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L**Z
Life changing for me
Don’t take this book lightly. I have been slowly deep dive reading and working with each page of this book for almost 3 years. It has been the best self help/coaching/ life transformation book ever. It has made a profound impact in my life getting clarity on the most significant life questions, for learning, and for growth. Hope this helps to motivate others to do the same.
E**N
Learn about yourself and living well
This is a big book. Each card of the major arcana contains an overall theme with authoritative text included as well as questions to journal. This extensive, in-depth study is more about yourself than about tarot, but it will expand your knowledge and understanding of each card by going through the study for yourself. You can pick and choose cards as needs arise in your life or work from beginning to end. The book includes wise quotations and resources. As I was struggling with an eating disorder at the time that I bought this, I began with major arcana three, the Empress, which deals with food issues. I would recommend this for anyone using tarot as a tool to understand themselves emotionally, psychologically, intellectually, spiritually.
F**S
Great book
Loved the creativity
P**L
Fully immerse yourself in the majors as you complete a self-discovery journey through the tarot
Andy Matzner provides us with a meaty journal-based tarot book that not only helps us learn the Major Arcana but facilitates a healing and introspective journey as well. Matzner offers us an excellent opportunity to dive in deep with the majors and work our way through the Fool’s journey to see what the journey has to teach us. Take your time with this book and get lost in the lessons of the tarot majors.As a psychologist who uses tarot for self-healing, I love Matzner’s approach to the tarot and the fact that he pairs various psychological techniques with the majors. This pairing helps deepen the healing and self-exploration process. If you are wanting to deep dive with the tarot, this book is an excellent guide for that immersive experience.What I like the most about Tarot for Transformation is that Matzner provides writing prompts for you to use for self-reflection, meditation, exploration, and journaling. He asks great questions for each card to aid you in fully exploring each Major Arcana card. There are so many tarot journal prompts and reflective questions provided in this book that you could journal daily for a year without repeating a single prompt.For each Major Arcana card, Matzner provides you with relevant and thought-provoking quotes, card meanings, symbolism for the colors in the tarot image, numerological, mythological, and historical associations, insightful questions meant to aid you in probing beneath the surface into your subconscious mind, journal prompts for your journal work, and psychological techniques that tie into the work with that particular Major Arcana card.I highly recommend this book for anyone wanting to further explore the tarot system. Tarot for Transformation truly immerses you in the lessons provided by the tarot majors to promote self-reflection, healing, and self-discovery.
P**A
Certainly Not What I Was Expecting
I don't know what the people who have written such glowing reviews about this book were expecting, but it definitely wasn't what I was expecting. I was expecting a book that was largely about the Tarot. This is basically a self help book, filled with a hodge-podge of ideas and suggestions for someone to change or transform their lives. Is it helpful? Yes, in a very generic way. There is scant little content about the Tarot, and what is there is very, very generalized and basic. I was really, really disappointed in this book.
B**T
Understanding Yourself - The Key To Your Future
At 8.5 x 1.2 x 11 inches, and 476 pages, “Tarot For Transformation” is a BOOK! I opened it up with some trepidation, thinking it would take a lifetime to work my way through. While it is not in the “large type” category, the type was a large enough size that I could read comfortably for as long as I wanted to. Letting out a sigh of relief! I did have to laugh when I saw that Matzner INTENDED the book to be big, so that the reader could lay it open on a table or desk while they reflect, perhaps journal, and allow it to become a “workbook for the soul” (Matzner’s words).We need to consider that Matzner is a licensed clinical social worker and psychotherapist. This becomes important when you realize that the foundation for this book is that of making best use of the archetypal nature of the Tarot Major Arcana. As a professional Tarot reader, I love and respect the nature of this book, and its ability to help the reader establish goals and create the life that they want. I can use it as a tool to help myself and my clients.For things to reveal themselves to us, we need tobe ready to abandon our view about them.Thich Nhat Hanh (from the book)Two things impressed me at the very beginning of the book: (1) a series of quotes with large spaces left between them, and (2) a page entitled PLEASE READ. The PLEASE READ page reminds the reader that this is a journal-based book and that there are questions and writing prompts for the reader to reflect on. The reader’s progress is based on their doing the work in this book. The reader is instructed to purchase a notebook or journal to keep track of their progress. The reader is encouraged to take their time with this book, as many emotions will be brought to the surface. It is also recommended to have some type of support system in place. Something that really hit home with me was the statement that if a question seems that it will bring up too many difficult memories, then skip the question. While the book is designed to stretch the reader’s comfort zone, their emotional safety is a priority.In his introduction, Matzner addresses using the Tarot as a tool for deep personal transformation. Each of the cards in the Major Arcana is used as jumping-off points for creating profound and permanent change. The first part of each chapter presents a commentary on the individual card, including a deep dive into symbolic and esoteric wisdom. Matzner notes that in order to live an authentic life, full of meaning, three things are necessary: (1) To discover who you are underneath all of the social conditioning of your life, (2) To determine what you truly want out of life, and (3) to master an array of life skills.In the table of contents each card has its own chapter. Along with the title of the card, there is a note on the energy of the card, on the work that will be done in this chapter. Some examples are:• The Fool – Mindfulness• The Emperor – Belief Systems• The Hierophant – Values• The Chariot – Boundaries• The Hermit – Emotional Intelligence• The Star – Spirituality• The Moon – Shadow Work, Disarming The Inner CriticI am going to look at one card, as a representation of what this book offers. The Hermit is one of my birth cards, so he volunteered. Really – he did volunteer! The beginning page shows a black and white image of the Hermit, along with the following quote from Ram Dass: “The quieter you become, the more you can hear.”Matzner begins his commentary by comparing The Fool and The Hermit. One is youth, ready to step off the cliff, open and receptive. One is old age, holding the lantern of wisdom high. The suggested challenge for the Hermit is that of balancing prudence with the possibility of betraying his own interests.The theme for working with this card is emotional intelligence. The goal is to create a healthy relationship with your feelings. Matzner lists our core emotions as fear, anger, sadness, and happiness. He suggests using mindfulness skills to notice when an emotion occurs, and to observe what happens next. Questions are presented for the reader to ask themselves, such as: How do I feel? What just happened? Am I willing and able to stay present with this emotion?Emphasis is placed on being mindful and staying in the present moment. We need to notice and experience our emotions without letting our mind get in the way. The Hermit is all about “Know Thyself”. Self-knowledge is power.Matzner discusses how emotions and feelings are developed as we grow up. He lists a series of beliefs that we carry with us, such as “Feelings shouldn’t be discussed”, “Sharing what I feel with other people is risky”, and “If I ignore a feeling it will go away”.There are several scenarios that are presented, along with solutions to them. These are moments that we all go through, and they help the reader look at their emotional reactions in a different way.There is quite an interesting take on intuition, as Matzner holds the belief that our intuition always knows how we should express and honor our feelings. He points out that a great challenge in following our intuition is fear. (He presents fear as False Expectations Appearing Real.)At the end of this chapter is a great section on using the Emotional Freedom Technique (EFT, tapping). Complete with diagrams this is a wonderful tool of empowerment that anyone can use.I found this book to be a wonderful tool for self-help and a wonderful journey. Filled with examples and straight talk, the reader is given many options for creating a life for themselves that is worth living. Based on the tool of journaling, anyone from any background can use this book. I plan to start from the initial chapter and work through to the end, beginning on my next birthday (late December). Why am I waiting? Because I have other projects going, and I want to be able to give each project the time and focus that it deserves.
M**S
First please make some notes in your journal.
Tarot for Transformation is how to manual. Rather like the writing I did when I worked for Hewlett Packard . How to assemble your computer with PICTURES. So there's nothing terrible about it. . .nothing much more than quotes and platitudes and needless instructions such as - the key to paying attention is your thinking! WOWZER. It all makes sense now, Andy! Thanks.
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