Jun 172019
 

Finding someone to blame seems to be a cherished pastime for some people. They seem to believe it is an end unto itself as if assigning blame wraps up the issue and brings closure. Outside of lawsuits assigning blame doesn’t do much that is worthwhile. It may feel like it does but in practical terms it really doesn’t.

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Mostly what blame provides is a false sense of absolution. Finding someone else at fault gives us the mistaken idea that we are free from responsibility for the situation. This is where it gets messy. It doesn’t change the reality that we have a piece of the work to do, it just gives us the illusion that we are off the hook. Responsibility is sometimes a hard thing and when we find a way to avoid it some of us jump right on that.

While someone else may be the reason something awful happened, and we had no part in the creation of the mess, we are still responsible to do what we can to make things right. It’s not on us to do the other person’s part for them but we also can’t foist our portion onto them because they were the genesis of the problem.

Two years ago Number Five graduated from high school. We had given her the 2003 Saturn Ion that Mr. Wonderful used to commute to the city for years. She was all set to spend the summer having fun, driving herself and her friends places, and then taking that car to college. At 4:30am on July 4th a neighbor of ours drove home seriously drunk. As he came barreling down our hill he crashed into the Saturn. It was parked right in front of our house and he hit it with such force he moved it more than seventy feet. With his front end smashed in and his bumper lying in front of our house, he kept driving. He took out a few garbage cans and tore up another neighbor’s lawn only stopping a hundred yards away when his engine failed. The noise woke the neighborhood. Number Five was so upset.

By assigning blame and shifting all responsibility onto another person we do more than just absolve ourselves. We give away our power to improve the situation. We unwittingly become trapped in the problem. The person responsible for the mess becomes the person required to clean it up and until that happens nothing changes, nothing improves.

Our drunk-driving neighbor was clearly wrong. He was to blame for the damage to her car, our mailbox, our neighbor’s garbage cans and lawn. If we responded to this the way so many choose to respond to personal damage we would have walked back into the house righteously angry with our inebriated neighbor and satisfied in our right to that anger. Yes, this mess was all his fault and, if we absolved ourselves of any responsibility because of that, the Saturn would still have been disabled and leaking gasoline. Our mailbox would still have been uprooted. We would be angry and waiting for someone else to fix it for us. This tactic doesn’t work.

You can hold someone responsible for the mess they create while doing what you can to put your life back together yourself. You can be angry with someone because their carelessness or callousness caused you pain and misery and you can still pick yourself up and deal with the fallout. It’s not an all or nothing situation. It’s important to know who causes problems in your life and you have every right to expect another adult to behave like an adult and to make amends for the things they’ve done that screwed up your life. You owe it to yourself to not hang on a hook waiting for that to happen. You owe it to yourself to do what you have to take care of yourself and set your world right again regardless of who knocked it sideways.

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Jun 032019
 

I frequently find myself empathizing with those who come to me for a reading. They are dealing with a confusing situation or making a painful decision and they don’t want to do it alone. These people want help and I want to help them. Frequently we work together with the cards and they leave with a plan, a better handle on their situation, or at least an understanding of what is going on. What happens occasionally is that they want more than support and help. They want things that tarot and I can’t give them.

The tarot won’t make your decisions for you. It will answer the questions you ask and even if that question is “What is the best decision for me?” the actual decision making will still be yours. As I said in my last post, a tarot reading is information. What you do with that information is up to you. You are free to reject the advice you receive from the cards and make a completely different decision.

The tarot won’t make excuses for your behavior. This one doesn’t come up often but it’s happened enough that I feel the need to mention it. We each see the world through our own perspective and we understand our motives for the things we do, or at least what we tell ourselves our motives are. The tarot is more objective and more literal than that. It will point out where you are kidding yourself. When your actions have consequences you didn’t intend, or more likely, you didn’t think about what the possible consequences could be, tarot will not let you off the hook. The tarot is neutral. It’s not interested in punishing you but it’s not here to give you absolution either. That’s what clergy is for. Better yet, seek out the person who suffered because of your actions, apologize, and if possible, make amends.

The tarot won’t give you permission. We spend so much of our lives having to appeal to an authority for permission to do things, that we get into the habit of thinking we need permission for everything. At some point you need to own your life and realize that you are the authority in your life. If you want to do something, and are willing to own the consequences of doing that thing, then go do it. You’re an adult. That’s what responsible adults do. I know it’s a hard habit to break especially if a lot of your life is structured so someone has authority over you, like a boss for instance. Your personal life is yours. You may have a life partner with whom you compromise about things, but in the end, you are responsible for your life and what becomes of it. Not anyone else. So there is no one whose permission you need, to be and do what you believe is right for you to be and do, except you.


So, yes, come get a reading. Gather information to help you make decisions about your life. Find an understanding of the situation you may not have considered. Have the courage to face the results of your actions and behaviors. Leave empowered to do what is most helpful for you.

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