Before we delve into our sample Tarot reading to celebrate spooky season, we must learn about the celebrations at this time of year. Your first reaction is a common one: “Well, it’s Halloween or All Hallow’s Eve!” You’d be correct; however, there are other traditions at the root of this popular worldwide celebration.
Let’s break down the history and then dive into a spooky season Samhain Tarot reading.
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Whether or not you honor these special celebrations, you may still be familiar with these names, as they are often conflated or tangled in secular holidays. All eight Sabbats are tied to the seasons, with four marking solstices and equinoxes, and the other four associated with Celtic fire festivals:
Samhain: Halloween / Pagan New Year / All Hallow’s EveYule: Winter Solstice / ChristmasImbolc: Saint Brigid’s Day / CandlemasOstara: Spring Equinox / EasterBeltane: May DayLitha: Summer Solstice / MidsummerLammas: Frey Fest / LughnasaghMabon: Autumn Equinox / Pagan ThanksgivingMany of these celebrations are connected to gratitude and explore the natural cycles of planting, nurturing, harvesting, and rest. And while each of these festivals has a history, tradition, and magic all its own, for many witches, Samhain is the most important Sabbat of the year.
Occurring during Scorpio season and at the mid-point between the autumn equinox and the winter solstice, this is a time when we speak of the “thinning of the veil” between the physical and spiritual worlds.
As a new year begins, we remember the dead, the people and places, and things that we have lost, and also celebrate the harvest of plants and livestock. Samhain marks the first festival of the dark half of the Wheel of the Year, transitioning from honoring cycles of birth, life, and growth into cycles of death, stillness, and recovery.
Some endings we choose, others are forced upon us, but the result is an inevitable conclusion — a necessary goodbye that allows us to leave behind a dream, relationship, career, pattern, ambition, hope, wish, or situation that has gone stagnant.
And while this is something that is worth acknowledging, grieving, and spending time reflecting on, it also can bring a sense of relief, even freedom. If the concept of death makes you nervous, uncomfortable, or even angry, spend some time dwelling on the gifts that death can bring.
What does leaving something behind or acknowledging an ending make space for? How do we honor things that are gone and welcome new opportunities?
Samhain gives us a chance to note where we crave abundance and where we need release. We cannot only ever ask to receive things: there’s only so much we can carry, only room for so many plants in our garden. Sometimes we need to clear things out, acknowledge rot and decay, and make space for the new.
To that end, death does not have to be sad, scary, or painful. It can also be a celebration, a joyful time of remembrance, a recognition of the things that matter.
Consider:
What have you lost, or are you in the process of losing?How do subtle or substantial deaths eventually create opportunities for rebirth? In giving ourselves time to process emotions and honor all that has passed, how do we show ourselves love, compassion, and grace?
For this reading, consider:
What are your shadows trying to tell you? What are you eager to release? What are you still clinging to? How can you anticipate the rebirth that is on its way instead of fighting for something already gone?This sample reading with the Marigold Tarot is meant to inspire and demonstrate how to effectively use this spread. It was not drawn for anyone in particular, but you may still find inspiration or empowerment from it.
As an ending, this card offers hope for the future, indicating that a period of hardship or difficult circumstances may be coming to a close. Yet this card also offers advice, telling us to set aside our pride and take the help that is being offered. While things are going to get better, we still need to act in order to improve our circumstances.
There is real strength and comfort within arm’s reach — and this card wants us to accept it.
Whether it’s a toxic relationship, an old dream, or a harmful situation, we reach this point when we’ve done everything that we can to repair a challenging issue and have not made progress in some time. Instead of continuing to spin our wheels, this card is the moment when we decide to leave our old ways behind to start down a new path.
In this position of grieving, the 8 of Cups wants us to remember what we are moving towards, to take ownership of our choices, and to recognize that we are now reaching for something brighter and healthier.
Sometimes when we are facing obstacles, we retreat into ourselves, believing that no one else could possibly understand what we are enduring. Yet this card reminds us that there is happiness to find, people who love us, and beautiful joys to celebrate. We are not as alone as we believe that we are, and there are so many new ways to find hope — we simply have to be willing to look for them.
Just like with the 8 of Cups, there may still be grief present, a period of mourning and sorrow as we say goodbye to something that we once deliberately pursued. But our shadows want us to recognize the strength that it takes to choose ourselves and to be open to whatever may be around the next corner.
But as a rebirth to anticipate, this card suggests that we may be breaking free of these traps, that in taking action and making changes, this is something that we can avoid or escape.
The 8 of Swords is not a sign that the Universe is working against us or that we aren’t smart or capable of solving our own problems — instead, it’s a reminder that our perspective may be flawed and that we may be limiting our choices because of our own beliefs. By opening our eyes fully, in recognizing where help and support are available, we can be reborn anew.
The stories that we tell ourselves have power — but by acknowledging situations and relationships that are harmful, being willing to accept help, in seeking truth and objectivity, we can enter a new stage of growth, awareness, and self-love.
We deserve compassion, honesty, and safety, and in recognizing what we are walking away from, in making space for new dreams, those gifts are all within reach.
How do you celebrate Samhain? What does the Death card have to teach us about saying goodbye? When has an ending that felt painful in the moment but resulted in something new and beautiful?
This deck features cards from the Marigold Tarot deck.
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