Today’s cards: 2 Oros, 9 Bastos, & 5 Bastos.
Yes, you have to stand up and prove yourself against someone that you know won’t play fair. If you give up, then you already know what will happen. But if you just try, the help that comes to you will surprise you at first. Don’t be judgemental about how that help arrives or what you have to do to accept it. Take care of business however you can and learn from the experience.
A Baraja Española deck, the Baraja Azteca is a 48 card deck of playing cards used for such games as Brisca, Tute, and Mus. This 48-card variant of the deck contains four suits; Oros (Coins), Bastos (Clubs), Espadas (Swords), and Copas (Cups). While the deck is made primarily for play, it functions well as a divination tool. Each reader uses their own personal understanding and intuition to interpret the cards.
“What Does The Deck Say” is a weekday series of 3 card pulls from a cartomancy deck. No context or query is given to frame what the cards say as the posts are reading samples and not personal instruction. The result is sometimes humorous, sometimes serious, and usually surprising. All readers are invited to leave a comment about what they perceive in the random spread as each person will interact with the cards in their own way.
Personalized, direct, and private cartomancy readings are available via Ko-Fi: Noxporium.
Why are you seeing March 11th’s post on March 12th? A reader suggested that the day’s post be published the evening of the day prior so that readers in the Eastern Time Zone may review the post before they encounter the day as Noxporium is in the Pacific Time Zone. This week will have the post dropped the day before at 6pm Pacific (9pm Eastern) on Noxporium.com and BlueSky, and at 6:30pm Pacific) (9:30pm Eastern) on Tumblr.