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What's your Tarot Birth Card?

16K views 36 replies 28 participants last post by  Sily  
#1 · (Edited)
Hey so I've been (watching Jojo's Bizarre Adventure) wondering something.
Apparently, if you do a simple equation with your birth date, you get something that is called your Birth Tarot Card.
I don't believe in any of this stuff, but it might be a little interesting regardless. I'm bored, so why not.
If you give me a long lecture on why this (obviously) isn't real, I'll personally find the nearest cliff in the Canadian Prairies, and throw you off it.

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With that out of the way, essentially what you do is this.
Add your birth date (DD) + (MM) + (YY) + (YY)
*Make sure to split your "year" into two parts (for example 1998 = 19+98)
Once you get that number (and if it is 2 digits), add those digits together.
If it's 3 digits, combine the first two digits, and then add the third one.
For an example, I'll use mine

February 23, 1998
23 + 02 +19 + 98 = 142
14 + 2 = 16

Or if you are just lazy, go to this link and it'll do it for you.
Tarot Calculator

I'll leave a list of the tarot card combinations down below to make things easier, feel free to leave a description of yours if you can find one.
Just find the sum you end up with, and match it to the corresponding card below.

10 = Wheel of Fortune/ Magician
11 = Justice/ High Priestess
12 = Hanged Man/ Empress
13 = Death/ Emperor
14 = Temperance/ Hierophant
15 = Devil/ Lovers
16 = The Tower/ Chariot
17 = Star/ Strength
18 = Moon/ Hermit
19 = Sun/ Wheel/ Magician

Apparently there are some exceptions, so I'll add them to be safe.
20 = Judgement/ High Priestess
21= The World/ Empress

If you want a description of your card, I ventured through the weird side of the internet for them. You can thank me later.
Here is a link to a list of them.
Tarot Birth Card Descriptions
 
Discussion starter · #2 · (Edited)
So I'll just start with mine to give an example

The Tower/ The Chariot

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Description:

The Tower and The Chariot share the issues of balance, control, energy, solidity and war. They contrast in their ways of handling every issue. The violent overthrow of rigid and ambitious structure contrasts with the invisible battle for balance and self-control. External contrasts with internal energy. The vulnerability of fortification contrasts with the durability of character.

The Tower is the tumultuous power at the center of everything. It is the constant potential for an occasional experience of the unexpected, the violent and sudden disruption of normal conditions; the power of complete surprise and the feeling of head-over-heels. The job of The Tower is to uproot dug-in positions and vested interests, to be the event horizon beyond which lies the unpredictable and unaccountable. The Tower is the end of complacency.

The Chariot is the steady flow of ceaseless intention that is the warrior in everything. Its job is to harness all competing impulses and energies, to overcome all obstacles and resistances, and against all odds, carry everything to its destiny. On this journey, everything becomes what it must become and nothing is lacking.

Unintegrated and imperfectly realized, The Tower can be capricious, frightening and disastrous. It can rob effort of its proper reward, and destroy faith in both justice and mercy. It can be melodramatic, or it can be pointless, random and gratuitously painful.

The Chariot can vacillate and side-step, or turn tail and run. It can be vainglorious and posturing, or overly sensitive and ineffectual. It can lose heart in the middle of a task, and mope.

Together, they are afraid of nothing, can stand successfully against any opponent, either internal or external, and when the time comes, they will rise to the ultimate challenge and be equal to it.