Interview Gina Wisotzky Interview Gina Wisotzky

Tarot Interview with Lucas Taylor of Brightleaf Tarot

It was such a treat interviewing Lucas Taylor for the latest episode of the Incandescent Tarot Podcast. Lucas is a tarot reader and collector @brightleaftarot and brings a distinctive and powerful intuitive style to his work with the cards, not to mention a vivacious and contagious energy! I had so much fun talking with him I couldn’t resist asking him some more tarot-specific questions which I’m sharing with you here today.

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Photo: Lucas Taylor | @brightleaftarot

It was such a treat interviewing Lucas Taylor for the latest episode of the Incandescent Tarot Podcast. Lucas is a tarot reader and collector @brightleaftarot and brings a distinctive and powerful intuitive style to his work with the cards, not to mention a vivacious and contagious energy! I had so much fun talking with him I couldn’t resist asking him some more tarot-specific questions which I’m sharing with you here today.

Check out our conversation directly on Substack, Apple Podcasts, or wherever else you get your podcasts, and be sure to leave a rating and review if you enjoyed the episode! You can find Lucas online @brightleaftarot.

Photo & Reading by Lucas

Photo & Reading by Lucas

Favorite Current Deck

I love all my children equally, but probably Spolia Tarot.

Tarot Pet-Peeve

Beautiful cards printed on terrible cardstock.

Favorite Card(s)

The Tower and The High Priestess

Trickiest/Least Favorite Card(s)

Hierophant, but mostly because I simply do not vibe with the majority of decks that use imagery of a Pope. I don't have a personal relationship with that imagery and I think it's a weird choice for how I interpret that card.

A Moment when Tarot Called You Out

Every time I try to avoid making a decision and try to make tarot decide for me. It's always like, nice try dumbass but you have to figure this out yourself.

Favorite Breakthrough with a Card

The Tower for sure. I think there is a lot of opportunity when this card comes up to let those structures fall around you without letting it devastate you, taking a breath, sorting through the rubble, Marie Kondo-ing the pieces and letting go of what doesn't serve you so that you can rebuild better and stronger to move forward in a really aligned way.

Your Reading Style in 3 Words

Intuitive, Accessible, Supportive

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Tarot Reflections Gina Wisotzky Tarot Reflections Gina Wisotzky

Check it Out: Robert Place on Tarot as a Spiritual Path

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about tarot and its many uses, particularly how to sum up my personal approach. As a tarot reader and teacher, I get asked this question a lot. And, as a spiritual seeker, my experience and outlook changes subtly over time.

One of the major shifts has been around the idea of spirituality. As a cynical child from a very secular family, I has an almost allergic response to the term. To me, spirituality meant flighty, irrational, and hopelessly outdated.

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about tarot and its many uses, particularly how to sum up my personal approach. As a tarot reader and teacher, I get asked this question a lot. And, as a spiritual seeker, my experience and outlook changes subtly over time.

One of the major shifts has been around the idea of spirituality. As a cynical child from a very secular family, I has an almost allergic response to the term. To me, spirituality meant flighty, irrational, and hopelessly outdated.

As any of you who’ve been following my work likely know, I was living a huge contradiction: My orientation towards the world, at least privately, was deeply spiritual. I saw the world as a living place, practiced free-form rituals as a young child, and even though I’d never admit it, found deep insight in the tarot.

Perhaps because I didn’t grow up in a religious tradition, I was unaware of the natural, human pursuit of spiritual meaning. To have other people to talk to about these questions and experiences would be delightful! But like any isolated and underexposed child, I thought I was completely alone.

So imagine my surprise when I learned more about what spirituality actually is and found I was already doing it, loving it, and finditing it deeply meaningful!

Which brings us to this article I’d like to share. I shouldn’t be surprised that Robert Place would be the person to so perfectly articulate tarot’s connection to spiritual practice. A renowned and wonderfully reliable scholar of tarot and divination, Place distills these ideas expertly in this interview with Buddha Weekly. He touches on the differences between divination and fortune telling (a key point!) and how to use tarot as a spiritual path.

I particularly love this quote:

It is better to ask about relationships with other people or about routine decisions that need to be made. You want the Tarot to tell you things that may be hard to hear, about how you are being self-centered or short sighted. And then you want the Higher Self to show you a better way to behave. As you practice this day-to-day and act on the advice, you are making better decisions and becoming more like your Higher Self. This process becomes a spiritual path.
— Robert Place

Check out the interview here and share your thoughts in the comments below. How do you view tarot’s connection with spiritual practice? What has your personal experience been?

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