It’s not just okay to be sensitive. It’s beautiful to be sensitive. It’s beautiful to be aware and feel deeply. It’s beautiful to love with all your heart and be giving.
Tag: really needed this tonight
Chris Guillebeau ‘Dee Williams at WDS 2014′

There is no right or wrong way
to interpret the cards within your Tarot deck.
You get to choose what works for you
and not use what doesn’t resonate or make sense.There are a myriad of meanings,
and ways of looking at a card.
Your deck is only the road map for a reading.
How you’ll reach the destination, you are the one in charge.
Post Notes:
Please do not remove the captions.
Title: Your Interpretations Are Valid
Copyright: © Ivan Ambrose 2016
Decks: Rider Waite Smith, Tarot Of The New Vision, After Tarot
Navigation: Table Of Contents | FAQ | Contact me
regardless of notes, likes, asks, reblogs, followers…. you are heard. you are seen. you matter.
I feel like a lot of people need hear this.

Love me whole.
Fill my empty nooks
eroded by lying lovers
of the past
and remind me
that I am worth the fight
on days when
my heart and mind
are warring with each other.
————————–
Post Notes:
Please do not remove the captions.
Title: Love Me Whole
Copyright: © Ivan Ambrose 2018
Deck: Starchild Tarot, Sacred Creators Oracle
Navigation: TOC | FAQ | Contact | Disclaimer

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[Drawing of chrysanthemums and pansies above a caption that says “Your skills aren’t useless or unimpressive just because they aren’t easily monetized. Just because you’re not making money doesn’t mean you’re not doing anything valuable.”]
A comforting thought
Five thousand years ago, the Sumerians called the night ngi, the stars mul, and the moon Nanna.
Four thousand years ago, the Akkadians called the night mūšu, the stars kakkabū, and the moon Sîn.
Three thousand years ago, the Hittites called the night išpanza, the stars haštereš, and the moon Arma.
Two and a half thousand years ago, the Greeks called the night nux, the stars astra, and the moon Selênê.
Two thousand years ago, the Romans called the night nox, the stars stellae, and the moon Luna.
Kings and queens and heroes looked up at them. So did travelers coming home, and little children who sneaked out of bed. So did slaves, and mothers and soldiers and old shepherds, and Sappho and Muršili and Enheduanna and Socrates and Hatshepsut and Cyrus and Cicero. In this darkness it didn’t matter who they were, or where they stood. Only that they were human.
Think of that tonight, when you close your window. You are not alone. You share this night sky with centuries of dreamers and stargazers, and people who longed for quiet. Are you anxious? The Hittites were too: they called it pittuliyaš. Does your heart ache? The Greeks felt it too: they called it akhos. Those who look up to the stars for comfort are a family, and you belong to them. Your ancestors have stood under Nanna, Sîn, Arma, Selênê and Luna for five thousand years. Now its light is yours.
May it soothe you well.
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