Eight of Cups
Eight of Cups indicates someone has grown bored.
In a tarot reading, it is about the inquirer (querent), someone close to the inquirer, or a hidden aspect within the inquirer that needs to be acknowledged for the inquirer to reach their highest consciousness. The happiness the inquirer is seeking can be found by answering a question:
Why is it important to change up routines (or not)?
It is import to consider that this is a Minor Arcana card (pip card), which carries a message that signifies an event that impacts your immediate past and future. When it appears the universe wants you to focus on feelings about predictability.
Don’t let the set structure of the Tarot distract you from its primary use as an intuitive divination tool. Use the keywords, images, and symbols of the card to tap into your intuition and deeper inner knowing.
Eight of Cups
Upright= Stagnant Routine
Reversal=Feared Change
Element= Water (which influences love and emotions)
Yes or no=This card is it typically a no
OCHO DE COPAS
VERTICAL= ESTANCAMIENTO EN LA RUTINA
INVERTIDA= CAMBIO TEMIDO
The signs are less important than the traits they represent because a person has sun, moon and rising signs, and one or more of these is often unknown to the tarot reader. The zodiac for this card relates to traits of sensitivity, focus, and intuition. And, planetary concepts of uncertainty are seen with: SATURN.
Note: These traditional tarot-astrology references are based on concepts commonly attributed to the secret society knows as the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn from the turn of the 20th century.
Eight of Cups, like all cards, is part of a cycle of beginning, middle, and end. The stage of this event is Mutable (End), and may be related to February and the energy of Late Winter.
As with all 8s in the Tarot, this card is associated with the time that led up to the current level of expertise. This card carries the energetic influence of 8. Watch for repeating numbers of 8 after the reading for confirmation of their importance in the reading.
The cards refer to identified traits and energies that balance each other out as opposite but interconnected forces. Some cards are grammatically gendered or depict age. This does not refer to actual biological gender or physical years. Masculine and feminine traits, and levels of maturity, exist in all of us.
Tarot Decks
The image above shows two different decks. The original Rider–Waite tarot deck for tarot card reading, also known as the Waite–Smith, or Rider–Waite–Smith, or Rider tarot deck is the most popular version of cards used today. Illustrated by Pamela Colman Smith, based on the instructions of academic and mystic A. E. Waite, the cards were originally published by the Rider Company in 1909. This deck has long been the gold-standard for learning tarot.
The Lightworker’s Tarot Deck, also shown here, is a beginner deck that uses many of the symbols and colors used in the Rider–Waite deck but also provides modern imagery designed for a rapid sensory-intuition response by today’s new generation of readers. A reader should select a deck based on what feels right for them.