Co-incidence is no accident (Knight of Cups)

If you look up “coincidence” on m-w.com, one of the definitions is that two things happen at the same time “by accident.” And in pursuing this notion, I came across a quote that said (and I’m paraphrasing because of course I didn’t take a screen shot), that there is indeed a reason for co-incidents, we just may not be able perceive the how or why … yet.

All that by way of saying that I have been thinking about sandhill cranes recently. This is the time of year when they would fly past our Hill Country house, kettling over the floodplain, taking a breather before continuing their migration north.

So it was a co-incidence, but no accident, that I drew the Knight of Cups, which I had planned to be a sandhilll crane. The problem was, there were way too many amazing photos of sandhill cranes in USA.gov … a great problem to have, I suppose.

But I’m getting a little ahead of myself. First off, here’s the Smith-Waite version of the Knight of Cups, complete with winged helm and footwear …

Followed by my usual Tarot researches …

  • 78 Degrees: dreams dominate this card … a figure committed to action … sex may pull him (and here I pause to note the prime motivation for Sandhill migration is to reach nesting grounds) … he follows a genuine vision … an exploration of his own inner world.
  • Kitchen Table Tarot: he is so romantic I can’t even stand it
  • The Creative Tarot: the romantic knight … here the fight is for the heart or for the soul … one guy who is more interested in wooing maidens than in fighting wars … willing to get lost … to let their intuition be their guide and stumble upon their sacred prize … persevering … dream of worlds that do not exist yet … build castles in the sky, then learn how to replicate them on solid ground.

Finding bookcovers was a snap, especially the one that looks like a globe with a northwest trending line. Of course, I cut them up before taking a picture, so here are some Amazon screen shots instead …

Then there was the challenge of which pictures to use. I wanted to include at least one from our days in the Hill Country, so I used one from here. The other three USA.gov pictures I chose to print in somewhat equal size, but in decreasing scale to give a sense of a sandhill moving up and away.

A bit of cutting a pasting later I had yet another card/collage to add to my rapidly warping notebook (and I’m okay with that, by the way … this whole exercise is more meditative than end-product driven) …

But wait … that’s not the end of the story. There was one more co-incidence. As Don and I headed out to walk around downtown Buda yesterday, I heard the unmistakable sound of sandhills overhead. They were kettling, as if waiting for me …

I had just enough time to put the phone onto video, just enough time to hear them fading into the distance …

The Chariot

Armadillos are such amazing critters that they’ve made several appearances in the blog over the years. They can do more garden demolition in one night than you would think possible. And while they may be near-blind, they are extremely good at avoiding capture. As I did my homework for today’s post I even learned some new and fascinating facts, courtesy of the Library of Congress no less.

Because the mighty armadillo is my stand-in for The Chariot …

I was on the lookout for stars similar to the canopy drapes on the Rider-Waite card, so I photocopied a star chart.

And I needed a garden scene, one that could be torn to pieces (or at least neatly cut in half) to document the might of a lone armadillo, backed with a bit of photocopied ‘dillo hide, looking for all the world like stones …

Finally, I wanted something to stand-in for the sense of vehicle implicit in The Chariot, so what better than a train to echo the ones that run through our new hometown?

As always, the books provided both inspiration and support:

  • 78 Degrees: powerful will … confident and content … able to control feelings … and direct the will … strong character … lunar (shoulder) plates … not to stress too highly the negative undertones [but the card] basically means success; the personality in charge of the world around it.
  • Kitchen Table Tarot: this card is about being in control … confident, resourceful, and savvy … he’s got a fancy canopy … he can just go … no obstacle is too big and no opponent is too strong (Don can attest to this from past experience) … a lot of passion … he’ll continue without looking back … he inspires passion … the reins? They’re inside of you … reach down inside … pull yourself up by your will … your indomitable, badass will (by the way, a number of years ago one of my student assistants said, “Liz, you are such a badass.” To which I honestly replied, “Is that good or bad?” She laughed.)
  • The Creative Tarot: victory over difficult circumstances, over your peers, over your own low expectations … The Chariot is the part of us that wants to win … it’s also about paradox and gaining control over one’s unconscious impulse … make sure your need to win in rooted in your need for self-improvement … competition can be inspiring.

Then I blasted right through the process and once again neglected to take process shots. Durn it …

I guess I was in full Chariot mode.

Seven of Cups

I finally drew a Cups card, but it was a Seven, and I’m tellin’ ya, it doesn’t feel like the most positive card in the deck. I mean, look at this Smith-Waite version …

The jewels seem tempting, but the snake and the dragon not so much. And what’s with the creepy head-in-a-chalice?

So I turned to the books …

  • 78 Degrees: with the Seven, the Cups problem emerges … imagination can produce wonderful visions, but … images remain daydreams … without real meaning …
  • Kitchen Table Tarot: sometimes our fantasies feel safer than reality (or they might be nightmares) … step out of wistfulness and take action … make things happen
  • The Creative Tarot: this is a card of many choices and it’s unclear if the cups contain what they seem … are the jewels real or fake? … is the snake poisonous or a symbol of the goddess? … it could be delusional, imagining things that aren’t really there … so many options, but with uncertain outcomes (pick a cup, any cup) … imagination can get you closer to being … but there are going to be times when you think you’re not making progress and you’ll never get to the level of your dreams …

Well, definitely one to sleep on, especially as it didn’t seem to fit well with my planned use of baskets and ceramic vessels for Cups. I woke up knowing that I would use this …

Rainbow phone

which is in no way edited … it really happened two years ago as I watched through my stitching window. I rationalized the use of a rainbow as the perfect water-based “7″ but I did modify it with a “smooth pastel” overlay to make it look a little less photographic.

I also wanted to try using some abstract imagery, so I kept that in mind as I fished through the bookcover box. I found one cover that made me think of the laurel wreath on the Smith-Waite card, and there were a few others that looked like possible backgrounds, so I tried a couple of them out …

Then I re-read the descriptions for the Seven of Cups and decided on a cover that seemed more dream-like. And in putting the pieces together, I tried to avoid the floating heads (being somewhat averse to human figural elements, as some of you know), only to find that one insisted on being present …

Sorta like the head-in-a-chalice, right?