tarot.ideazunlimited.net.Page of Wands

Page of Wands

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The Upright Readings

enthusiasm, exploration, discovery, free spirit, Inspiration, ideas, discovery, limitless potential, free spirit

According to the card, King Kakudami is searching for his beautiful daughter Revathi at Mansarovar, who fell from the place of Brahma. Your communication and thinking are like a liberated soul. This is the best. You have too many ideas to get inspired. You have limitless potential. Just do not let your free spirit dominate your deeds. Some great work is about to happen through you.

The Reverse Readings

setbacks to new ideas, pessimism, Newly-formed ideas, redirecting energy, self-limiting beliefs, a spiritual path

You are always inspired by new ideas. The pessimism may start to dominate you. Only by redirecting the energy to the newly formed thoughts will you be survived. It is better to give up self-limiting beliefs. There may be setbacks for the spiritual path. The setback can be positive as well as negative but some activities will take place in the spiritual life.

Page of The Wand

European Tarot card study points:

A page is with yellow cloths, black flowers design on it, and in addition, a white cloak is on the back, looking at the wand in his hand. His cap has a feather on it. He is standing far away on the ground; three hills are in the background.

Ancient Indian Tarot card study points:

A middle-aged man is holding the wand in hand, searching for something in the water. The mysterious blue moon is shining late in the evening. The man is in White Dhoti, blue Kurta, and yellow cloth on the shoulder, red turban on the head. He is King Kakudami, used to visit Brahma with his beautiful daughter named Revati. Once she lost herself, dropped from Heaven in Mansarovar, A sacred lake in the Himalayas.

Yakshas taken into the deep water caught her. Therefore, the king became a normal man, yachak, pleading Yakshas. King Kakudami was popular for the quote, "dwindled in stature, reduced in vigor, and enfeebled in intellect."

(Detail story of Revathi.)

Kakudami's daughter Revati was so beautiful and so accomplished that when she reached a marriageable age, Kakudami, though no one on earth was worthy of her, went to the Creator, Lord Brahma, to seek his advice about a suitable husband for his daughter.

When they arrived, Brahma was listening to a musical performance by the Gandharvas, so they waited patiently until the performance was finished. Then, Kakudami bowed humbly, made his request, and presented his shortlist of candidates. Brahma laughed loudly and explained that time runs differently on different planes of existence and that during the short time they had waited in Brahma-Loka to see him, 27 chatur-yugas (a cycle of four yugas, totaling 108 yugas) had passed on earth.

Brahma said to Kakudami, "O King, all that you may have decided within the core of your heart to accept as your son-in-law has died over time. Twenty-seven chatur-yugas have already passed. Those upon whom you may have already decided are now gone, and so are their sons, grandsons, and other descendants. You cannot even hear about their names. You must therefore bestow this virgin (i.e. Revati) upon some other husband, for you are now alone, and your friends, your ministers, servants, wives, kinsmen, armies, and treasures, have long since been swept away by the time."

King Kakudami was overcome with astonishment and alarm at hearing this news. However, Brahma comforted him and added that Vishnu, the preserver, was currently incarnate on earth in the forms of Krishna and Balarama, and he recommended Balarama as a worthy husband for Revati.

Kakudami and Revati then returned to earth, which they regarded as having left only just a short while ago. They were shocked by the changes that had taken place. Not only had the landscape and environment changed, but over the intervening 27 chatur-yugas, in the cycles of human spiritual and cultural evolution, mankind was at a lower level of development than in their own time.

The Bhagavata Purana describes that they found the race of men had become "dwindled in stature, reduced in vigor, and enfeebled in intellect."

The daughter and father found Balarama and proposed the marriage, which was accepted.

After the marriage had been celebrated, Kakudami considered his fatherly duties to have been completed. Following the advice Brahma gave him during their meeting, he went north to the Himalayas, to Badrinath to engage in meditation and ascetic practices.

The Devi Bhagavatam describes that "according to Brahmâ's injunction, he became engaged in severe austerities in Badrinath and, when the time of death arrived, left off his body on the banks of the river and escaped.