Thursday, 7 May 2026

Book time: Read Tarot in 7 Days by Keith Morgan

 






Read Tarot in 7 Days

Keith Morgan 



Paperback 

First printed 1991 by Pentacle Enterprises 

Edition shown and reviewed: Second edition 1992

34 pages 

ISBN 10: 1872189903 ISBN 13: 9781872189901


Read Tarot in 7 Days by Keith Morgan (aka Kimberley Morgan) is a compact, practical beginner’s guide designed to teach tarot reading quickly through a structured, week-long course.


The premise is simple but quite influential:

You don’t need years of study to begin reading tarot—you can build a working foundation in seven focused days. Illustration is limited to examples of common tarot spreads including my own personal fave, the Celtic cross.



Rather than overwhelming the reader with heavy symbolism or esoteric theory, the book emphasises:

  • Hands-on learning
  • Daily practice
  • Developing personal intuition


It’s very much a “learn by doing” system.


The 7-day structure


While exact chapter breakdowns vary slightly by edition, the course typically follows a progressive path like:


Day 1 – Introduction to Tarot

  • What tarot is and how it works
  • Getting familiar with the deck


Day 2 – Major Arcana

  • The spiritual and archetypal cards
  • Big life themes and lessons

Day 3 – Minor Arcana

  • Everyday situations and experiences
  • Suits and elemental correspondences

Day 4 – Meanings & Interpretation

  • Moving beyond memorisation
  • Seeing patterns and relationships


Day 5 – Asking Questions & Spreads

  • How to structure a reading
  • Simple layouts (often beginner spreads)


Day 6 – Practice Readings

  • Applying knowledge in real scenarios
  • Building confidence


Day 7 – Intuition & Personal Style

  • Trusting your inner voice
  • Moving toward independent reading



This structure reflects a broader teaching philosophy found in many modern tarot guides: learning symbolism is important, but intuition and experience are what make a reader effective.


Style and approach. Typically Morgan 


What makes this book stand out—especially for its time—is how approachable it is:

  • Short and direct: no unnecessary theory
  • Encourages self-reading, which wasn’t always widely promoted decades ago
  • Functions partly like a workbook or journal companion
  • Focuses on tarot as a tool for insight and self-understanding, not just prediction


A very helpful learning tool and even a first entry into tarot  


This book is Ideal for absolute beginner. It Removes intimidation around tarot and Encourages daily spiritual practice. Builds confidence quickly


Limitations are obvious however with such a short book.

  • Very brief—doesn’t go deep into symbolism or advanced techniques
  • Less suited for experienced readers seeking depth
  • Some meanings may feel simplified compared to modern, more psychological tarot systems


Read Tarot in 7 Days is typical of Morgan’s early work; short and sweet and is best understood as a gateway book—a gentle initiation into tarot rather than a lifelong reference. It aligns well with a practical, intuitive, almost “witchcraft-adjacent” approach where the relationship with the cards matters more than rigid rules.



If your interest leans toward developing a personal, intuitive bond with tarot quickly, it’s still a charming and effective little guide. It may just be the start you’re looking for. Unfortunately, getting hold of a used copy is tricky.  There are of course more recent books out there that will do the same thing but when it comes to tarot and the Occult in general you can never know enough or have enough resources to create a balanced understanding.  Older books can also be useful in seeing if wisdom and practice has changed over time.


Wednesday, 6 May 2026

Mineral Marvels: Lead

 




Lead

The alchemical metal of legend


Planet: Saturn

Day: Saturday

Element: Earth 


WARNING!!

Note that lead is poisonous, and there’s no safe level of exposure in the body. What makes lead dangerous? Lead interferes with how your body works at a cellular level. It can Disrupt enzymes needed for vital processes,  Mimic important minerals like calcium and iron and Build up in bones and organs over time. This leads to a condition called lead poisoning. I do not recommend or condone any use of lead magically or symbolically. This article is for educational purposes ONLY!



Lead has carried a powerful symbolic weight across centuries, not because of any measurable “energy” in the scientific sense, but because of how human cultures have interpreted its qualities—its heaviness, dull sheen, and resistance to change. In metaphysical traditions, especially within Western esotericism and alchemy, lead is far more than a metal: it is a symbol of gravity, limitation, endurance, and ultimately transformation.


Magickal Uses: Grounding, stability, banishing, ending bad habits, protecting against negativity, and accessing the subconscious.

One of the most important associations of lead is with the planet Saturn. In classical astrology, Saturn governs time, boundaries, discipline, and the inevitable processes of aging and decay.



Lead, as Saturn’s metal, embodies these qualities. It is heavy, slow, and resistant—mirroring the way Saturn is said to impose structure and consequence on human life. In a metaphysical sense, lead represents the “weight” of existence: responsibility, karma, and the constraints that shape personal growth. It is the substance of reality that cannot be ignored or wished away.



In alchemy, lead occupies a foundational role. It is often considered the prima materia—the base, unrefined substance from which all transformation begins. The famous goal of alchemy, the transmutation of lead into gold, is less about literal metallurgy and more about spiritual evolution. Lead symbolises the unawakened self: dense, inert, and bound by ignorance or material attachment. Gold, by contrast, represents illumination, perfection, and spiritual awakening. The journey from lead to gold is therefore an allegory for inner transformation—the refinement of the soul through discipline, insight, and purification.


This symbolic journey is sometimes framed through the lens of the Philosopher’s Stone, a mythical agent capable of effecting such transformation. In this context, lead is not “bad” or inferior; it is necessary. It is the starting point, the raw condition of being human. 


Lead wasn’t chosen in alchemy by accident—it fit perfectly into the symbolic, philosophical, and practical framework alchemists were working with.


It was the “base metal” par excellence


Lead is dull, heavy, and easily tarnished. To alchemists, that made it the ideal representation of an unrefined state of matter—what they called prima materia.


  • It seemed “imperfect” compared to gold
  • It could be melted and reshaped easily
  • It looked like something that could become something better


So if you were trying to demonstrate transformation, lead was the natural starting point. It matched the philosophy of transformation Alchemy wasn’t just early chemistry—it was also a spiritual philosophy. The famous idea of turning lead into gold symbolised:

  • Moving from ignorance → enlightenment
  • From impurity → perfection
  • From the ordinary self → the perfected self


Lead represented the beginning of that journey, not a failure or flaw.


On a practical level:

  • Lead was widely available in the ancient and medieval world
  • It melts at a relatively low temperature (~327°C)
  • It’s easy to cast, combine, and experiment with


So alchemists could actually do things with it in their laboratories.


PLUS It seemed transformable


Lead can:

  • Alloy with other metals
  • Change appearance when heated or treated
  • Be coated or altered to resemble silver or even gold-like surfaces



To early experimenters, this suggested that true transmutation might be possible.


Without lead, there can be no alchemical process, no ascent toward gold. Thus, lead carries a paradoxical metaphysical meaning: it is both the lowest and the most essential state.


Lead is also linked to themes of protection and containment. Its physical use as a shield against radiation has been mirrored symbolically in magical traditions, where it is thought to absorb or block unwanted influences. Some practitioners of ritual magic or folk traditions have used lead objects as talismans of grounding, anchoring the spirit firmly in the material world. In this sense, lead represents a boundary—a barrier that defines what is within and what is without. It is the guardian of thresholds, reinforcing stability and preventing dissipation.



Trivia time: lead protects from radiation 

Lead is used to protect against radiation because of a mix of its atomic structure and physical density, which make it very good at stopping or weakening harmful rays. It’s High atomic number (Z = 82) means it’s got a very high number of protons. This matters because radiation like X-rays and gamma rays interacts with electrons in atoms. The more electrons an atom has, the higher the chance radiation will collide with one and lose energy. In simple terms: lead presents a “dense forest” of electrons that radiation has to pass through.


Psychologically, lead can be read as the shadow—the dense, often uncomfortable aspects of the self that must be confronted rather than avoided. The heaviness of lead mirrors emotional burdens such as grief, guilt, or fear. Yet within many metaphysical frameworks, these burdens are not merely obstacles; they are catalysts. 


Herbs associated: Comfrey, mullein, cypress, solomon's seal.




By engaging with the “lead” within, one begins the process of transformation. This resonates with later esoteric and psychological systems, including the work of Carl Jung, who interpreted alchemical symbolism as a map of inner development. For Jung, the base metals of alchemy correspond to unconscious material that must be integrated into conscious awareness.


Lead’s association with time also deepens its metaphysical significance. Saturn, its ruling planet, is often depicted as a devourer of time, a force that consumes all things. Lead thus becomes a symbol of mortality and impermanence. It reminds the practitioner that all forms decay, all structures eventually dissolve. Yet this is not purely negative; it is also what makes transformation possible. Without endings, there can be no beginnings. Lead, in this sense, is the gateway through which change enters the world.



In ritual and symbolic practice, working with lead often involves themes of grounding, banishing, or confronting limitations. It is not a light or uplifting substance in the metaphysical imagination; rather, it is sober, serious, and demanding. 


It calls for patience and endurance, qualities necessary for any deep transformation. Where other symbolic materials might inspire or elevate, lead anchors and stabilises, ensuring that spiritual work remains rooted in reality.


In conclusion, the metaphysical properties attributed to lead arise not from empirical science but from centuries of symbolic interpretation. As the metal of Saturn, it embodies time, limitation, and structure. As the base substance of alchemy, it represents the beginning of transformation and the raw material of the self. As a protective and grounding symbol, it marks boundaries and absorbs excess. Lead is, above all, a reminder that growth often begins in heaviness—that the path to illumination passes through the dense and difficult terrain of existence itself.