Kabbalah - some book tips
Posted: 16 Jun 2018, 09:08
Kabbalah is daunting, and reading books about kabbalah is daunting, too. Books are supposed to help us understand it but if they drown you in kabbalah jargon from page 1, well... then we don't finish them.
I recommend strongly, no matter which book you use: make your own Tree of Life (it's really easy, all you need is a large piece of paper or cardboard and a pair of dividers), and make it big enough.
And then write everything you learn about the Tree of Life into your sketch. It doesn't have to be beautiful, but doing it, writing down the names of the spheres and the names of the majors on the connecting paths, will help your brain retain the knowledge. There are beautiful trees on the Internet with perfect graphics but believe me, making a study tree yourself will be helpful. So whatever book you read, go ahead and make that tree.
I find Andrea Green*'s "Kabbalah and Tarot: A Step-Up Guide for Everyone" helpful and un-threatening. She explains kabbalah via the tarot which means you will profit from this book if you know the cards already. Her discussion of the Tree and the sephiroth is short and a bit dry - she gives keywords and doesn't use the narrative metaphors that helped me understand the tree (e.g. the divine light flowing through different-coloured vessels like a Renaissance fountain, retaining the colours and thus becoming less luminous and more "compact" - this metaphor really made the whole tree come alive before my inner eyes) but she focuses on the cards connected to each sephira to make us understand them. And that's good imo.
She starts with the majors, but her strong point imo is the chapter about the minors. If you didn't understand what the Fours and the Eights and all the other minors with the same number have in common, she will make it clear.
The court card chapter is very short but don't despair - the best resource on the court cards in the kabbalah is free on the Internet anyway. Zephyros' posts on the topic on AT are great reading and make everything absolutely clear. Basic explanation of the Tree of Life and the Four Worlds, Part 1 talking about astrology and the court cards, Part 2 about the kabbalistic background to the court cards. I found no better explanations in any book.
But Andrea Green's chapter about using the kabbalah in reading is good again. This is definitely the book for you if you don't want to dive into the Kabbalah for kabbalah's sake but for tarot's sake.
*Andrea Green is the pen name of Marcus Katz and Tali Goodwin, and their self-promotion for their books, websites, association etc is a bit obnoxious - on the other hand, tarotists have to live, too, and they give good value for our money from my experience, so I'm okay with that. But thought I'd mention it... Andrea Green's book about card meanings is good, too.
More book tips coming later, and I also plan to write about kabbalah-centered decks!
I recommend strongly, no matter which book you use: make your own Tree of Life (it's really easy, all you need is a large piece of paper or cardboard and a pair of dividers), and make it big enough.
And then write everything you learn about the Tree of Life into your sketch. It doesn't have to be beautiful, but doing it, writing down the names of the spheres and the names of the majors on the connecting paths, will help your brain retain the knowledge. There are beautiful trees on the Internet with perfect graphics but believe me, making a study tree yourself will be helpful. So whatever book you read, go ahead and make that tree.
I find Andrea Green*'s "Kabbalah and Tarot: A Step-Up Guide for Everyone" helpful and un-threatening. She explains kabbalah via the tarot which means you will profit from this book if you know the cards already. Her discussion of the Tree and the sephiroth is short and a bit dry - she gives keywords and doesn't use the narrative metaphors that helped me understand the tree (e.g. the divine light flowing through different-coloured vessels like a Renaissance fountain, retaining the colours and thus becoming less luminous and more "compact" - this metaphor really made the whole tree come alive before my inner eyes) but she focuses on the cards connected to each sephira to make us understand them. And that's good imo.
She starts with the majors, but her strong point imo is the chapter about the minors. If you didn't understand what the Fours and the Eights and all the other minors with the same number have in common, she will make it clear.
The court card chapter is very short but don't despair - the best resource on the court cards in the kabbalah is free on the Internet anyway. Zephyros' posts on the topic on AT are great reading and make everything absolutely clear. Basic explanation of the Tree of Life and the Four Worlds, Part 1 talking about astrology and the court cards, Part 2 about the kabbalistic background to the court cards. I found no better explanations in any book.
But Andrea Green's chapter about using the kabbalah in reading is good again. This is definitely the book for you if you don't want to dive into the Kabbalah for kabbalah's sake but for tarot's sake.
*Andrea Green is the pen name of Marcus Katz and Tali Goodwin, and their self-promotion for their books, websites, association etc is a bit obnoxious - on the other hand, tarotists have to live, too, and they give good value for our money from my experience, so I'm okay with that. But thought I'd mention it... Andrea Green's book about card meanings is good, too.
More book tips coming later, and I also plan to write about kabbalah-centered decks!