06-The Lovers Reversed Mage Finance Tarot Reading

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

Finance, Money Matters Or Debt:

When the love card appears in reverse, it can indicate that you are paying far too much attention to your love life and far too little attention to other important things, including friendships, finances, and the rest of your personal life. If you need help, ask for it. Letting finances get out of control is a mistake no matter what else is going on in your life. Do not lose sight of the things that you must attend to, no matter how much you feel that you are walking on air.

Card Meanings: Imbalance, Conflict, Disconnection, Disunion, Trust Issues, Fickleness, Disharmony, Separation, Lack Of Accountability, Untrustworthy, Unreliability, Frustration

The Lovers is associated with the astrological sign of Gemini, ‘The Twins.’ It almost always points to partnerships with just one other person; generally, and not surprisingly, this indicates a romantic partnership, but of course this is not always the case. Less frequently, it points to the duality that all of us have inwardly – between male/female, yin/yang, approach/avoidance, and the like.

This reading is part of a finance tarot reading using the The Lovers using cards from the with the Mage 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

Tarot Triumphs
Book Details
Tarot Triumphs: A word of caution, though: When I was getting acquainted with another form of card divination (later to become known as the Tree of Life Oracle, for which I wrote the handbook2), I decided to ask who would win the Grand National, the biggest horse race in the British calendar. I am not a betting person, but I thought it would be fun to have a go. I did a three-card reading, and two of the cards that turned up were called the Man of Blood and the Drunkard. I checked the list of runners. Aha! Red Rum was an outsider in the race—surely he would fit the cards rather well? I put some money on him. He won! (And, incidentally, he went on to become one of the most renowned racehorses in history.) Next year, a little guiltily, I confess, I tried the same thing. It didn’t work and I lost my money. The next and final year, I did the same, and lost yet again. The money lost just about canceled out money won.

Try our Love Horoscopes: Cancer and Pisces

Angel Encyclopedia: George Herbert’s ‘Easter Wings’ is actually shaped like wings. John Donne’s ‘The Dream’ brings celestial qualities to the bed of lovers and ‘The Relique’ refers to the asexuality of the lovers’ guardian angels. Donne’s ‘Anniversary Poems’ on the death of a young girl survey the upper and lower realms and find her soul so

Tarot Triumphs: Here are some further ethical, practical, and philosophical considerations for you to reflect on. They are not set in stone, but they should help you to develop your Tarot practice in a mature and individual way.

  • Feel free to drop us a line if you looked for The Lovers Mage Finance Tarot Reading and you don’t see what you want. We would be glad to help. In the meantime checkout Tarot Reader Dundee.

Tarot Triumphs: I have always been drawn to divination. As a child, I diligently counted my prune stones after school pudding to see whom I would marry, and I gleefully made folding paper fortune-tellers, in which you could scrawl all kinds of possible fates for your friends. In my teens, the desire surfaced to know more about astrology, dream interpretation, and fortune-telling. This was before the new wave of interest in magical subjects, so there was not much material readily available. On holiday with a friend and her family, in a rented cottage in Wales, age thirteen, I pored over a moldy volume of dream interpretations that I’d found in the bookcase there, my chief entertainment during a week of rain. I begged to be allowed to take it home. Quite reasonably, my friend’s mother prevented me from doing so on the basis that the owner might be fond of the book herself. Later, I got my mother to buy me a fortune-telling teacup that we saw in a junk shop—one where little card images are scattered on the china, to be interpreted through how the tea leaves fall—though I never did manage to work it out properly. As for astrology, at that time I could only find very superficial magazine columns to work out what sun signs my friends and I were born under. But I had a kind of instinctive feeling that this all made sense. I was less interested in knowing the future than in discovering how to penetrate this otherworld, the place from which these magical messages seemed to come.