Reversed Tarot Cards: A Practical Guide

Reversed Tarot Cards: A Practical Guide

Make sense of upside-down cards without the confusion.

Sooner or later a tarot card lands upside down, and beginners often freeze. Is it bad news? The good news is that reversals are far less alarming than they look. With a simple framework, they add nuance rather than confusion.

What a Reversal Means

A reversed card generally takes the upright meaning and modifies it — softening it, delaying it, blocking it, or turning it inward. The Sun upright is open joy; reversed, it might be happiness you are not yet letting yourself feel.

Common Ways to Read Reversals

ApproachMeaning of a reversal
BlockedThe energy is stuck or resisted
InternalThe energy is felt inwardly, not outwardly
DelayedThe outcome is slowed or not yet ready
DiminishedA gentler, weaker version of the upright

To Use Them or Not

Plenty of skilled readers never use reversals, finding all the nuance they need in card positions and combinations. Others love the extra layer reversals provide. Neither approach is more ‘correct’ — it is a matter of style.

Reading With Confidence

If you are learning, start with upright meanings until they feel natural, then experiment with reversals. When you visit a reader, feel free to ask how they handle reversals so you understand their method.

Want a professional to read the cards for you, upright and reversed? Book a tarot reading today.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Do all readers use reversals?

No. Some read every card upright and find depth through position and context instead. Both approaches are equally valid.

Are reversed cards negative?

Not necessarily. A reversal can soften a difficult card or simply turn its energy inward, so context matters far more than ‘good’ or ‘bad’.

Should beginners use reversals?

Many beginners learn upright meanings first, then add reversals once they feel confident. There is no rush.

Jake Carter
REVIEWED BY
Jake Carter — Tarot Reader
Reads with and without reversals and teaches both approaches.

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Court Cards in Tarot: People, Personalities and Roles

Court Cards in Tarot: People, Personalities and Roles

Demystifying the trickiest cards in the tarot deck.

Ask any new tarot reader which cards trip them up, and the answer is almost always the court cards. The sixteen Pages, Knights, Queens and Kings can feel slippery — but once you understand their logic, they become some of the most insightful cards in the deck.

The Four Ranks

Each suit has four court cards, and each rank represents a stage of maturity or a way of engaging with that suit’s energy.

RankEnergy
PageCuriosity, learning, new beginnings
KnightAction, pursuit, momentum
QueenMastery from within, nurturing
KingMastery in the world, authority

Suit Plus Rank

Combine the rank with the suit and a personality emerges. A Knight of Cups is a romantic on a mission; a Queen of Pentacles is a grounded, nurturing provider; a King of Swords is a clear, decisive thinker. The blend tells the story.

Person, Energy or Advice?

A court card may point to a real person, describe an energy around your situation, or suggest an approach to adopt. A skilled reader uses the surrounding cards and your question to decide which reading fits.

Reading Them With Confidence

Rather than memorising rigid definitions, picture each court card as a character you might meet. Ask what they value and how they act. This intuitive approach brings the court cards vividly to life.

Curious who the court cards point to in your life? Book a tarot reading and find out.

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New to Psychic Book? Try a reading with a trusted advisor and feel the connection before you spend a thing.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Do court cards always mean people?

Often they represent people in your life, but they can also describe an energy, a stage of development, or an approach you are being invited to take.

How do I know who a court card represents?

Context is everything. The suit, the surrounding cards and your question all help your reader identify who or what the card points to.

Why are court cards so hard for beginners?

They are more abstract than other cards. With practice, reading them as personalities and energies becomes second nature.

Jake Carter
REVIEWED BY
Jake Carter — Tarot Reader
Helps beginners get comfortable with the often-confusing court cards.

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