The Labyrinth Oracle: Cards for the Spiritual Path is a
divination system for people interested in personal growth, seeking a tool to
assist them on their spiritual path. The word "path" in "Cards
for the Spiritual Path" is meant to have a double meaning, representing
both the spiritual Path as well as the path through a Labyrinth or Maze. Most
cards are named after and picture a thing, activity, or person from mythology
that's related to Mazes or Labyrinths. They use that image to represent an
archetype or facet of the spiritual Path and the labyrinthine depths within.
"The Labyrinth Oracle" is authored by Walter D. Pullen with card art by Kathy Pullen. It contains 109 cards,
with about 30,000 words of interpretations, spreads, and background
information.
"The Labyrinth Oracle" is available at the following locations:
"The Labyrinth Oracle" is a unique and effective divination system
for the following reasons:
- Easy to use: The Labyrinth Oracle is designed to be an easy to use
tool for the spiritual seeker. Few standard decks are able to give a concise
meaning and clear energy for each card. Often with other decks, people need to
consult a book to decipher whatever card. Labyrinth Oracle cards have a single
keyword on them that enables one to get a good idea of what the card is all
about from just a glance. One can do quality readings from just picking up
energy from the title, keyword, and card art. For the actual card descriptions
in the interpretation booklets, the goal is to describe enough so the reader
can pick up on all the various facets of the card, but not have so much text
that it becomes distracting.
- Effective readings: The Labyrinth Oracle is designed to answer
questions people commonly ask in readings. Frequently, the seeker has a
decision to make and wants guidance on the consequences of each choice, they
want to know their compatibility with a partner, or they want to know about
their purpose in life. Hence the specially designed Labyrinth Oracle decision,
relationship, and elemental spreads. The Labyrinth Oracle also has spreads
similar to those in other divination systems that just analyze a situation.
- Empowering cards: There are no “good” or “bad” cards
in the Labyrinth Oracle, and there's no concept of “reversed” cards in the
system either. The purpose isn't to answer what fate holds in the future, as
much as it is to consider the questions about the energies in play at the
present. Each card has its positive and negative potentials, with the goal
being to make one aware of both the challenges and opportunities and how to
best deal with them.
- Similarity to Tarot: The Labyrinth Oracle is a new and unique
divination system, designed with the spiritual seeker in mind. Although the
Labyrinth Oracle is different from Tarot, they do have similar structure, and
so will seem familiar to Tarot users. For example, one feature of the Labyrinth
Oracle is its three suits, which are similar to the four suits in Tarot that
represent the states of being in the four elements. Labyrinth Oracle suits
represent actions and motivations, and cover the fundamental trinities of
experiencing/doing/being, beginning/middle/end, birth/existence/death,
maiden/mother/crone, or cardinal/fixed/mutable.
There are 109 cards in the Labyrinth Oracle. This isn't an
arbitrary number, because the number 109 has special energetic properties:
- 109 represents Labyrinths: If we define A=1, B=2, and so on until
Z=26, then the word "Labyrinth" adds up to 109.
- 109 represents life's journey: 109 starts with first digit “1”,
ends with the last digit “9”, and has the empty digit “0” in the
middle. That represents the spiritual Path from beginning to end, that each
soul fills in with their own unique journey.
- 109 represents the spiritual Path: 109 starts with the digit
"1", which being a straight line represents the ordinary physical or
intellectual state of being. The evolving person then discovers intuition or
spirituality, represented by the circle or digit "0". Finally one
blends the two aspects of life together, with spirit controlling on top,
represented by the "0" over the "1", or the digit
"9".
- 109 is important in religion: A mala (Sanskrit for “garland”) is
a beaded string commonly used by Buddhists and Hindus when repeating mantras.
It has 108 beads total, or 109 when including the head bead.
- 109 covers heptominoes: There are 108 heptominoes, or different ways
of connecting seven squares together orthogonally to compose a figure. Each
Labyrinth Oracle card is associated with one of the heptominoes, and uses it as
a glyph. Combined with the special final Labyrinth Oracle card that doesn't
have a glyph, that results in 109 cards total.
- 109 is the number of love: 109 is similar in shape to a heart! The
digit “9” looks like the right half of a heart, while the digits “1”
and “0” if pushed together can make a backwards “9”, or the other half
of a heart. <3
The back of Labyrinth Oracle cards is a unique nine ring Labyrinth, with
circuit sequence 349852167. This Labyrinth is called "The Perfect
Labyrinth", because it's the smallest standard full circuit Labyrinth
(with the least number of circuits) without any limitations or blemishes. More
specifically, it has all of the following properties:
- Symmetric: A symmetric Labyrinth has the same circuit sequence when
navigating the Labyrinth in reverse from exit to entrance. In other words,
turning the Labyrinth inside out results in the same Labyrinth.
- Non-trivial circuits: A Labyrinth has trivial circuits if there are
three or more circuits in consecutive sequence, like fanfold paper. Such
circuits are redundant and adjacent circuits could be removed to make a simpler
Labyrinth that's still fundamentally the same.
- Non-partitionable circuitwise: A Labyrinth is circuit partitionable
if it's possible to divide the Labyrinth into two or more smaller Labyrinths.
In other words, there exists a wall between circuits through which there's only
one passage. Even the classic seven circuit Labyrinth (with
circuit sequence
3214765) is partitionable, because it's really twin three circuit Labyrinths
with a one circuit Labyrinth between them.
- Non-partitionable radiuswise: A Labyrinth is radius partitionable if
there exists a wall running from outside to center (perpendicular to the
circuits) through which there's only one passage. In such a scenario, one could
remove that radius along with the innermost or outermost circuit it connects
to, and have a simpler Labyrinth that's still fundamentally the same.
- Mergeable: A mergeable Labyrinth allows the entrance and exit
passages to be aligned on the same axis. That requires the first circuit from
the entrance to be closer to the entrance than the last circuit is from the
exit.
"The Perfect Labyrinth" is also visually aesthetic. When the
entrance and exit passages are merged to be aligned on the same radius, there's
an enclosed middle area three passages long, which nicely divides the nine
circuit Labyrinth into 3 groups of three circuits. If the center area is three
passages wide (as seen above) then the entire Labyrinth is 21 passage units in
diameter, or 7 groups of three. The four wall endpoints where passages make
U-Turns compose a square, with each vertex (5, 2) passage units away from
adjacent vertices (5 + 2 = 7). The Labyrinth Oracle has 109 cards, or 12 groups
of 9 cards each + one extra card, which aligns with the zodiac (12 signs) and
this Labyrinth (9 circuits).
Interact with "The Labyrinth Oracle" in the following ways::
- Facebook: Visit the
Facebook group for "The Labyrinth Oracle". Post comments and
"Like" it if so inspired. See also general Facebook page for the author
and the artist.
- Blog: The author's blog,
"Labyrinth of Life", further considers the spiritual Path.
- Twitter: Follow the author's
Twitter account for latest news.
- E-Mail: Contact the author at this
address.
This site produced by Walter D.
Pullen (see Astrolog homepage), hosted on astrolog.org and Magitech, created using Microsoft FrontPage, page last updated
September 2, 2022.