Tarot cards have intrigued people for centuries, blending symbolism, intuition, and a touch of the unknown. Though they began as simple playing cards in 15th-century Europe, tarot gradually evolved into a tool for reflection and divination, shaped by mystics and artists across generations. Each card is a symbolic world. The Major Arcana represents life’s big themes, beginnings, change, wisdom, while the Minor Arcana reflects everyday emotions and experiences.
Their imagery doesn’t offer fixed answers; instead, it invites intuition. Readers interpret colors, figures, and archetypes to uncover personal meaning. For many today, tarot is less about predicting the future and more about understanding oneself. Its power lies in synchronicity, the uncanny feeling that the right cards appear at the right time. Tarot remains mysterious because it sits between logic and intuition, offering guidance through symbols rather than certainty. In the end, its deepest secret is simple: the cards become a mirror, revealing what we most need to see.