00-The Fool Upright Thoth Love Tarot Reading

This page is part of your love tarot reading with the Thoth Tarot Deck. If you are reading this page by accident you may prefer our Spirit Guide Quiz or if you looked for The Fool specifically try The Fool Thoth Tarot Meaning. Love, Luck and Light to all!

Romance, Love Or Relationships:

The meaning of The Fool in the context of love could indicate that you aren’t ready for a commitment. At least not yet. Even though others may be pressing you for one now is not the time. There is nothing wrong with having fun and indeed this card is a positive harbinger for your love life; lots of fun seems to be in the offing and this is what you want right now in an existing relationship. If, on the other hand, you are looking for a new relationship and hopefully love then make sure you don’t let your desire for fun let you overlook the real thing should it come your way now. When you’re wrapped up in having fun it can be easy to overlook the possibilities in a new relationship. True love is not always instant so you need to make sure you’re aware that it could be creeping up on you!

Card Meanings: Originality, Foolishness, Adventure, Youth, Pleasure, Spontaneity, Lack Of Commitment, Travel, Idealism, Opportunity, Innocence, Beginnings Possibilities, Freedom, Carelessness, Thoughtlessness

The Fool is always an indicator of newness in one form or another. In many ways it indicates the purity, the open-hearted energy, and the innocence of a child. Children are trusting and trust forms the basis of meaning for this card. This is generally considered a positive card but there is a caveat. The caveat being that it is important to take time to be sure that you are looking where you’re going. Trusting yourself to take a step into the unknown is one thing, but doing so without any thought whatsoever may be a mistake.

This reading is part of a love tarot reading using the The Fool using cards from the with the Thoth Tarot Deck. You will find many more tarot pages that will be of great help if you need tarot card meanings. Use the search at the bottom of the page. We have some amazing tarot books for you to browse. Please see below.


Here are some snippets from a few of my favorite books

Complete Book of Tarot
Book Details
Complete Book of Tarot: Hebrew letter: Teth or Theth (a clay or wicker basket; a Hebrew word meaning to surround, contain, store, catch, intertwine, coil, knot together, interweave; also mud or clay, and a snake or serpent). The coiling serpent is suggestive of the intertwining of bodies in sexual intercourse. The Hebrew letter Teth (basket) and this card’s association with human lust bring to mind the nursery rhyme, ‘A-tisket a-tasket, a green and yellow basket, I wrote a letter to my love and on the way I dropped it … a little boy he picked it up and put it in his pocket.’

Try our Love Horoscopes: Virgo and Pisces Match

Complete Book of Tarot: To illustrate this point, let’s trace the Fool’s journey through the major arcana, as if the Fool were an initiate to Christianity who needed to learn how to achieve salvation through the teachings of the medieval church. In early tarot decks, the Fool is unnumbered. He is often shown as a madman, vagabond, or beggar; he stands completely apart from the sequence of trumps in the tarot deck. In the tarot games of northern Italy, the Fool was regarded as an ‘excuse card’ as ‘playing the Fool’ excused the player from following suit or playing a trump card on a particular trick. Metaphorically, the Fool functions as an outsider looking in; he gives the player an excuse for not following the established rules of the game.

Elements of the Psychic World: 0 The Fool: a jester figure, sometimes shown beginning a journey and accompanied by a dog, representing impulse, birth and youth.

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Elements of the Psychic World: Perhaps the most popular name in Europe for the mysterious ghost lights that are often seen hovering around or near graveyards or over marshy areas. One tradition says the will-o’-the-wisp are the souls of dead people appearing as a death omen or guarding lost treasure; another claims they are lost souls who cannot enter heaven or hell and therefore become malignant and do their best to lead those foolish enough to follow them into trouble. Recent research has suggested a natural explanation: the lights are caused by the igniting of gasses escaping from rotting plants or animals.