Em'-pris ~ The female ruler of an empire (or another type of imperial realm) or the wife or widow of an emperor.
Number: III, 3
Hebrew Letter: Daleth (or Dalet)
Color: Emerald Green
Element: Earth (primary) and Water
Planet: Venus
Season: Spring/Autumn
Chakra: Root
Humor: Black Bile
Temperament: Melancholic (primary) and Phlegmatic
Sense: Smell
System: Reproductive System, Skin, Digestion
Keywords
Love, beauty, fertility, creativity, growth, harmony, abundance, and, when reversed, problems with pregnancy/motherhood or insecurity
The Lesson of the Tarot Empress is Nurturance
The Fool meets, accepts, and appreciates the loving, nurturing, feminine aspect of the personality.
Personality (Strengths & Weaknesses)
The Melancholic temperament is associated with the Red HSP Personality (Earth).
The Tarot Empress Traditional Meanings
Your station and potential are fulfilled. You express your creative instincts so beautifully. How wonderful it is to be gifted with such abundance. Love, effort, and persistence have paid off. Life's truest gifts of family, health, and material gain are blessings in their own right.
You are and will always be the wife of your husband's dreams, a teacher of love, mother or nurturer of children, and perhaps part spell caster when it comes to the bewitchment you can place on your mate's heart.
Feeling alone in the absence of a mate, worries concerning fertility and futility, and concerns over the foundations of financial and material security may leave you shaken and insecure. These thoughts threaten you most when you doubt that you are loved, but when you know you are loved, your creativity and loving light shine the brightest.
The Tarot Empress Biblical Meaning
Regardless of her anxieties, the Tarot Empress carries God in her heart and never forgets to offer thanks to God for every abundance in her life, no matter how small. The Empress prays to be a blessing to others. She knows that blessings are to be shared on earth and are a measure of heavenly reward. But she also knows that without the flame of thankfulness in her heart and a passion for nurturing others, she and those she nurtures would be left in the shadows. Some say the Tarot Empress represents Mother Nature, symbolizing the union between God the Mother (feminine) and God the Father (masculine). Others say she is the feminine side of Jesus, the man who loved unconditionally and taught others to do the same.
Keywords: Love, nurturance, beauty, fertility, creativity, growth, harmony, abundance, or problems with fertility (of any kind), pregnancy, motherhood, or insecurities.
Genesis 1:28 – Be fruitful and multiply.
The Tarot Empress in Health Readings
In my Taroscendence consultations, when this card appears in a wellness context, I explore nervous system support, stress reduction, natural remedies, and lifestyle adjustments that help your body feel safer and more regulated. Tarot health meanings aren't provided here because of the possibility of using a remedy that's not in your best interest. If you would like a healthy nudge in the right direction, you are welcome to request a consult from me.
Tarot Meditation
In what ways can you express creativity or attract more abundance into your life?
Food Remedies
The Empress doesn't do well with spicy or processed foods. Stale, rancid, or astringent foods, soy, too many nuts (especially peanuts) and beans, nightshades, especially tomatoes, and eggplant, will bother the Melancholic temperament. The Melancholic fares better on meat-containing diets.
Melancholic (Red): See Raising Red/Melancholic Temperament Energy Levels
Choosing Herb & Essential Oils
Basil, benzoin, black pepper, cedarwood, cinnamon, red clover, eucalyptus, frankincense, geranium, holy basil, lavender, lemon, myrrh, oak moss, orange, patchouli, peppermint, rose hips, rose absolute, rose otto, rosemary, rosewood, sage, sandalwood, turmeric, vanilla, vetiver, and violet leaf.
Stones & Crystals
Red garnet, red ruby, red jasper, red-brown tiger's eye, red coral, hematite, black onyx, obsidian, bloodstone, smoky quartz, jet, or a plain black pebble
Artwork: Lamia by John William Waterhouse, 1909
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