Conscious Dreaming
and the Tarot

by Marty Gegner
Certified Dream Worker

One day at the National Museum of Art in Washington, DC, I stood viewing the portrait "Little Girl in a Blue Armchair" by the Impressionist Mary Cassatt. My heart began to race and I felt light-headed as I looked at that little girl in the portrait. I recognized her. It was me! I saw myself in that painting, or at least I saw something within me. It was like looking into a mirror, and it gave me a palpable feeling of grief. Standing motionless, I wondered, "Where is this coming from?" Although I was awake and conscious of all the sounds and smells around me, the experience felt surreal, like a dream. Memories swirled in my head, and in that moment of painful recognition, I found the next piece of my puzzle. I thought I had completely come to terms with the event the memory evoked, but stirred by the portrait, my soul exposed the fact I had not.

That such an insight might come from a dream image was natural to me. I had been recording my dreams for several years. But now, looking at that painting while wide-awake, I became aware of a kind of conscious dreaming I had never met before. I knew that visions during meditation and contemplation were conscious dreams, but here was a conscious dream emanating from what I was looking at in the physical world. Dream images have the potential to produce a powerful emotional charge, which can spontaneously evoke new perceptions on both emotional and cognitive levels. Now I understood that the physical images that cross our path in our waking hours can elicit that same response, with those same possibilities for insights and enlightenment. As I learned that day, the unconscious is constantly looking for ways to bring its vast range of knowledge, wisdom, and healing to our consciousness.

I have since discovered that the images in the Tarot deck can provide the means for a meaningful dialogue with the divine through conscious dreaming. Several years before my art-museum revelation, I had become interested in the Tarot and had purchased several different decks. At that time I was not really connecting to the images from my depths, but would read in books what the images were said to mean. One day after the museum experience I came across a deck I had not seen before, The Osho Zen. I immediately connected at the soul level with many of the images in this deck in the same way I had with the Little Girl in the Blue Armchair. This compelled me to put the instruction book away, black out the descriptive words that were just below each image, and rely on my emotions and intuition to guide me in viewing the cards. The results were, and continue to be, remarkable. By associating to images in the cards that I pull at random, I consistently trigger striking insights at just the time I need them.

What exactly is the Tarot? Traditionally used as a divination tool, the Tarot is a deck of 78 cards divided into two sections: the major arcana and the minor arcana. The 22 major arcana cards are visual representations of cosmic forces such as Birth, Death, Justice, Heroism, and so forth, which contain the archetypal symbolism that lies deeply embedded in the human psyche. They are a representation of the spiritual, or inner, journey. The remainder of the deck, the minor arcana, is divided into 16 court cards and four suits, which represent our path in the outer, or physical, journey.

The Tarot archetypes provide a key to twenty-two expressions of soul energy. Twenty-one of these are steps we take on the journey of soul exploration and growth. The twenty-second archetype is the Fool, who represents the vagabond traveler that we ourselves are as we make our way though the cycles of our life. The Fool symbolizes all the new beginnings, foolish risks, innocent hopes, and leaps of faith we take on both our physical and spiritual journeys.

No one truly knows the origin of the Tarot, although several intriguing theories exist. There are references to the Tarot as far back as 900 B.C.D. and later in a document written by monks in 1377, and another reference written in 1572 by Girilamo Gargagli. In the twentieth century Aleister Crowley and his Thoth Deck (1944) brought the Tarot back into modern awareness.

An understanding of the basic teachings of Carl Jung is crucial for approaching the Tarot as a vehicle for conscious dreaming. Jung believed that dream images must be understood symbolically, that the instinctual basis of dream symbolism is "primitive or archaic thought forms." He pointed out that while personal dream symbolism varies with the dreamer, there are symbols that have universal meanings and are a part of what he called the collective unconscious. These are the archetypes that we all share at the collective level. Jung also felt the Tarot images are "descended from the archetypes of transformation" (Jung, 1959-1990, p.38).

Archetypal consciousness manifests itself on both the personal level and the collective level. When we access the collective unconscious, we tune in to our innermost being. The universal patterns with which we resonate offer us creative solutions to the challenges we face in our lives. Examining our emotions carefully and honestly allows us to see which archetype is influencing us at any given time, with or without the knowledge of our ego. There are several ways to access our archetypal patterns, including dreams, visions, music, art, active imagination, and the Tarot. When we listen to our inner wisdom, we have the opportunity to choose our path and help it unfold, rather than have the path seize us and drag us along.

Jung named several primary archetypes that are key to the individuation process, which entails the psychological and emotional maturation that is meant to accompany our physical maturation. Some of these archetypes include the hero, sacrifice, rebirth, mother, father, the wise man or woman, the self, the shadow, the anima and animus, and so on. All of these archetypal symbols are represented in the twenty-two major arcana images.

Just as dream images convey their effects symbolically, so the Tarot offers itself as a prime tool for examining the psyche. The images on the cards tell a symbolic story and tap our deepest source, our unconscious, in the same way a dream does. When used with that intention, and not as a divination tool, the images on the Tarot cards offer great insight, often giving the same kind of 'aha,' or charge we get when examining a dream. They can also point us to our shadow, that part of ourselves we do not want to examine. It is quite possible for the cards to synchronistically point toward the essence of future events in the outer world as the inner world grows in awareness. This new inner awareness that grows from such hints offers us perspectives and choices that had not previously been recognized, thereby precipitating eventful changes in one's life. To rely on the Tarot for "predictions," however, is much like taking a dream in the literal sense. What the cards actually do when used as an association tool is offer insights on how to change ourselves from the inside out, in the way a dream does, thereby altering our future by inviting "higher" forms of thought, emotion, and inner truth.

There are dozens of Tarot decks available with an incredible spectrum of images, colors, and explanations, and offering many conflicting explanations of the cards and their meanings. When we use the Tarot for conscious dreaming, however, conflicting instruction books are not a hindrance. Just as we do not rely on dream dictionaries to give meanings to a dream, we do not rely on Tarot guides to give meaning to the cards . Instead, we allow the associations to the images to arise from within ourselves, thereby gaining intuitive understanding of the synchronistic appearance of the card.

As synchronicity would have it, cards pulled from a deck at random will always be exactly what is needed at that moment, often leading to an 'aha' and a step toward a resolution of the issue at hand. When a particular card elicits an emotional reaction, that reaction needs to be examined as soon as all associations to all the images have been made.

Jung taught that the language of symbols used by the unconscious mind transcends all human language. This is why the symbols of the major arcana can have a more potent effect on us than verbal language can. The tarot is a container that holds and expresses synchronistically the wisdom of the universal or archetypal symbols.

It can be very effective to use the cards as though they were a dream. One method is to shuffle the cards, choose at random three to five of the major arcana cards, and lay them out in whatever order you choose. Then tell yourself a story based on the imagery of those cards, explaining possible meanings of the symbols in your own words. Relate the symbolic meanings to situations in your life in much the same manner as when working a dream. This has the potential to trigger 'ahas,' as each card contains many small details that subtly represent the dark and bright shadow aspects of the particular archetype it portrays.

By using the images on the Tarot cards as a conscious dream to tell our own story, we are able to bypass our ego and commune with our "higher self." The power of these archetypal images offer meaning that we are often able to tap from our deepest source, from our soul, while we are awake and conscious. There are many ways to do inner work. I have found that the Tarot, when used as a vehicle for conscious dreaming, is a sound and effective tool for the inner journey. You might want to give it a try

Marty Gegner is a full time dream worker in the Washington, DC area and a certified dream worker in Northern Virginia. She also works with the powerful Osho Zen Tarot to tap your inner wisdom. Both the tarot and your dreams speak the symbolic language of the soul; Marty can help you decode this often confusing language and access your "inner knowing." The Tarot images and the images in your dreams illustrate what is happening in your life now while showing the possibilities of the future. Through her early years in Santa Fe and Mexico City, she established strong ties to the Native American cultures of both Mexico and the American Southwest regarding nature, dreams, and honoring God. Marty began journaling her dreams at 18 when she had a dream that saved her life. A former Hollywood makeup artist and clothing/costume designer, Marty has earned her Certifications in Dream Group Leadership from the Haden Institute, NC, and the Marin Institute for Projective Dream Work, CA. She knows it is never “just a dream.” Contact Marty at DreamWork Consulting, 311 Maple Ave. W., Suite J, Vienna, VA 22180 ; call 703-758-8818 (Voicemail) 703-608-1030 (Cell) or send an email. See her website at dreamworkguide.com.




  • return to ByRegion.net home