Daily Archives: June 20, 2026

The Major Arcana: Walking the Fool’s Journey

Whenever I teach someone to read tarot, we always start in the same place. Not with meanings, not with spreads, but with structure. A full tarot deck has 78 cards. Twenty-two of those belong to the Major Arcana, and the remaining fifty-six make up the Minor Arcana, divided into four suits: Cups, Pentacles, Swords, and Wands. Those suits deal with the mundane, day-to-day events of life, and I’ll save them for next time. Today, I want to slow down and really sit inside the Major Arcana, because these twenty-two cards are the heart of the deck and they deserve to be understood properly, not just memorized. For consistency, everything here follows the Rider-Waite tarot, the most widely used deck and the foundation most modern readers learn from first.

The Major Arcana cards are numbered 0 through 21, beginning with The Fool and ending with The World. Traditionally, this sequence is read as a single continuous story called the Fool’s Journey, in which The Fool moves through a series of archetypal lessons and, by card 21, arrives at a sense of completion and integration, having lived through every stage the story has to teach.

This is really the key difference between the two halves of the deck. The Minor Arcana describes the mundane, day-to-day events of life: a conversation, a decision, a mood that’s moving through you this week. The Major Arcana describes something larger than any single event. These cards point to major life events, defining moments, and turning points, the kind of shifts that mark a real before and after in a person’s life. When a Major Arcana card shows up in a reading, I always tell my clients to sit up a little straighter. It’s a sign that something significant is unfolding, not a passing circumstance but a deeper current running underneath it.

The Fool’s Journey, Card by Card

Here is each of the twenty-two Major Arcana cards in order, along with a brief sense of what each one is asking of you.

0. The FoolNew beginnings. The start of something. Innocence, a leap of faith, the willingness to begin without knowing exactly where the road leads.

I. The MagicianManifestation. You already have what you need. This card speaks to willpower, resourcefulness, and the ability to turn intention into action.

II. The High PriestessKnowing. A call inward. Intuition, mystery, and the wisdom that comes from listening rather than chasing answers.

III. The EmpressAbundance. Creativity, fertility in every sense of the word, and a deep connection to the natural world.

IV. The EmperorAuthority. Structure and stability. This card asks you to lead, to build something solid, to take responsibility.

V. The HierophantTradition. Belief and learning. Often points to institutions, mentors, or the value of those who came before you.

VI. The LoversUnion. Choice and alignment. Not always romantic, this card is fundamentally about the joining of two things into one.

VII. The ChariotWillpower. Determination and drive, the discipline it takes to move forward through conflicting forces.

VIII. StrengthCourage. Not brute force, but patience, compassion, and the gentle taming of our own inner wildness.

IX. The HermitIntrospection. Withdrawal for the sake of clarity. Solitude and the search for your own inner light.

X. Wheel of FortuneCycles. Change and turning points. A reminder that life moves and that nothing stays fixed forever.

XI. JusticeTruth. Cause and effect. Fairness, and the consequences of our choices finally coming due.

XII. The Hanged ManSurrender. A pause. A new perspective, the wisdom that sometimes comes only from letting go of control.

XIII. DeathTransformation. An ending that makes room for something else. Release, and the closing of a chapter so a new one can begin.

XIV. TemperanceBalance. Patience and moderation, the slow blending of opposites into something harmonious.

XV. The DevilBondage. Attachment and temptation, the parts of ourselves we haven’t yet looked at directly.

XVI. The TowerUpheaval. The collapse of what was never built on solid ground often follows real clarity.

XVII. The StarHope. Renewal and faith, a quiet sense that things are beginning to mend.

XVIII. The MoonIllusion. The realm of the subconscious. Intuition, and the things that only become clear once we stop demanding logic from them.

XIX. The SunJoy. Vitality and confidence, a return to warmth after a long stretch in the dark.

XX. JudgementAwakening. A reckoning. Reflection on the past, and a calling toward whatever comes next.

XXI. The WorldCompletion. Wholeness and fulfillment, the satisfaction of a long journey finally coming full circle.

In the weeks ahead, I’ll be giving each of these twenty-two cards its own dedicated post, with more of the imagery, symbolism, and personal reading experience there simply isn’t room for here. Consider this list your map. The deeper conversations are coming.

The Major Arcana isn’t twenty-two separate ideas to memorize. It’s one long, spiraling story about becoming, one we move through again and again throughout our lives rather than just once. So when you see a Major Arcana card in your own reading, try asking where in the Fool’s Journey it sits. Are you near the beginning, full of potential like The Fool or The Magician? In the middle of the harder lessons, somewhere around The Devil or The Tower? Or closer to the end, settling into the wisdom of The Star, The Sun, or The World? That question alone will tell you more about your reading than any keyword list ever could.

Next time, we’ll turn to the other half of the deck. I’ll walk you through the Minor Arcana, suit by suit, so you can see how the daily details of Cups, Pentacles, Swords, and Wands fill in the texture beneath these bigger Major Arcana lessons.

Kim’s Esoteric Tarot Journals

Tarot card circle showing The Fool's Journey wit watercolor flowers .