect of the eight. To the early Christians it was the symbol of the new Life, the final Resurrection and the anticipated Resurrection that is baptism. It was also the number of Beatitudes (The Blesseds) of Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount. The number eight as a symbol of new beginning is seen in the Bible, as when Noah saved eight persons from the flood to start over. Similarly, the Jewish rite of circumcision which marks the beginning of the newborn boy’s relationship with God is performed on the eighth day, and in Leviticus 9:1, the inauguration of the Tabernacle as the new dwelling place for the presence of God took place after seven days of preparation on the eighth. In Jewish Qabbalah, the number is the eighth Sephira, Hod or “Splendour.” The star of Bethlehem is usually shown with eight rays. Also, Easter Sunday, the day when Christ is said to have rose from the dead, was counted as the eighth day after Palm Sunday, the day on which Jesus entered Jerusalem. I know, to us it seems like seven, but the ancients had an inclusive way of counting the day itself plus the following days. (read the full post)
Music Credits
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September 27th, 2007 at 5:45 am
Another great episode, and thanks for playing the songs by Jonathan Coulton - you’ve just turned me on to a new off-beat aritst - thanks!
September 28th, 2007 at 6:54 am
Greatly appreciate the technique-oriented podcasts. This was oh so helpful.
October 2nd, 2007 at 9:05 am
Leisa:
Thank both you and Paul for being willing to share his reading. There is no better way to learn about reading than to watch someone do it (and then to do it yourself).
I appreciated the comments on how to determine timing, as that is always a difficult thing to do. And it is important to let the Seeker know that nothing is written in stone, and that their actions, and the actions of those around them, can skew the timing.
Blessings,
Bonnie