Guest Posted April 24, 2021 Posted April 24, 2021 Hello, everyone. In your opinion, in your reading practice, which of the cards - Clover or Bouquet - symbolizes the small pleasures of life? I ask this because I've read different authors who ascribe this meaning to both cards. Could they both represent such idea? If so, what's the difference?
HOLMES Posted April 25, 2021 Posted April 25, 2021 Depends on what one may define as small pleasure. For some the house/home could be, or fish for a fishing person . For another the rider could be as antony hopkins likes to pick a direction and drive for hours. Could you.mean small fortune/,luck? Or definitely pleasure?
Guest Posted April 25, 2021 Posted April 25, 2021 It depends. The Flowers card is associated with both hobbies and pleasurable pastimes, but also the societal rules that keep things “just-so.” It keeps life calm and easy. The Cloverleaf can indicate the small or guilty pleasures that from time-to-time one can indulge. The Cloverleaf is more tangible and earthy, whereas the Flowers is mood/sanguine.
Guest Posted April 25, 2021 Posted April 25, 2021 39 minutes ago, HOLMES said: Depends on what one may define as small pleasure. For some the house/home could be, or fish for a fishing person . For another the rider could be as antony hopkins likes to pick a direction and drive for hours. Could you.mean small fortune/,luck? Or definitely pleasure? I think your answer is right below: 23 minutes ago, timtoldrum said: It depends. The Flowers card is associated with both hobbies and pleasurable pastimes, but also the societal rules that keep things “just-so.” It keeps life calm and easy. The Cloverleaf can indicate the small or guilty pleasures that from time-to-time one can indulge. The Cloverleaf is more tangible and earthy, whereas the Flowers is mood/sanguine. That's much clearer now. It makes perfect sense!
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now