Feeling Blue this Blue Moon?

    A Blue Moon is the second full moon in a calendar month OR the third of four full moons in a season — as it is tonight.

We note the cycles in our lives, the rhythms in the world around us; we celebrate passages & anniversaries; we mark events that vary from the norm, both in caution & in delight.

Take a few moments each day to be aware of the changes in light, to notice the movement of life forms that share our world, to feel the shifts in winds & weather: This can help reset our inner balance, connecting us through our senses to the larger Nature of which we are each a moving, dancing part.

There are times when this inner balance eludes us, when we need a little help to right our compass. If this is one of those times for you, call me to see how I can help.

Renee Beck, Oakland Transpersonal Therapy & Dreamwork. 510-287-0341.

The Benefits of Therapeutic Tarot

The Tarot is a collection of images of archetypes — concepts common to our shared human experience — that show up in different cultures in different forms. For example, all cultures have images of a Creator/Destroyer, the Journey, the Hero, & Death/Rebirth. These archetypes are readily found in religion, myth, & stories. (Can you think of a good film or book that doesn’t have those in some form?) Images are the language of the unconscious, just as words are the language of the conscious mind.

We live in a very conscious-mind culture, & imagery (& music, or poetry, which is a way of using words to evoke the imaginal) is a way to get below/beyond just the logical, rational normal way of doing things. It’s a way of accessing the relational aspect of consciousness, where we can connect things &create understanding in ways that our “thinking brain” doesn’t. A Therapeutic Tarot reading is about a specific question, & the way the cards are laid out specifies a different aspect of the question in each card position; the cards are drawn, & the archetypes are synchronistically shown in relationship to each other.

What happens then depends on the purpose of the person doing the reading. Some people want to foretell the future (which I don’t do, since everything that happens between “now” & “then” can & does change the future); some people want to tell people what they want to hear. I like to have a dialogue about what the person sees in the cards, talk about the archetypal meaning, discuss how that relates to his or her inner & outer life (especially inner), & how she or he might use & apply this insight to make better choices or to create changes in how to do things that might improve his or her life.

When integrated into psychotherapy, Therapeutic Tarot can add richness of dimension into your own healing or growth.

For a free 15-minute interview about Oakland Transpersonal Therapy & Dreamwork, or to schedule a Therapeutic Tarot Consultation, contact  reneebeckmft.com

The Fool

In the Tarot, The Fool card is represented by the number 0. While 0 numerically means “nothing”, looked at mystically, the zero, an image of a circle, represents the all & the nothing, the center & the surround, connection & continuation. The Fool card represents a state of being in touch with the larger oneness, with a sense of the numinous.

The Fool reminds us to maintain a childlike wonder & joy at the simple marvels of existence. The word “fool” means empty-headed, insane, & is derived through French from the Latin word “follis” for blacksmith’s bellows: a leather bag filled with air. When we are in touch with the sacred, we do go a little out of our minds, because what we are experiencing goes beyond normal, day-to-day thinking.

And as wonderful as our minds are, they are only part of our experience. The Fool suggests that we embrace the entirety of who we are, to open to the mysteries of life, to the beauty & knowledge present in any moment, if we can just go a little out of our heads.

Happy April Fool’s Day: May we all be able to be a little Foolish, sometimes!

What are the origins of the Easter Bunny?

Spring rituals traditionally celebrate life, rebirth, the return of growth, & fertility. Pre-Christian Europeans celebrated the return of Spring with ceremonies honoring the Triple Goddess, who signified the Mystery of the Trinity. (Three is the geometric requirement for moving beyond a point, to a line, to giving form.) The Triple Goddess was believed to live in the Earth, & to find her, you needed to be guided by her helper, the Hare.

In Britain, the Lunar Goddess of Fertility was called Eostre or Ostara, & the egg was used as her symbol. The Orphic Egg represents the full potential & birthing of the the cosmos.

However you celebrate the rebirth of Spring, may your life blossom & be fruitful!