Shuffle | Corrine Kenner’s Tarot Blog

May 22, 2007

King of Wands

Filed under: Film — Corrine Kenner @ 5:51 pm

Here’s a cute story from today’s Minneapolis Star Tribune:

Billpinewandmaker

Muggle wand-maker’s tale kicks off blog
An Edina "Harry Potter" fan creates Oliver’s Wands — and a little magic for himself.

By Maria Elena Baca, Star Tribune
Photo by Joey Mcleister, Star Tribune

When Bill Pine overheard his kids reading the Harry Potter books with their mom, he didn’t know that the snitches of story he heard would have the magic to change his life.

Over the past four years, a wand-making project for his kids has transformed into a wood-turning business called Oliver’s Wands that allows Pine to work from his Edina home and spend time with his kids, Mackenzie, Brien and Calvin, ages 11, 10 and 5. He’s sold thousands of exotic hardwood wands to Potter fans and others who believe in magic.

Pine’s story is the first of many you’ll read on the Potter Blotter blog on startribune.com starting today. The blog will run past the July releases of the "Order of the Phoenix" movie and the seventh and final book, "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows." The Potter Blotter will be a place where casual fans and uber-fans of all ages can share thoughts about J.K. Rowling’s franchise.

Here’s Pine’s Potter story:

Q How were you introduced to the Harry Potter books?

A I started listening to it; the kids would fall asleep and I would keep reading. I got addicted.

Q How did you start making wands?

A My kids wanted a wand. I had a drill, maybe a hammer if I was lucky. I bought some dowels and thought I’d try to hand-carve one. That turned out just horribly. I got upset and bought a lathe and taught myself how to use it, and made some wands. Parents at school wanted them for their kids, and it kind of went from there.

The rest of the story is here.

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May 19, 2007

Fortunetellers and the First Amendment

Filed under: Current Affairs — Corrine Kenner @ 6:54 am

Here’s another great article to keep in our files.

Second sight deserves First Amendment protection

By Gene Policinski
May 17, 2007 02:58 PM

Let’s gaze deeply into our national crystal ball and look in on the latest flap in Livingston Parish, La. We just may see an unexpected, but nonetheless important, constitutional message.

The parish council – called a county council in most areas – voted unanimously a few days ago to make it illegal in that jurisdiction to predict the future for money. Citing justifications ranging from personal religious beliefs to state law, council members voted for penalties of up to a year in jail and $500 in fines for such "second-sight" activities, according to the Associated Press.

Livingston, in the southeastern part of the state near Baton Rouge, is not alone in trying to regulate or ban tarot-card readings, fortune-telling, psychic readings and a host of similar activities. In the past decade, such attempts have gone to court in states including Nebraska, Tennessee, Florida, Oklahoma and North Carolina.

Authorities generally argue that customers of such services are likely to become victims of fraud or illegal confidence schemes. Countering this view, those who make a living predicting the future say that, unless there’s evidence of criminal conduct, they have a free-speech right to conduct their business.

An intriguing side argument is made by some that such laws ultimately could be applied to other activities that don’t immediately come to mind, such as predicting the stock market, forecasting the weather or – in a stretch – preaching about biblical prophecies, printing horoscopes in newspapers and putting predictions in fortune cookies.

If the past is any indicator of the future – in Livingston or elsewhere – the new local ordinance banning paid predictions of the future seems likely to run smack up against the Bill of Rights.

In Argello v. City of Lincoln (1998), Judge Richard Arnold of the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals wrote: "If the citizens of Lincoln wish to have their fortunes told, or to believe in palm-reading or phrenology, they are free to do so under our system of government, and to patronize establishments or ‘professionals’ who purport to be versed in such arts. Government is not free to declare certain beliefs — for example, that someone can see into the future — forbidden. Citizens are at liberty to believe that the earth is flat, that magic is real, and that some people are prophets."

And as U.S. District Judge Robert Echols in Tennessee – in a lawsuit involving tarot readings – said in 2004, earlier cases have held that "predictions are only fraudulent if the speaker knows of facts that will prevent a prediction from coming true." In other words, whatever else it is, under the law fortune-telling isn’t a crime unless you intend it to be.

Most Americans, I surmise (not predict), are like me: My belief in readings, séances and psychic forecasts hovers somewhere between healthy skepticism and absolute disbelief. But it’s important to note that most speech – whether it expresses my own impeccable logic or someone else’s silly belief – is protected from government control. Not just permitted. Or allowed. Or tolerated. But protected with the full force and vigor of an amendment to the United States Constitution.

Why? This nation’s founders recognized the desirability – the necessity – of a wide range of free thinking in a free society. Liberty was once an inconceivable concept, save for those who gazed into the future and saw a time when societies would be based on the dignity of man and on inherent freedoms.

Believers in prophets and prophecies, new and old, ought not to have government looking over their shoulders. As Judge Arnold noted, "the line between beliefs (or opinions) and facts is blurry at best. What seems like a provable fact to one person is only an opinion to another: paleontologists … think that evolution is a scientific fact, while creationists think it is only a false belief."

Education, not regulation, would seem a better way of dealing with the future of star-driven prognostication or colored bits of paper that purport to predict.

It’s not that the unwary, the unknowing or the overly trusting don’t deserve to be protected from those who would bilk them of money or worse. But to echo Judge Echols, such frauds are crimes and there are already appropriate laws against them.

Basing your behavior on a $25 prediction or gambling your peace-of-mind in sleight-of-hand may well be foolish. But I can predict with certainty that having government decide what we are free to believe is a worse alternative.

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May 16, 2007

Plain Cards

Filed under: Tarot Cards — Corrine Kenner @ 12:09 pm

Plaincards_back
I just stumbled across plaincards.com, a company that makes blank cards for do-it-yourself tarot decks. The blank cards even come with a blank box for your deck.

The company has compiled a list of helpful links here — along with free art you can download for your cards.

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May 11, 2007

“Brotherly Love turned Big Brotherly”

Filed under: Current Affairs — Corrine Kenner @ 8:31 am

Columnist Deroy Murdock is the latest to come out in support of the Philadelphia psychics who were shut down.

Philadelphia officials should have skipped their
recent crackdown on spiritual advisors. The City of Brotherly Love
turned Big Brotherly when police on April 24 began padlocking psychics’
and Tarot card readers’ shops.

A previously
un-enforced third-degree misdemeanor forbade anyone to "pretend for
gain or lucre to tell fortunes or predict future events," as the
Philadelphia Inquirer reported. Before defense attorneys intervened,
cops hammered these occult entrepreneurs, supposedly because they
bamboozled clueless clients.

Really? In
trying times, many Americans see their clergymen. Others consult
bartenders, barbers, or bowling partners. So what if some Americans
believe those who peer into crystal balls? Most folks steer away from
seers, but if no one got frog-marched into a séance at gunpoint,
Philadelphia authorities should have focused on those who faced gun
muzzles, namely the 127 people fatally shot or otherwise killed through
April 24, 17.6 percent more than the 108 killed through that date in
2006.

Unfortunately, he lumps psychics in with prostitutes and drug dealers … but I guess we’ll take whatever friends we can get!

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May 10, 2007

“There are mysteries which can never be explained”

Filed under: Tarot Talk — Corrine Kenner @ 7:16 am

National Review Online offers a surprising defense of psychic readers.

It opens with a cynical description of a $10 tarot reader … but concludes like this:

It can be salutary from time to time to feel in your guts —
and against the protests of your head — that there are mysteries which
can never be explained, realms of experience inaccessible to the
pitiless light of logic and science, strange forces that play above and
below this vale of tears. I do not argue that there are such things; I
say only that, when one has lost the capacity, in unguarded moments, to
feel that there are, life and imagination are the poorer for it.

This
feeling has a checkered record, let us admit. It has burned rather a
few witches. But it has also breathed life into much of what is best in
our art and history. Take it away and you have Israel without its
prophets, Greece without its Delphi, a landscape in which every oasis
of longing for the transcendent is desiccated by the dry winds of
reason.

In the modern age, one
inevitably makes long and arduous sojourns across this desert. Betty,
in her simple and unpretentious way, offers fifteen minutes of shade
and a sip of water, all for the price of a very cheap dinner. That is
no fraud, my dear Philadelphians. It is a bargain.

Go read the whole thing.

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May 9, 2007

Cosmic Designs

Filed under: Astrology — Corrine Kenner @ 6:00 am

Astronomy … or astrology?

Roman Towns Built With Astronomy
Rossella Lorenzi, Discovery News

May 8, 2007 — Ancient Romans built their towns using astronomically aligned grids, an Italian study has concluded.

Published recently on the physics Web site, www.arXiv.org, maintained at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, the research examined the orientation of virtually all Roman towns in Italy.

"It emerged that these towns were not laid out at random. On the contrary, they were planned following strong symbolic aspects, all linked to astronomy," Giulio Magli, of the mathematics department at Milan’s Polytechnic University, told Discovery News.

Part of a wider study published in Magli’s book "Secrets of the Ancient Megalithic Towns," the research examined the orientation of some 38 towns in Italy.

Magli explained that ancient Roman writers, including Ovid and Plutarch, documented how the foundation of a new town took into account the flight of birds and astronomical references.

"However, the link between Roman towns and sky symbolism has never been fully investigated," Magli said.

The rest of the story is here .

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May 8, 2007

Reading Tarot for Gypsies

Filed under: Family Life — Corrine Kenner @ 6:25 am

Wheel_2

My 17-year-old, Katherine, is in the Czech Republic this week. She traveled there with her dad (my first husband) to take photos of their long-lost gypsy relatives.

Here she is in Prague — holding a hubcap over her face because they had just passed a Kafka exhibit and she was feeling surreal.

I had asked them to keep their eyes open for the Magic Realist Press, the studio that produced The Baroque Bohemian Cats’ Tarot, The Victorian Romantic Tarot, The Fairytale Tarot, The Fantastic Menagerie Tarot, and, of course, The Tarot of Prague.

Apparently, they didn’t have much luck.

"flight was good," she emailed me. "still alive," she wrote. "can’t talk long."

Obviously not, I thought. The poor child was so tired from her trans-oceanic journey that she had lost her ability to find the "Shift" key!

"Prague looks just like postcards. looked for your tarot store. ended up in vnjdaosowkenncjnkdosielzzznbjokdshjlzjhdiuoewmz (sp?)"

Luckily, Katherine had brought her own tarot cards with her on the trip, just in case she gets the chance to read for some of the Roms.

She makes me laugh. My daughter traveled to Europe to read tarot for gypsies.

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May 7, 2007

Welcome to my website

Filed under: Uncategorized — Corrine Kenner @ 12:12 am

Corrine_kenner_the_tarot_reader_pro
I’m Corrine Kenner, the tarot reader — and this is where you can buy my
books, subscribe to my free tarot newsletter, and learn more about the professional tarot readings I offer.

This page also features my blog — an online tarot journal, filled with notes and commentary from the tarot world.

Scroll down to see what’s new!

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May 6, 2007

Draw Three Cards

Filed under: Tarot Cards — Corrine Kenner @ 11:26 pm

Threecarddraw_2

It took me long enough, but I finally got around to scanning the drawing I made during Mary Greer’s workshop at the Readers Studio. During the workshop, she taught us how to do three-card drawings — and she wasn’t just talking
about drawing three cards from the deck. She was talking about drawing
our readings, on paper, with images from three separate cards.

In other words, she had us shuffle, pull three cards, and then
combine the symbols and images of our choice from those cards into one
whimsical drawing.

Can you guess which cards I drew? The answer is after the jump.

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A Tarot Turn On

Filed under: Tarot Imagery — Corrine Kenner @ 7:23 pm

I just ordered this switch plate from a seller on eBay. It’s so cool!

Tarot_switchplate

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