Tarot as a Gentle Tool for Healing
- Rachel Fielder
- May 8
- 2 min read
Updated: Jun 3
Tarot has been part of my personal practice for years. What began as curiosity slowly became something much deeper—something I return to again and again when I need clarity, grounding, or simply to feel held by something bigger than myself.
In my work through Nature of Virgo, I use tarot not as a way to predict the future, but as a mirror. A tool for reflection. A way of gently listening to what’s already here—within the body, the heart, the energy, and the moment.

What Tarot Means to Me
I’ve come to believe that healing doesn’t always look dramatic. Sometimes it’s quiet. Sometimes it’s simply feeling seen, or having something inside you reflected back in a way that helps it make more sense. That’s what tarot does for me. It helps me hear my own inner voice more clearly. It opens space for compassion, insight, and permission to be exactly where I am.
When I share tarot in sessions, it’s with that same intention. Not to give answers or fix anything, but to offer a soft place to land—to explore, to feel, to reconnect with yourself.
How Tarot Supports the Healing Process
In my experience, tarot can:
Help name emotions or patterns we’re struggling to express
Offer a shift in perspective when we feel stuck
Affirm what we already sense, but may be doubting
Support us in making choices that feel more aligned
The beauty of tarot is that it doesn’t need to push. It meets you where you are. It holds space for the questions you're carrying—even if you're not ready to name them out loud.
Part of a Bigger Practice
I often weave tarot into intuitive healing sessions alongside Reiki, guided meditation, and gentle energy work. Each session is unique, shaped by the moment and by your needs. What guides me is a deep belief that we all carry wisdom within us—and sometimes we just need a little help accessing it.
Virgo energy helps me hold space with care, presence, and attention to the details that matter. And the natural world continues to remind me that healing doesn’t need to be rushed—it unfolds in cycles, in seasons, and in its own time.
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