Bonnie Cehovet’s blog is a blog worth sharing! Cheers to Bonnie!
via Bonnie Cehovet
Bonnie Cehovet’s blog is a blog worth sharing! Cheers to Bonnie!
ISIS Tarot de Marseille Artist: Tadahiro Onuma ISIS (The Institute of Study on Initiation and Symbolism) 2010 ISBN #978-4-88594-446-8 I want to thank Alec Satin for bringing this deck to my attention. I saw he scans on his blog, and “had to have it”! I purchased the deck directly from Mr. Onuma, with not a little trepidation, because I was not that sure how well Japan’s postal system had recovered from their recent devastating tsunami … Read More
via Bonnie Cehovet
Posted by Jordan Hoggard on June 23, 2011 in Guest Blogs
Tags: divination, isis-tarot-de-marseille, nicholas-conver, review, tadahiro-onuma, Tarot
You must log in to post a comment.
Bonnie Cehovet
June 23, 2011 at 9:05 pm
Jordan –
Thank you for putting this blog out there. I love this deck, and would like to see more people considering the Marseille style decks, either through this lovely deck, or through the decks that Jean-Claude Flornoy restored.
Blessings,
Bonnie
mystereum
June 26, 2011 at 10:30 pm
😀 You are welcome! A big ole simplicity towards complexity I have, that I guess I overlooked for decades until it unfolded to reveal itself. . .and I fully trust in it doing so when it did and not a moment before. . .is that I have always been able to sight-read any deck put in my hands or on the screen. . .and as I minded my temples flexing last time I looked at a Marseilles deck. . .your blog post reminded me of that. Reminded me of my own decptive simplicity towards myself and Tarot and basically most everything. . .where I can almost miss my own valuable statements and actions and miss capitalizing on them for myself and to further provide a service to others. Call it a Mystereum Knight of Wands AWAKENING moment, and your block on a Marseilles deck that lightly, subtlely, has shade rather than wholly and deceptively simply hiding its allusions in plain sight as is traditional for Marseilles decks struck a symphony of chords to resonate and focus me to look at my own process with “looking at a Marseilles deck” eyes. Cheers Bonnie!