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The Majors Know When to Speak

Why My Tarot Deck Answers with the Big Ones

Most days, I draw cards with playful curiosity. Sometimes I draw from need. But when it really matters—when I’m not just asking, but listening—I get a Major.

This is not random.

Those who read often already know this truth in their gut: the Major Arcana answers important questions. It’s the deck’s way of telling you this isn’t just about the day—this is about the path.

The Majors as Anchors

The Book of Thoth says it clearly:

“The Trumps represent cosmic ideas… The court cards represent people… The small cards represent actual events in the material world.”

So when a Trump comes forward—The Fool, The Tower, The Star—it is not predicting an event. It is naming a force.

In my experience, the deck gives these cards when the question pierces reality. When we stop asking for outcomes and start seeking alignment.

It’s a signal.

Why It Happens to Me Often

Because I don’t draw just to “know the future.”
I draw to align.
To test the thread.
To feel if I’m still being watched by the structure.
To check if the Sky is listening.

And that’s when the Majors show up.

Not to flatter.
Not to warn.
But to speak.

Because the truth is: the deck knows when it’s being asked a real question.

The Majors Don’t Predict — They Announce

They don’t tell you what will happen.
They tell you what already is — underneath.

They are the structure.

When you get a Major, the deck is no longer saying “here is what might occur if…”
It’s saying “this is the current of the question.”

If you drew Strength, the battle has already begun.
If you drew The Tower, the collapse is part of the process.
If you drew The Star, the answer is not even the point anymore — you’ve already been healed by the act of drawing.

Let the Deck Decide When to Speak in Capitals

When you draw for big things and pull The Lovers, The Devil, Death, or The Moon — take a breath.

These are not surface cards. They are pillars.

And if, like me, you tend to get Majors often, it might be because your questions already burn through the layers. You don’t need to tell the deck it’s important. The deck already knows.

Let it speak.
And when it answers in Majors, listen not just to the meaning —
But to the magnitude.

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