Wheel of Change Fool
We see an androgynous youth straddling a
chasm. His arms are raised above his head. From one hand we see a
small fire and in the other she holds a chalice that is tilted
downward and spilling its contents. Above the Fool's head we see
four white birds fluttering. They each hold one letter - T A R O.
The Fool is dressed in a bright green tunic and leggings with one
gold leg and one green. His right foot is bare. He wears a gold
belt with a closed red pouch dangling from it. The bottom of his
tune is adorned with bells and he wears a spotted scarf knotted
about his neck and another at his wrist. A stream of cosmic energy
seems swirl up from the chasm and encircle the Fool. Red roses
seem to be falling from his arms. On his right side we see a
guitar resting, on his left we see a fox near the edge of the
chasm. Behind the Fool we see the radiant light of the Sun rising
to illuminate the sky.
The Book describes the Fool as symbolizing
the experience of feeling you are in exactly the right place at
the right time. It may be the beginning of a new journey of life
but, like the Fool, you may not recognize what it is. You have all
you need to make a success of yourself at your fingertips if you
would but look for it. Perhaps you must free yourself from
convention as the Fool has done, and like him, accept what comes
to you. In this way you may try something completely new and
discover that you are rather good at it. Because he has no cares,
worries or fears the Fool is symbolic of impulsiveness and even
irresponsibility and recklessness. He symbolizes freedom from
convention and anew creative vitality in this less restrictive
world.
What I see is a feeling of joy, exuberance
and innocence, maybe even ignorance, of what is going on around
you. This Fool seems so caught up in the wondrous things swirling
around him that he is oblivious to the fact that he is straddling
a chasm. There is no fear of the consequences because it doesn't
even occur to him that there are consequences. I see the Fool as
representing an attitude and experience that many of us lose as we
become more adult. We get so caught up in following the rules and
playing nice that we forget to just let go and enjoy ourselves -
so what if it's not politically correct. To me Homer Simpson, the
cartoon character, is one representation of the Fool. He just
blindly charges ahead with no concern for the outcome and without
any worries of failure. It is doesn't work out - well fine. I am
both fascinated and repelled by Homer. I find myself focusing too
much on who gets to clean up after this Fool. But of course that
isn't the Fool's problem is it? And that, to me, is what I need to
learn from the Fool. Sometimes you need to stop worrying about how
the story ends and just enjoy the ride. To quote Tom Cruise (at
least I think it was Tom Cruise) in the movie Risky Business
- "sometimes in life you've gotta say what the f***".
Bees Blessings,
Debbie