Why tarot
Ancient wisdom
modern clarity
Used as a reflective tool - not a crystal ball - tarot shows you what's already present: your emotions, your patterns, your desires. Deliberate self-inquiry, not divination.
Tarot is good for you
When used as a tool, tarot helps you reflect and think clearly about your life and feelings. It allows you to become more aware of your emotions, patterns, and motivations
Tarot supports your well-being
You may feel calmer, more hopeful, or uplifted in difficult moments - thanks to positive expectations, processing negative emotions, and the grounding effect of active reflection.
Tarot encourages action
Tarot presents potential possibilities on your life path, encouraging you to take conscious action instead of feeling powerless. It reveals what you really want - not what you should do
Card 1shows the main meaning of the situation, its essence and the overall climate of events. It acts like a lens through which you should view all other signals and conclusions.
The Method
How to
read the cards
There are many tarot spreads and ways to interpret. At Tarotello, one universal method removes ambiguity - position alone determines each card's role.
Focus your intention
Concentrate on your question, doubt, or emotion. Hold it clearly before you begin — the more specific, the more resonant the reading.
Choose your domain
Specify whether your question relates to life in general, love & interpersonal relationships, or work & material matters.
Draw the spread
Tarotello shuffles, cuts, and lays out the 13 cards. Tap any card to reveal its traditional meaning and associated keywords.
Card 1 characterises everything
Begin here - it frames the entire reading. Then locate the advice card and the upcoming-events card, both clearly indicated.
Tell a coherent story
Remaining cards point to additional factors and people. Read the whole spread as a narrative, not isolated fragments.
Accept & reflect
You may ask a follow-up, but don't consult the cards too often. Accept the story told and look for genuine inspiration in it.
Tribune
An Analytical-Psychological overview of the Tarot
The article presents the Tarot as a symbolic system of images that - in Carl Gustav Jung’s analytical‑psychological framework - serves as a map of the human psyche. The author discusses the structure of the deck, the meaning of colors, and the hierarchy of cards in the context of the four psychological functions. Tarot is depicted not as a tool of divination but as a method of self‑knowledge and spiritual development. The text shows how working with cards can support the process of individuation, the integration of archetypes, and inner transformation through journaling, dialogue with symbols, and reflection on the shadow.
Read MoreTarot and its faces. From masters of the cards to pop‑culture stars
For centuries, tarot has accompanied not only fortune‑tellers but also artists, thinkers, and pop‑culture stars. This essay shows how, from Etteilla, Waite . . .
Read More Safety and HealthThe dangers of divination. When tarot and horoscopes can cause harm
The essay shows that the real danger of tarot and horoscopes does not lie in “magic” but in psychology: in losing agency, falling into fatalism, and making . . .
Read More Your
question
deserves
an answer
Get reading→ Tarot does not tell you what will happen. It shows you what is happening - right now, in the place within you that you can't quite see.