tarot.ideazunlimited.net.Queen of The Cups

Queen of The Cups

हिंदी के लिए कृपया यहाँ क्लिक करें
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The Upright Readings

loving mother, gentle, happiness, Compassionate, caring, emotionally stable, intuitive, in flow.

You are lucky enough to have a loving mother. You have a gentle nature. As if you were born to create happiness in other's life. A compassionate, caring woman is playing an important role in your life. This can be your mother, sister, wife, girlfriend, neighbor, friend, relative, anyone. This woman is or will help you to be emotionally stable. A woman should support a man, it is not necessary. A woman can also help another woman. Overall your life is smooth. Your life is with the flow. It's good.

The Reverse Readings

perverse, unhappy, gloom, over-active imagination, Inner feelings, self-care, self-love, co-dependency.

You may have distorted friends around. They will look sad. However, let your overactive mind and the inner feelings of its imagination take some time to think. Self-care, self-love, co-dependence are all necessary to maintain happiness in life.

Queen of The Cups

European Tarot card study points:

This cup is surprising for card readers as well as the queen shown in the card. This cup is not a cup from any perspective. This must be an alien's gadget.

tarot.ideazunlimited.net.physian cap There are three types of cups. The queen is sitting in her white clothes on a wooden chair. The chair has carved statues of three cupids, according to Greek Mythology, god of desire, erotic love, attraction, and affection.

tarot.ideazunlimited.net.physian cap tarot.ideazunlimited.net.physian cap The queen is sitting in between river flow, with pebbles in the river flow.

Ancient Indian Tarot card study points:

The Indian queen is sitting on the Peacock throne.

A middle-aged queen is gazing at the Kalash. She is queen Ulupi. She was a Naga princess. The Naga Kingdom was under the Ganga water. She dragged Arjuna under the water. Later on, both got married. Arjuna and Ulupi gave birth to son Iravan. Ulupi granted a boon to Arjuna that underwater creatures would obey him. Any force cannot defeat him underwater. She was sad when Arjuna left her kingdom.

(Detail story.)

Arjuna, the third Pandava brother, was exiled from Indraprastha, the capital city of the kingdom, to go on a twelve-year pilgrimage as penance for violating the terms of his marriage to Draupadi, the brothers' common wife. Arjuna went to the northeastern region of present-day India.

One day, when Arjuna was bathing in the Ganga river and was performing a few rituals, the Naga princess Ulupi, grasps him and pull him into the river. She holds him with her hands and forces him to travel under the water. They finally end up in an underwater kingdom, the abode of Kauravya. Arjuna comes across a sacrificial fire there and offers his rites to the fire. Agni was pleased with Arjuna's unhesitating offering of oblations.

Delighted by her act, Arjuna inquires Ulupi about her background. She reveals her lineage and tells him that she brought him to her father's kingdom to kill him, as Arjuna is an enemy of Nagalok. Then Arjuna tells the truth to Ulupi and says that he and the Pandava brothers want a friendly relation with Nagalok. After knowing the truth, Ulupi embraces Arjuna and admits that she has fallen in love with him. Arjuna, however, declines her proposal citing his celibacy on his pilgrimage. Ulupi argues that his celibacy is limited only to Draupadi, Arjuna's first wife. Convinced by her argument, he marries her, and then they make love. Later, a son named Iravan was born to them. Pleased by Arjuna, Ulupi grants him a boon that all beings living underwater will obey him and that he will be never defeated in a war underwater.

The Vasus, Bhīṣma's brothers, cursed Arjuna after he killed Bhīṣma through treachery in the Kurukshetra War. When Ulupi heard of the curse, she sought the help of her father, Kauravya. Her father went to Ganga, Bhīṣma's mother, and requested her for relief from the curse. Ganga said that his own son, Babruvāhana, would kill Arjuna. Arjuna's son through Chitrāngadā and brought back to life when Ulupi placed a gem called Nāgamaṇi on his chest.

Following her father's advice, Ulupi instigates Babruvāhana to fight Arjuna. When Arjuna goes to Manipur with the horse intended for the Aśhvamedha sacrifice, the king Babruvāhana, as directed by Ulupi, challenges Arjuna to a duel. In the fierce battle that took place between them, the other's arrows mangle both. Finally, Arjuna, mortally wounded, is killed by his son when he shoots a powerful arrow at him. Chitrāngadā rushes to the spot and abuses Ulupi for instigating Babruvahana to fight Arjuna. Repenting his deed, Babruvahana is determined to kill himself but was stopped by Ulupi. She goes to her kingdom and brings the Nagamani. When she places the Nagamani on Arjuna's chest, his life is restored, thus relieving him of the Vasus' curse. When brought back to his life, Arjuna was happy to see Ulupi, Chitrāngadā, and Babruvahana. He takes all of them to Hastinapur.