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The Tarot of Eli-2-, LLC: The Rider-Wait-Smith Tarot-0- The Fool & The Triple Goddess Tarot-0-The Fool

Western Hermetic Magick Qabalah, Tantric, Alchemical, Numerical, and Astrological Traditional Tarot Card Comparisons.

October 22, 2025

 

א – Aleph – The Fool – Air – Kether↔Chokmah

 

SEO Focus: Spiritual Awakening, Beginner’s Tarot, Consciousness Expansion Pillar Title: “The Fool’s Leap: Awakening to the Breath of the Tarot of Thoth” Intent: Introductory guide for seekers starting the Hermetic journey. Hermetic Note: Position this as the portal post—link to all “Beginners” articles.

 

Above all things, know thyself.

Rider-Wait-Smith-The Fool (Radiant Rider-Waite Tarot)

🌙 The Triple Goddess Tarot Guidebook

The Journey of the Divine Creatrix through the Soul of the Fool

“She is the Dreamer and the Dream.
She is the Voice before sound,
and the Silence that births all speech.”

Communion with the Divine Creatrix

The Triple Goddess Tarot invites you to enter the temple of the Divine Creatrix, the Great Mother Binah — She who is Understanding, the dark Sea of Stars from which all forms emerge. This deck is more than an oracle; it is a dialogue with the living current of creation.
Each card is a syllable of the Sacred Alphabet of the Soul, a reflection of the eternal conversation between Spirit and Form — between the Fool and the Goddess.

Through the Triple Goddess — Maid, Mother, and Crone — the seeker rediscovers their own triune nature:
the innocence that learns,
the power that creates,
and the wisdom that releases.

To use this deck is to walk beside the Goddess as She experiences Herself through the cycles of time — to see the Divine through the eyes of its own Creation.

 

The Triple Goddess Tarot-The Fool, is shown in two variants, male and female. This makes sense, as gender doesn't exist yet (gender is a falsehood-all is One) ---energy is still one without polarity flow. This Card stresses that one should step off the beaten path. Take only what you need.

The Fool: Witness of the Great Work

The Fool, numbered zero yet containing all numbers, is the narrator and divine spark of this journey. They are the whisper of Kether descending into Binah’s womb.
In the story of the Triple Goddess, the Fool represents the awakening consciousness — the Eternal Witness who follows the Goddess through Her three transformations. The Fool is innocence observing wisdom being born, life being created, and form returning to the stars.

The Fool is the Child of the Divine Mind, walking through the labyrinth of incarnation, gathering understanding, daring to act, willing to love, and keeping silent in reverence.

The Sevenfold Journey of the Maid

The first seven Major Arcana follow the Maid, the young Soul who awakens to awareness and seeks to know Herself.
She is curiosity embodied — Eve before the fruit, Persephone before the descent, Artemis in her purity of purpose.
 

Her trials are those of Learning, Perception, and Knowledge — the power “To Know.”
Through her, we learn to open the inner eye, to embrace wonder, and to trust the inner voice that calls us forward.

In this stage, knowledge is sacred play — the universe whispering secrets to the child of light.
Her path culminates in the first glimpse of mastery: the realization that innocence is not ignorance but divine curiosity made flesh.

The Sevenfold Journey of the Mother

The second septenary describes the Mother’s journey, the mature Soul who learns To Will.
She is Isis of a thousand names, Demeter who births and mourns, the vessel and the fire alike.
Now knowledge becomes creation — understanding transforms into action.
The Mother embodies the alchemy of manifestation, the realization that to love is to give form to light.

She is the Architect of the Worlds, the Magician’s equal and the Empress of the Sacred Womb.
Through her cards, we learn that will is not domination but the alignment of one’s personal fire with the cosmic flame of purpose.
The Mother teaches us that every act of love is a spell, and every creation — be it a child, a vision, or a world — is holy.

The Sevenfold Journey of the Crone

The final septenary follows the Crone, who has passed through the fires of love and loss and who now learns the mysteries To Dare and To Keep Silent.
She is Hecate at the crossroads, Sophia veiled in shadow, and the Weaver who cuts the thread with serenity.

The Crone is the dark moon, the dissolver of forms.
She teaches that death is not an ending but a return — the spiral folding back upon itself.
Her silence is not emptiness but completion, the pause before a new creation begins.
Through her eyes, we see the stars reflected in the black waters of Binah — the womb that is also the tomb.

The Crone holds the keys of time and release. She whispers:

“What you cling to, you become.
What you bless, you transcend.”

 

The Minor Arcana and the Witches’ Pyramid

The Minor Arcana are the four pillars of the Witches’ Pyramid — the architecture of magickal consciousness:

  • Swords – To Know (Air) – The clarity of Mind; the quest for truth.

  • Wands – To Dare (Fire) – The courage of Spirit; the leap into creation.

  • Cups – To Will (Water) – The depth of Emotion; the force of love and desire.

  • Pentacles – To Keep Silent (Earth) – The stillness of Body; the sanctity of manifestation.

These four foundations uphold the Great Work.
When they are balanced, the temple of the Soul stands firm — a living Merkavah for the Divine Feminine current that flows through all worlds.

 

 

Questions for the Triple Goddess

When you open this deck, you open a dialogue with the Creatrix Herself.
Approach with reverence, as though entering the sanctum of the heart.

Ask the Maid:

  • What is awakening within me?

  • How can I reclaim wonder and trust?

  • What new path of self-knowledge is unfolding?

Ask the Mother:

  • What creation is gestating within my soul?

  • How may I align my will with divine purpose?

  • How can I nurture without losing myself?

Ask the Crone:

  • What must I release to become whole again?

  • How can I transmute endings into wisdom?

  • What truth lies hidden in silence?

Invocation of the Creatrix

O Divine Mother of a thousand names,
She who is Maid, Mother, and Crone,
teach me to know the hidden path of the stars,
to dare the descent into shadow,
to will the light into form,
and to keep silent in the stillness of return.
Through Your eyes may I see creation anew —
through Your heart may I remember the Source.

 

 

 

Conclusion: The Return to the Source

The Triple Goddess Tarot is not only a deck of cards but a mirror of the Great Work.
Through it, the seeker learns that the Goddess is not outside, but within — the very consciousness by which you dream, love, and remember.

Each card becomes a meditation, each spread a rite of rebirth.
The journey begins as the Fool gazing upon the world, and ends as the Crone gazing upon the stars —
and in that gaze, the circle is complete.

“I am She who is before the beginning and after the end.
I am the sea that holds the sun,
and the flame that births the dawn.”

In the more traditional Tarot of the Rider-Waite-Smith Tarot, the Fool card (represented by the number 0) often depicts a figure on a journey and ready to step into the abyss with a small dog at their side, here it is a Great Wolf. The presence of the dog/Wolf in the Fool card holds symbolic significance.

The Fool — The Child of the Creatrix

Number 0 – The Breath Before Beginning

In the Rider–Waite–Smith Tarot, the Fool is shown standing at the edge of a precipice, poised to step into the unknown with a small dog or wolf by their side. In the Triple Goddess Tarot, the companion becomes a domestic cat, an animal equally sacred to the Great Mother and long regarded as her lunar familiar.

The presence of this companion — whether dog, wolf, or cat — holds deep symbolic significance. It is not merely a creature of flesh but a totem of instinct, the whisper of the animal soul that walks beside the divine child. The animal embodies the instinctual intelligence that the rational mind forgets: the pure guidance of the body, the whisper of intuition, and the silent protection of ancestral wisdom.

The Dog or Wolf: Guardian of the Threshold

The dog represents loyalty, faithfulness, and protection — the guardian who warns when the edge grows near. In mythic terms, this animal is Anubis, the jackal who guides souls through the Duat; or Cerberus, who guards the gates of Hades. As the Fool steps forth, the dog reminds us that even innocence carries an inner protector — the Solar instinct that responds to danger without fear. It is the call of the loyal heart that says, “Trust your path, but remain awake.”

The Cat: Familiar of the Goddess

In the Triple Goddess Tarot, the cat replaces the dog to emphasize the Divine Feminine mysteries of intuition and independence. Sacred to Bast, Freyja, and Hecate, the cat moves between worlds — domestic yet feral, gentle yet fierce. She teaches the Fool the art of curiosity and presence.

The cat embodies the Lunar instinct — receptive, graceful, and silently aware. Her companionship signals that this journey belongs to the Creatrix, where the seeker learns through experience rather than obedience. The cat is the Witch’s familiar, the Priestess’s mirror, and the quiet reminder that freedom is sacred.

The Fool as the Breath of Kether

 

 

Numbered Zero, the Fool represents Ain Soph Aur, the limitless light before creation. In Qabalistic terms, this is the divine breath descending from Kether into Malkuth — the first spark of awareness leaping from the Abyss into form. The Fool is innocence personified, the spirit unbound by experience, the soul before definition.
 

Yet this “innocence” is not ignorance — it is trust in the Infinite, the childlike faith that leaps because it knows it cannot fall. The Fool carries no baggage of judgment or fear; only the will to explore the unfolding mystery of Being.

 

Spontaneity, Trust, and the Leap of Faith

Whether guided by the dog’s loyal bark or the cat’s intuitive gaze, the Fool steps into the abyss of potential. This act of divine spontaneity is the archetype of creation itself — the moment the universe says “I AM.”
Thus, the Fool reminds us that to live is to leap — to dare without calculation, to trust the current of life even when its end is unseen. The animal companion reassures us that instinct is not the enemy of Spirit but its first expression in form.

Meditation and Reflection

When this card appears, ask yourself:

  • Am I ready to trust the unknown and step forward with faith?

  • What instinct or inner voice is guiding me now?

  • Do I approach my path with curiosity, or am I bound by fear of misstep?

The Fool teaches that creation begins in courage — not the courage of conquest, but the courage of wonder.
Step forward, and let your inner familiar — your loyal dog, your wise cat, your silent guardian — walk beside you into the light of becoming.

Rider-Waite-Smith Tarot-The Fool (The Radiant Tarot version)

The wallet on the end of the carrying stick represents the Fool's memory. The White rose in his hand, represents purity.

In traditional Tarot symbolism, the White Rose held by the Fool in the Fool card carries its own set of meanings. The White Rose is a powerful symbol that adds depth to the interpretation of the card. Here are some interpretations associated with the White Rose in the context of the Fool:

  1. Purity and Innocence: The white color of the rose often symbolizes purity and innocence. The Fool, carrying a White Rose, suggests a sense of untainted, childlike innocence as they embark on their journey. It represents a clean slate, free from preconceived notions or judgments.

  2. Spiritual Awakening: White is frequently associated with spirituality and higher consciousness. The White Rose in the Fool's hand may signify a spiritual awakening or the pursuit of higher truths. The Fool's journey is not just a physical one but also a spiritual and transformative one.

  3. Possibility and Potential: The White Rose can symbolize the potential for new beginnings and endless possibilities. It serves as a reminder that the Fool is at the threshold of a journey filled with opportunities and open to the myriad experiences that await.

  4. Symbol of Hope: The White Rose can be seen as a symbol of hope and optimism. As the Fool steps into the unknown, the White Rose suggests a sense of hope and faith that the journey will be guided by purity of intention and positive energy.

  5. Alchemy and Transformation: In some esoteric traditions, the White Rose is associated with alchemy and transformation. The Fool's journey is a transformative process, and the White Rose represents the alchemical potential for personal growth and evolution.

Adam Khadmon (The Heavenly Human)

The Fool and the Ecstasy of Being

Rather than being confined to the mystical or transcendent alone, the Fool represents the power of wonder and ecstasy — that radiant, unfiltered awareness found in the very young and the truly enlightened. This is the consciousness that has not yet been divided by self-definition, the ecstatic gaze that beholds all things as new.

Before the imprint of indoctrination — before “good” and “bad,” “mine” and “theirs” — the Fool abides in a holy curiosity, in perfect union with the unfolding mystery of Being. This is the innocence of Kether, the pure, untamed Spirit that knows only the dance of experience. It is the primal “I AM” before it learns to call itself by name.

As the soul descends into incarnation, it assumes a cultural identity, a mask formed of beliefs, language, and inherited ideas. This identity is a collective thought-form, an egregore, born of consensus and survival instinct. It is not the Real Self, but rather a costume woven from the fabric of society — a necessary illusion that allows Spirit to play in the theater of time.

Qabalists call this apparent world “Reality,” yet they know it to be relative — subjective and ever-shifting, a reflection within the Mirror of Mind. The Real, in contrast, is the Infinite Self — the boundless awareness that commands material into form simply by declaring I AM.

What “I AM” assumes itself to be becomes “Me.”
 

“Me” is always an assumption, a temporary arrangement of consciousness. The Fool exists before this assumption, as the luminous field from which all identities arise and dissolve.

To walk the Fool’s path, then, is to remember that Reality is a creative act — a word continuously spoken by the Divine through you. The Fool’s ecstasy is not foolishness but freedom: the joy of knowing that all forms are masks of the same eternal light, and that the Real Self — the “I AM” — forever remains unbound, unbroken, and unborn.

Rider-Waite-Smith-0-The Fool (RWS Tarot)

Dr. Arthur Edward Waite and the Language of Symbolism

Dr. Arthur Edward Waite (1857–1942) — initiator of what became known as the Rider–Waite–Smith Tarot — was far more than a mere designer of cards. He was a dedicated scholar of Western Hermetic Occultism, a translator of esoteric knowledge into accessible form, and a publisher who sought to restore spiritual dignity to the language of symbols. His published works, such as The Holy Kabbalah and The Key to the Tarot, remain cornerstones for students of both mysticism and the Hermetic Arts.

In The Key to the Tarot, Waite declared:

“The true Tarot is symbolism; it speaks no other language and offers no other signs.”

This profound statement reveals his understanding that the Tarot is not a mere deck of fortune-telling images, but a living hieroglyphic text — a visual scripture of the soul. Each image speaks through symbol rather than word, transmitting meaning across the boundaries of culture and creed. Symbolism, to Waite, was the universal language of the unseen world, the speech of the Divine Mind made visible.

Waite’s collaboration with Pamela Colman Smith, an artist of clairvoyant vision, gave birth to one of the most influential decks in Western esotericism. Together, they translated the subtle architecture of the Hermetic Qabalah into pictorial form — every color, gesture, and emblem serving as a key to deeper initiation. Their Tarot is a mirror of the human journey from ignorance to illumination, a synthesis of mysticism, alchemy, astrology, and Christian-Hermetic mystic theology.

 

 

The Legacy Continued: From Symbol to Revelation

In honoring Waite’s vision, the Triple Goddess Tarot extends his symbolic language into the feminine polarity of the Mysteries — interpreting the Major Arcana as the stages of the Divine Creatrix unfolding through the cycles of Maiden, Mother, and Crone.

Where Waite saw the Tarot as the sacred text of Initiation, the Triple Goddess Tarot understands it as the living Book of the Womb, the cosmic narrative of how the Infinite becomes intimate — how the ineffable I AM descends into form.

Symbolism remains the language, but now it speaks through Her voice, revealing the feminine arc of creation:

  • The Maid, who learns the power To Know;

  • The Mother, who manifests through Will;

  • The Crone, who teaches Silence and Return.

Thus, the work that Waite began — restoring the Tarot to its original dignity as a hieroglyphic map of consciousness — continues through this deck in a new octave of expression.

To study these cards is to enter a lineage of awakening — a continuum of light passed from hand to hand, symbol to symbol, soul to soul.

Two Centuries of Tarot Illumination

The last two centuries have been a golden era of rediscovery for the Tarot, a time when mystics, scholars, and magicians sought to unveil its true origin as a Book of Wisdom rather than a mere tool of divination.
 

From the Enlightenment through the modern occult revival, each generation has contributed to restoring the Tarot’s sacred language of symbol, number, and archetype.

In 1781, Antoine Court de Gébelin published Le Monde Primitif, in which he first proposed that the Tarot was a remnant of the ancient Egyptian “Book of Thoth,” a record of primordial wisdom encoded in hieroglyphic imagery. Two years later, Jean-Baptiste Alliette, better known as Etteilla, produced the first deck designed explicitly for esoteric use — linking the cards to astrology and the four elements.

By 1854, Éliphas Lévi brought the Tarot into the Qabalistic current, uniting it with the Hebrew letters, the Tree of Life, and the doctrine of correspondence. His Dogme et Rituel de la Haute Magie transformed Tarot from fortune-teller’s tool into a ladder of initiation. Soon after, Vaillant (1857) and Mathers (1888) expanded upon these principles, integrating them into the evolving teachings of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, where the Tarot became the map of the magician’s soul.

Papus (1889) in The Tarot of the Bohemians, and Falconnier (1896), with his Egyptian adaptations, continued to weave the cards into Western occult synthesis. Oswald Wirth, Arthur Edward Waite (1910), Thierens, and Paul Foster Case refined this work, establishing the Tarot’s modern structure as a spiritual alphabet aligned with the 22 Paths of Wisdom on the Tree of Life.

The twentieth century deepened this current: Aleister Crowley’s Book of Thoth (1944) elevated the Tarot to a universal metaphysical system, while Gareth Knight (1965) and Eden Gray (1960) made its symbolic psychology accessible to new generations. Gertrude Moakley (1966) and A.E. Doane (1967) studied its Renaissance imagery as a sacred art of the Mysteries, and Stuart Kaplan (1970) chronicled its evolution into the global symbol system it has become today.

The Continuing Revelation

Thus, across these two centuries, the Tarot has been a mirror reflecting humanity’s evolving understanding of Spirit manifesting in Form. Each author, artist, and initiate has polished a facet of this vast gem — restoring its purpose as a Western Book of the Soul, a pictorial Qabalah for the modern mind.

The Triple Goddess Tarot now enters this lineage as both heir and evolution — restoring to the tradition the voice of the Feminine Divine, the Creatrix Herself who dreams the symbols into being.
Through the Maid, the Mother, and the Crone, this deck completes the circle of polarity, uniting Solar and Lunar, Magus and Shekinah, Logos and Womb.

As the Fool steps once more into the Unknown, the words of Waite still echo through every card:

“The true Tarot is symbolism; it speaks no other language and offers no other signs.”

The Tarot as a Catalyst of Divine Consciousness

The Siddhis of the Soul

No matter which Tarot deck one prefers — be it ancient or modern, Thoth or Rider–Waite–Smith, the Triple Goddess or another inspired creation — one of the most fascinating and mysterious aspects of the Tarot is its personal effect upon the user.

Each card is an archetypal mirror, and when the mind gazes into it with sincerity, something awakens. The image is not merely looked at; it looks back. This mutual gaze between Seer and Symbol ignites a subtle alchemy within the psyche. Hindu mystics have long called these inner awakenings Siddhis“magickal abilities” or perfections of consciousness. These are not tricks of the ego but the natural consequences of expanded awareness.

In this light, the Tarot becomes a device of illumination, helping to generate more Magick (K) — conscious transformation through will — and less tragedy — the unconscious repetition of karmic dreams. Every spread, every meditation, every quiet contemplation of the cards is a dialogue between Self and Self, a remembrance that consciousness is both the question and the answer.

 

Macrocosm and Microcosm: The Dream of the Divine

The Macrocosm, or the Great Universe, is the Divine Self dreaming. It is the sleeping–dreaming aspect of the Creative Intelligence — the Infinite Mind contemplating its own possibilities. Within this vast Dream, forms arise, dissolve, and arise again, each a word spoken in the language of the stars.

The Microcosm, the human being, is that same Dream made aware of itself. Humanity is the active and transformative aspect of the Divine Creative, endowed with the sacred privilege of reflection. We are the eyes through which the Dreamer sees Its dream.
When consciousness awakens in humanity, the Dream becomes lucid — and the Divine begins to reshape Itself knowingly through us.

Thus, while the Macrocosm is the dreaming Creator, the Microcosm is the awakening Creator — the point at which the Infinite becomes conscious of its own artistry.
Through this awareness, the human soul can step outside the Dream, if only for a moment, to observe and transform it. This is what the Hermetic axiom means when it declares:

“That which is Below corresponds to that which is Above.”

The Tarot is the bridge between these two states — the Dream and the Awakening, the Cosmic and the Personal. It allows the reader to perceive the hidden architecture of their own life as an extension of the Divine’s eternal act of imagining.

Tarot as the Dreamer’s Art

To lay out the cards is to open the Divine Book of the Self, page by page, symbol by symbol.
Each spread becomes a snapshot of the Macrocosm’s current dream, refracted through your personal lens of being.
When you interpret the cards, you do not merely read a future — you participate in the act of creation, shaping the Dream consciously rather than unconsciously.

This is the true Magick of the Tarot:
To awaken the human as a lucid Dreamer within the body of God,
to restore the art of imagination as the highest form of prayer,
and to remind the soul that its destiny is not written in the stars —
but written by them, through you.

The Path Less Traveled

Tarot and the Heroic Ascent of the Soul

If you are looking for an easy path into spirituality, you will not find it in the Tarot.
This is a path less traveled, the winding ascent of the Hero’s and Heroine’s Journey, a path that demands self-honesty, courage, and the willingness to see through illusion. Tarot does not offer comfort—it offers awakening.

True spiritual development is never bestowed by external means. It is not gained by acquiring knowledge, relics, or rituals alone. It is a process of inner unfoldment, a gradual reclaiming of our Divine Inheritance—the memory that we are fragments of the Infinite seeking reunion with the Whole. Upon this principle, the Tarot operates most effectively: as a mirror of the Soul’s return to the Source.

Therefore, the Tarot is not a toy, nor is it a prop of Hollywood mysticism.
It is a living glyphic system that serves two sacred purposes:

  1. It preserves and transmits an esoteric teaching.
    The Tarot is a visual scripture—its images encode the perennial philosophy of the Western Mysteries, the Hermetic Qabalah, and the Soul’s evolution through the planes of Being. Each card is both a letter and a lesson, a gate through which consciousness may pass from ignorance to illumination.

  2. It evokes specific mystical, intellectual, and emotional responses within the aspirant.
    When properly approached, the Tarot awakens dormant faculties of perception. It stirs the intuition, aligns the personality with the Higher Genius, and calls forth archetypal forces from the depths of the Inner Consciousness. The student is transformed not by the reading of symbols, but by the symbols reading them back.

“Man, Know Thyself”

The ancient injunction from the Temple of Delphi—“Gnothi Seauton”, Man, Know Thyself—is the cornerstone of all occult and spiritual endeavor.
In the modern age, this truth is no longer hidden; the so-called “Occult Teachings” have become accessible to those with eyes to see and ears to hear. Yet accessibility does not mean simplicity. The veils remain, for they exist not to obscure the mysteries, but to train the eye that seeks to pierce them.

Tarot, when approached with reverence, reveals the true nature of Homo Sapiens Sapiens—not as a fallen creature seeking redemption, but as a divine expression of the Universal Mind awakening to its own reflection. The human being is both the question and the answer, both the dreamer and the dream.

Through the cards, we remember our mutual relationship with the Celestial Self—the Solar Genius that guides our incarnation—and the Universal Collective Unconscious, the great oceanic Mind of the Divine that dreams us into Being.

To study the Tarot is to become conscious of that Dream, to awaken within it, and to shape it with love, wisdom, and will.

When thrown in divination the RWS and the Tarot of the Triple Goddess-Fool - cards imply:

  • Folly.
  • Mania.
  • Extravagance.
  • Intoxication.
  • Delirium.
  • Frenzy.
  • Naiveté.
  • Innocence.
  • Lunacy.
  • (All of which lead to the Mystery of Dionysus. Where extremes of intoxication and ecstasy lead to Higher Mind)
  • New journeys.
  • Time to take a leap of faith.

If reversed:

  • Negligence.
  • Absence.
  • Distribution.
  • Carelessness.
  • Apathy.
  • Nullity.
  • Vanity.

Thank you for your interest, comments, and supportive donations. May you live long and prosper.

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🌞 Final Invocation

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Speak the language of stars.
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Begin your Return.

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