About the Publication
Approximate number of subscribers: 100-500
Categories: Faith & Spirituality, Health & Wellness
Subcategories: Witchcraft, Self-help, Social Action
Publication Summary: I combine traditional and intuitive tarot praxis with other systems of communication, expression, and knowledge such as critical hope, quantitative and qualitative analytical methods, art history, dialectical behavior therapy, popular music, and social movements. My biweekly newsletter examines the tarot through the lenses of grief, celebration, recovery, perimenopause, and other life experiences. My writing emerges in dialogue with real card pulls that are a mixture of sortilege/deductive (random cards) and inductive (choosing cards intentionally), and I operate on the premise that all cards have a message for us.
Collaboration Opportunities
Podcast guests
Interviews or profiles
Co-written article/post
More Details from the Creator:
I am on a mission to prove that the tarot has something for everyone. To that end, I am interested in finding writers from a variety of disciplines who are open to engaging with tarot in a non-predictive context. For example, what happens when a political analyst unfamiliar with the tarot sees the Tower card for the first time? Do they see a silly picture or an impending market crash? How would a professional chef react to the Pasta Tarot (this is a real deck)? Can I convince a freelance project manager to try out some of Mark McElroy’s project planning spreads with their clients? Can I find a lawyer willing to use the cards to help identify potential pitfalls in their cross examination? Eventually I would love to interview professionals across various disciplines on a podcast, but I’d like to start with guest interviews in newsletter form.
I am also interested in appearing as a guest on other creators’ podcasts or in their newsletters. I am open to collaborating with anyone who has gotten this far in my lengthy answer to the question!
I want to collaborate with people who share my values. People are who they say they are, libraries deserve funding, and more spaces need to be accessible to all. Final thought, I don’t do yes/no or medical questions because they disempower the person asking the question and they open tarot readers to ethical scrutiny. In the words of Lindsay Mack, “there are no bad cards.”
How to Connect & Collaborate
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