Joan Marie wrote: β15 Feb 2022, 07:57
I think I now really (finally) understand what you mean by "loose brick"
BTW- I am attempting, though I don't know how successfully, to NOT make each line of the Haiku correspond to each card specifically, but rather to get an overall picture or vibe or whatever you want to call it based on the connections between the cards, the analogy that the combination puts forth.
Yeah, I think you are trying to do the impossible. In 17 syllables you are trying to write a beautiful poem while also leading the reader through a series of complex metaphorical connections between word and image. If the readers can't instantly see exactly how your mind is working and what you are basing your poem on then the cards themselves seem irrelevant to them and they get confused. If a real poem crops up then it's a bonus, but for me it's enough with this exercise to draw attention to one or two simple elements in the cards and pick out a simple story. Doing it one card at a time moving left to right is a useful trick for keeping things as simple as possible. Simple for the audience but not for us. It forces us to be concrete and literal. It's really an exercise in looking for "eye rhymes". You are trying to do something infinitely more complex. But, Christ, the tarot haiku I have managed so far are hardly glowing examples. ("Do what I say, not what I do.")
"loose brick" is just EE's metaphorical way of saying that you only need to find one surprising visual coincidence on which to hang the whole reading. The simpler the coincidence the better - as EE says, "In order to read with the TdM you need to be dumb." Once it is pointed out, the client cannot NOT see it. It instantly puts you and the client on the same wavelength. Once you have established that common ground you can extend the metaphor and make more elaborate and perhaps dubious connections between the cards. Inwardly the client should immediately be thinking to themselves, "Jeez, of course, it was staring me in the face the whole time. Why didn't I see it?" Suddenly your audience is in the palm of your hand, you have won their trust. After that you can take all sorts of liberties with the images. Your connection is rooted in the shared truth of that one undeniable visual fact.
I think it's also taking advantage of the sense of confirmation that always attends a coincidence. All tarot readings depend on that. "Good grief," you think, "the Chariot card showed up next to the Death card and my car broke down this morning." It's a coincidence but it feels as though the cards and the details of your life are magically synchronised. In a way they are since the cards can be interpreted in many many different ways and one of those ways will have something in common with your own life. You might not have thought about your car at all if you hadn't seen the cards. You unconscious makes the connection, or the reader's unconscious is attuned to your consciousness and makes the connection...but I'm drifting off onto another subject.
An example would be in the cards that Pen last drew (Lovers / Fool / King of Batons). At first you look at the three cards and it's a brick wall, a dense agglomeration of possibilities. You could combine the different emotional and visual elements in the cards in a billion different ways. Then you notice that the arrow in cupid's bow is perfectly parallel with the massive pointed staff that the King is holding. They are laying at the same angle. Suddenly the staff looks like a massive version of the arrow - they even both have points on the end - they must be the same object. But noticing they are parallel is the "loose brick". Pen looked at the cards and noticed someone in the first card was about to be shot with an arrow, so the word "danger" became her "loose brick". The rest followed from that. There are so few motifs on TdM cards that they constantly echo one another. We've talked about this lots of times. It's what makes the TdM unique among tarot decks. It allows the cards to communicate with one another.
So "eye rhymes" are how EE refers to these visual echoes shared by two or more cards. The first part of his classes is spent getting us used to looking for those eye rhymes. But, heck, it isn't easy. There's a knack to it, and sometimes I despair that I'll ever get the knack in a million years. I'm just not a very visual person and live in a dream world of inattention and distraction most of the time. Noticing things is not my forte. Of course lots of experience looking at the cards allows you to build up a repertoire of things to look for.
Probably I'm just trying too hard. Remember that in France the tarot is known as "le jeu de tarot" - the game of tarot. Approaching it like a fun game played by family and friends around a dinner table is the feeling that seems to work best for me. Imagining sitting around with people eating nachos and drinking beer while someone leans over your shoulder and says "Notice no-one is wearing a hat" or stuff as simple as that. But it doesn't even always have to be an "eye rhyme". A simple idea like the stirring pot of the Wheel is enough to loosen the first brick. That thought probably wouldn't even pop into your head unless you had unconsciously registered a bunch of other stuff, but we have no control over that. It's just a matter of waiting for something to grab your attention. Waiting is hard and trying to consciously force it, like I do, is what prevents it from happening. It's the same with golf: the more important the shot the more your conscious mind wants to elbow its way in and say, "I better take control here. You don't want to mess up." but the muscle control necessary to hit a good shot is so refined that only instinct can manage it. The best players have to train themselves how to not care at the very moment that $10 million is riding on the necessity of them sinking a 3 foot putt. It's a spiritual discipline.