Tarot cannot be fully taught through words alone.
Its symbols live through myth, image, culture, language, and—most importantly—the lived experience of the person encountering them. Meaning is not fixed; it is shaped by perception.
Cupid’s Bow explores this truth through story.
This February gathering moves through a three-card arc—The Lovers, Strength, and The Fool—woven together through mythology and narrative. Beginning with the myth of Cupid’s bow, whose aim was impossible to ignore once released, we follow a symbolic story of choice, presence, and movement into the unknown.
Tarot cannot be fully taught through words alone.
Its symbols live through myth, image, culture, language, and—most importantly—the lived experience of the person encountering them. Meaning is not fixed; it is shaped by perception.
Cupid’s Bow explores this truth through story.
This February gathering moves through a three-card arc—The Lovers, Strength, and The Fool—woven together through mythology and narrative. Beginning with the myth of Cupid’s bow, whose aim was impossible to ignore once released, we follow a symbolic story of choice, presence, and movement into the unknown.