I’ve talked before about a method to generate Planet + Sign + House astrological readings. That method requires that you separate the deck into three sets of cards before dealing, though. So, unless I have a pre-sorted deck, I’m just not patient enough to prepare for that reading.
I’ve been investigating other methods to use.
I have never really liked the typical 12-houses spread, where there’s one or more cards dealt per house. Or per zodiac sign, or whatever. In a real astrological chart, there’s often lots of energies at work in one area of the zodiac, and none in other places. So, a card per house seems artificial. Some of you may recall from my recent talk that I want my spreads to match up with real life, at least symbolically….
So, here’s one way to generate a divinatory astrological chart:
- Shuffle the cards while thinking of the issue at hand. Intend to get useful information via this spread.
- Deal around a circle so that you get twelve piles of cards. So, you’ll deal around the circle six and a half times, putting the cards face down.
- Now, go through the piles, one by one. You want to get rid of everything except the planetary majors, the Emperor, and the Ace of Wands. If a pile would be empty, leave one card face down as a placeholder for that position.
- Interpret the Emperor’s position as Aries. Then, as you go anti-clockwise around the spread, consider the positions to be Taurus, Gemini, Cancer, and so on around the zodiac.
- Interpret the Ace of Wand’s position to be the Ascendant (1st house). Then, as you go around the spread anti-clockwise, you’d consider those positions to be the 2nd house, 3rd house, etc.
- Interpret the planetary majors as the planets, which now have both a sign and a house to live in.
If pictures help, here is the initial dealing (using my Lo Scarabeo Deck):
… and here is the completed spread:
The Emperor and the Ace of Wands were in the upper left, marking Aries and the 1st House, respectively. They had no planets in those positions, so I also left a face-down placeholder there. Then, we had Mercury and the Sun in the 3rd house, which in this case is also Taurus. We had Jupiter and the Moon in the 4th house, which is Gemini. We had Mars in the 5th house, which is Cancer here. We had venus and Pluto in the 6th house, Leo. We had Saturn in the 7th house, Virgo. We had Neptune in the 9th House, Scorpio. We had Uranus in the 11th house, Capricorn.
Now, you can interpret the situation using whatever astrological tools you have at your disposal.
Variants
One variant is to use your actual natal chart to guide the sign/house alignment. So, still use the Emperor card to locate Aries in your spread. But forget about the Ace of Wands. Once the zodiac signs are determined, use your actual natal ascendant as the position of your first house. Then you can read whatever planets you spread as transits of your birth chart, if you like.
A second variant is to interpret planets in houses, without regard for the zodiac signs. In this case, forget about the Emperor card, and just locate the 1st house via the Ace of Wands.
[Edit 2008/06/19]: A third variant, suggested by Dawn in the comments, is to use your natal chart as a map. You would place cards around the zodiac where your planets are, and read them in terms of how those planets are affecting you. This is nice because you’d just spread 10 cards in the right places, and read whatever cards you get. Simpler than dealing them all and searching for the planetary majors.
FAQs
- Why use a marker for Aries? Why not just fix it at the top or something?
Because there are 12 positions and 78 cards, some positions will have more cards in them after you’ve dealt them all out. You want the signs/houses with extra cards to be selected at random. - Are the astrological charts resulting from this spread 100% realistic?
Not quite. For instance, in a real chart, Mercury can’t stray too far from the Sun, but here it could land in opposition to the Sun. But, it’s pretty realistic, anyway. - Why did you pick the Ace of Wands for the ascendant marker?
It just felt like an appropriate choice, as it starts off the houses, and in the natural zodiac the 1st house is on a fire sign. - This spread sounds like an excellent way to learn the meanings of the signs, planets, and houses. Do you agree?
Yep! I do.


