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Queen of pentacles

हिंदी के लिए कृपया यहाँ क्लिक करें
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The Upright Readings

thoughtfulness, intelligence, talents, melancholy, Nurturing, practical, providing financially, a working parent.

This card is lucky. It shows that you have thoughtfulness, intelligence, and talent. This card depicting Queen Damayanti, wife of Nishad King Nal, depicts the process of a princess becoming queen.

In between, there is sadness in your mind due to being thoughtful. Society, your relatives, friends all are nourished meaningfully.

You are a very sensitive person providing practical financial support. You are a working parent. Meaning you love your family very much.

The Reverse Readings

mistrust, suspicion, neglect, Financial independence, self-care, work-home conflict.

Being prosperous in life, you do not distrust others. Yet you feel neglected. Even then, you complain about nothing. It is not your tendency to express doubts towards anyone. As you deserve the financial independence, the self-care you've been struggling for work-from-home. You are the only one like yourself.

Queen of The pentacles

European Tarot card study points:

A queen in her maroon dress with a yellow cloak is sitting on a chair. The chair has a goat head. A rabbit is playing on the ground. She is in deep thoughts, her head is down looking in the pentacle, which is in her lap. She is sitting in the garden.

Ancient Indian Tarot card study points:

A queen is relaxed in her Palace. The palace has a deep sky blue color. Chandeliers are showing her lavish life. She is in her pink sari but thinking about someone.

She is Queen Damayanti, wife of Nishadh King Nal. Nal Damayanti's love story is very famous, due to the character of the swan messenger. King Nal once caught a swan. The swan requested that if Nal sets him alive then he will go to Damayanti and will tell her about Nal.

The swan then flew to Vidharbh kingdom, to see Damayanti, The swan sang an epic about King Nal. She lost her head and fell ill. She started loving Nal.

Later on, she got married to King Nal. King Nal was a Gambling addict. He lost everything in gambling. Then both of them left the kingdom to the jungle. At one incidence, Nal lost his clothes.

At night Nal leaves Damayanti by taking half of her sari while she was in deep sleep. Damayanti faced many problems..

(Detail story of Nal Damayanti.)

Nala's story is told in the Vana Parva of the Mahabharata and was adapted into various versions. According to the Nishadha Charita, is one of the five great epics. King of Nishadha found a beautiful swan in a forest. The swan told him about Damayanti. An impressed Nala told the swan to go to Damayanti and tell her about him. Later, He was chosen by Damayanti as her husband in the swayamvara, a function in which the bride selects her husband from among the invitees.

All the gods left the place praising the qualities of Nala and blessing the couple. But when Kal Purush heard everything from the returning gods, in wrath, vowed to doom the life of Damayanti, since she had chosen a mortal and disregarded gods. He vowed to divert Nala from the path of Dharma (the path of righteousness and virtue) and to separate Nala and Damayanti. Nala was religious so it took twelve years for Kali to find a small fault in him and bewitch his soul.

After being influenced by evil, Nala played a game of dice with his brother Pushkara and gambled away his wealth and the kingdom to him. Before departing, Damayanti sent her children to her father's kingdom with a charioteer. Pushkara threatened that any citizen who showed sympathy for them would suffer the penalty to live in the jungle. While Damayanti was sleeping, Nala, under the influence of Kali, deserted her and went away.

In the jungle, he saved Karkotaka Naga (Half Snake half Man) from a fire. The Karkotaka Naga transform Nala into an ugly dwarf named Bahuka and advised him to serve King Rituparna of Ayodhya. He also gave Nala a magic garment that would restore him to his original form. Nala went to King Rituparna and served him as charioteer and cook. Meanwhile, Damayanti finds her husband nowhere.

She declared a reward for anyone who would find the hideout of her husband. One of her scouts returned and told her about a charioteer named Bahuka in a faraway kingdom.

Damayanti sent a riddle to Rituparna to confirm Nala's presence. On hearing that Damayanti was going to marry another husband, Bahuka took Rituparna and drove the chariot fast. He set out for Vidarbha from Ayodhya. During the journey, Kali came out from his body and asked for forgiveness for fear of being cursed. Nala forgave him, and in a few hours reached Bhima's kingdom. With the help of one servant, Damayanti found that charioteer named Bahuka, who was surely her Nala, and called him to her apartment. Both recognized each other and Nala took his original form.

Knowing Rituparna's skills at dice and numbers, Nala exchanged his skill as a charioteer for knowledge at dice. Then he set out to regain his kingdom from his brother. He challenged Pushkara. Nala staked all the wealth he had earned from his father-in-law, himself, and his wife for the latter's kingdom.

Driven by the desire of gaining a beautiful wife, Pushkara, was sure of his success, accepted a rematch in dice, in which he lost and became a slave. Nala then forgave him for what he had done and asked him to live as his brother, not as a slave. Nala and Damayanti were reunited and lived happily thereafter.