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Third House Secrets

Third House Secrets

著者: Cameron Steele
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Welcome to Third House Secrets, where writer Cameron Steele and clinical herbalist Meg Madden use krisis, or more plainly, the kairotic moment of a tarot draw as a path into conversations about spirituality, wellbeing, and life under the auspices of the divine feminine.


In Prophetic Culture: Recreation for Adults, Federico Campagna mentions krisis in his discussion of the tradition of Ars Memoriae, which began in the sixth century as an art-form that sought to liberate memory from oblivion by “composing mental landscapes where memories might take root and flourish” instead of decay and disappear. In German art historian Aby Warburg’s revitalization of Ars Memoriae in the twentieth century, Warburg posited that human beings’ “primordial experiences of the overpowering forces” of reality have taken on particular, recognizable, nearly universal forms, called “engrams.” These engrams are not static but “permanently active,” meaning that when we encounter them, they have the ability to sustain, change, or eradicate reality as we know it. They’re not just images, they’re messengers. In Campagna’s words, they “bridle reality.” As he writes writes:

“An engram can always bring to the fore a memory of that particular experience of reality, and thus it can inaugurate a krisis (moment of judgement) when a subject is called to decide whether to confirm or to challenge the parameters of their own fundamental frame of meaning” (165).

To confirm or to challenge the parameters of our own fundamental frame of meaning … we can’t think of a better description for what the tarot has been for us over the past years. An engram, a spirit, a way to talk to God, a moment of judgment every time we flip a card, a miniature crisis in which I open myself up to the possibility that reading—cards, books, bodies, moods, myself—can both change and stabilize reality.


Although we love podcast series on the tarot that take a researched dive into the intellectual and esoteric underpinnings of the cards—shout out to Weird Studies, Fortune’s Wheelhouse, and Hierophany as some our favorites—our approach is going to be more in line with the kairotic moment, krisis itself. We’ll pull one card from the Major Arcana each month on camera and then talk about it, seeing where our personal and professional practices with divination, spirituality, writing and teaching, and herbalism lead us. Seeing where the card wants to go, too. It’s fitting we drew Judgement, then, for our first discussion.


Enjoy and please let us know what you think!

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Cameron Steele
アート スピリチュアリティ 衛生・健康的な生活
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  • "Eclipse"
    2025/05/30

    Saturn may have finally left Pisces, but that doesn’t necessarily make the terrain of The Moon card in the tarot any clearer. Our card for June illuminates the fluidity between art and fear, magic and madness, the body and the language we try to impose upon its processes. Here we are in the realm of the howl—where the call’s not coming from within the house so much as echoing everywhere all at once. The Moon’s calling card includes questions like: What’s the difference between devotion and compulsion? Going with the flow and being overwhelmed by it? Justified wrath and a howling anger that perpetuates harm across time and space? Crowley calls this Piscean path treacherous, but there’s also something of Asclepius’ healing temple here—the ancient model of the hospital where dreams could heal alongside science, and dogs, and priestesses, and, in the words of Emily Dickinson, a certain slant of light.


    We don’t have answers, necessarily, to the questions above, but we feel our way into them with the help of Pamela Colman Smith’s Arcana XVIII, allowing the light of an eclipsing Moon to catch some of the meanings of other cards, including the High Priestess, The Star, The Sun, and The Tower, in its path of totality along the way.


    Texts mentioned:

    Amanda Wagstaff’s textiles and quilts (Here’s an interview Cameron did with Amanda last year.)

    Emily LaCour’s Full Circle exhibition featuring her “Eclipse” series (Here’s an introduction to LaCour’s art as it relates to eclipse cycles.)

    Aleister Crowley’s Book of Thoth

    Guy Dargert’s The Snake in the Clinic

    Emily Dickinson’s “A Certain Slant of Light” (320)

    Peter Kingsley’s Catafalque

    Allen Ginsburg’s “Howl”

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    1 時間 16 分
  • "Krisis"
    2025/04/29

    Texts mentioned in the talk:

    Alan Chapman’s Advanced Magick for Beginners and Magia

    The Weird Studies podcast

    Wilfred Bion’s Attention and Interpretation

    The Telepathy Tapes podcast

    Micheal Eigen’s Psychic Deadness and Kabbalah and Psychoanalysis

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    1 時間 18 分
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