Sirian Starseed Tarot

Sirian Starseed Tarot

The Sirian Starseed Tarot was designed to help spiritual seekers achieve a multi-dimensional perspective on their lives and the wider world. The 78 cards have vibrant, rich, spiritually uplifting illustrations.


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Card Images from the Sirian Starseed Tarot


SirianStarseed1 SirianStarseed2 SirianStarseed3 SirianStarseed4 SirianStarseed5 SirianStarseed6 SirianStarseed7 SirianStarseed8

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Sirian Starseed Tarot Review by Mat Walker

Normally when I do a tarot reading there's a lot of analyzing and interpreting. I evaluate the traditional card meanings, the symbolic imagery, the numerology, the amount of elements that show up, the astrological significance of each card, etc. With this method I can usually gain a lot of great insight into situations through reflection and evaluation. However, none of this happened with the Sirian Starseed Tarot. Glancing at the cards, I had an immediate psychic impression of the basics of what the spread was saying. Before I started doing my ordinary analysis, something else began to happen that I've never experienced with the Tarot before. There seemed to be a psychic flow that I had somehow tapped into from using the cards; this flow was a download of information that, without analyzing as i have always done, I began discussing with the querent. My third eye and throat chakra seemed to be in a unision like I've never experienced, invoking depth of wisdom and guidance through this flow of psychic energy. This experience left both me and the querent wide-eyed and amazed.

The Sirian Starseed Tarot comes in a nice and sturdy thick box. If you’ve ever worked with the tarot before (especially if you’ve used it a lot), the box usually gets damaged because it’s flimsy and weak and your cards’ corners are going to end up getting messed up. But not this, the box is spacious and sturdy which will keep your cards nice and protected and allow you to travel with them without having your cards or the packaging get ruined.

The cards themselves are nice, big and glossy high quality cards. They are about the size of the traditional Thoth deck, if anyone is familiar with that, but it is a lot larger than the traditional Rider-Waite deck. One the back of each card has the Sirian Seal. The Sirian Seal is a geometric shape which was given to Patricia Cori by the Sirian High Council. If you haven’t worked with the Sirian Seal, it’s works to protect and allow a strong energy flow almost effortlessly (amongst a bunch of other things). That’s the beauty of this deck and having this on the back because normally when you work with Tarot you need to charge and cleanse the cards between every reading to remove the energy of the previous readings and give it that extra “OOMPH” boost. With this deck I’ve found you don’t really need to do that. It’s pretty much effortless. The cards seem to fresh and new on their own every time I pick up a card. You could always charge and cleanse your cards if it makes you feel better or if it’s a habit, but I’ve found it’s not really needed at all.

The artwork of this deck is very stunningly beautiful, it’s like your own merkabah ride. Just like a merkabah ride, you will be traveling through various dimensions of the past, present and future. This deck is going to take you through the beauties of of the Earth, the depths of the ocean, outer space and inner space. It’s a multidimensional journey through yourself. The cards are vibrant and colorful and almost psychedelic at times. Invoked in the card imagery is everything from ancient Egyptian wisdom and insight to a Celtic feeling to a light worker and celestial starseed feel.

A lot of the cards have been renamed, instead of the ‘fool’ we have the ‘starseed’ for example. Patricia explains all her changes and insight in the companion book that comes with it, which is 78 pages long. Just like anything Patricia writes it’s really insightful, beautiful and poetic. Unlike other companion books that come with other tarot decks, it doesn’t give you vague key terms that will cause you to get stuck or misunderstand the mysteries which have always been encoded in the tarot. Patricia Cori’s writing on each card helps you go on your own personal journey with each card and reveal what it means to you in a reading and in your own venture of transformation. Other changes to the deck that have been made are the suits themselves. There’s no longer pentacles, swords, wands and cups. It’s now crystals, orbs, flames and chalices. The other change to this deck is the court (or pip) cards which doesn’t have that old energy of gender patriarchy. We no longer have the king as the ruler of the suit with the queen below him and the knight and page. We now have the levels of spiritual progression from the seeker to the adept to the sage to the master.

This deck still contains all the mysteries, intrigue and deep understanding of the traditional cards such as the Rider-Waite and Thoth decks which have been painstakingly thought out. What sets this deck apart is that it’s infused with the insight of the dawning new consciousness we are entering into. This alchemical restructuring of the tarot is done masterfully. As we’re changing all our systems are changing if not breaking down, including our spiritual structures such as the Tarot and this is the perfect blend of classical and modern wisdom.

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Sirian Starseed Tarot Review by Christiana Gaudet

There are a number of reasons I might not have loved the new Sirian Starseed Tarot by Patricia Cori and Alysa Bartha, published by North Atlantic Books.

The Sirian Starseed Tarot is a "channeled deck," and clearly born of and marketed to the community of people whom many would describe as "waiting for the spaceship to land."

It is a photography deck. I don't always connect with photography decks.

Many of the card and suit names have been changed. I'm a bit of a traditionalist, so that doesn't always resonate with me.

The list could go on, but you get my point.

Now here's the punch line. I absolutely love The Sirian Starseed Tarot.

Patricia Cori, well-known voice of the Sirian High Council and designer of The Sirian Starseed Tarot, agreed to spend some time with me over Skype from her home in Italy.

Patricia has been visited by the sixth-dimensional beings from the Sirian star system since she was young. She is a world renowned author and teacher. She leads trips to sacred sites around the world. And, she is amazingly down-to-earth, compassionate and intelligent.

In our conversation I discovered that Patricia Cori has been a tarot reader for many years. Unlike many recent deck creators, tarot is not a band-wagon on which she is jumping to find a new audience. Tarot is a life-long passion for Patricia, and that passion is evident in The Sirian Starseed Tarot.

Sirian Starseed Tarot is oversized. Patricia knows this makes it a little harder to handle, but she wanted us to be able to really enter each card and experience it in meditation, as well as in divination.

Patricia worked side-by-side with the artist, Alysa Bartha, to create the deck, but she also worked with the Sirian High Council. She channeled information from them, related it to Alysa, and together they birthed the deck.

Patricia described to me times that unintentional images simply appeared in the cards; images that were appropriate and meaningful.

The cards themselves include photos from sacred sites around the world. As I said earlier, I usually don't like photography decks, but in this deck the photos work so well that all my brain registers is beautiful spiritual art.

The coloring is vibrant, with a lot of starlight in the purple-hued night skies.

To really understand this deck one must understand the concept of "Starseed." Starseed are souls who have been planted here on Earth by those who exist in higher dimensions and other star systems. Starseed have been placed here to serve Earth in our process of spiritual evolution. To me, the concept seems similar to that of the bodhisattva in Buddhism.

Those who are Starseed may not have an inherent knowledge of being Starseed. They may be psychic and spiritual. As Patricia says, they may feel not quite at home on Earth, and may have an inner longing to return to their home in the stars. They may remember past lives in Atlantis, the Mayalands or Egypt.

Many of the Major Arcana cards are renamed, as are the Minor Arcana suits. The renaming reflects the Starseed theme of the deck. The Fool is "Starseed," and the Magician is "Indigo", for instance.

The changes also reflect Patricia's desire that the deck be less hierarchical and less patriarchal. The Empress is "Abundance" and the Emperor is "Reason," describing the female/male energy without the gender references.

As a product of medieval Italy, tarot is admittedly sexist and classist. Many decks have been created over the years to reflect more inclusive values. I happily count the Sirian Starseed Tarot as one of those more balanced decks.

The Minor Arcana suit names are Crystals, Chalices, Orbs and Flames. The only one I didn't immediately resonate with was Orbs for the Air suit. I asked Patricia about this, and was completely satisfied with her answer.

First, Patricia said, she wanted to get away from the aggressive masculine concept of Air and Fire. So, instead of Swords and Wands she called them Orbs and Flames. The Air element is about thought and communication; Patricia used Orbs since that is a way Spirit communicates with us, especially in photography. And, Patricia specifically receives her messages from the Sirian High Council in orb-like "thought bubbles."

Patricia Cori is a Rider-Waite-Smith tarot reader, and her deck reflects Waite tradition quite nicely. The card backs are not reversible as they bear the triangular symbol of the Sirian High Council. Reversed meanings are not given in the accompanying booklet, but I am sure the reader could chose to honor reversals if desired.

The booklet itself is well-written, but does not fully explain each card in the detail I would have appreciated. Patricia told me she is considering writing a full-sized book for the deck. I think this would be a very worth-while project.

One of the things I like about the images of Starseed Tarot is that they are evocative without ever being gruesome. Even the most timid client would not find any words or images frightening.

That Patricia Cori understands tarot as an archetypal journey and a tool of tarot and meditation, as well as a tool of divination, gives the deck and booklet a lot of depth. Some of the images are deceptively simple, but if you spend some time with each image you will find the images evoke meaning and feeling quite easily.

The Sirian Starseed Tarot is not a deck to be taken lightly. It is more visually understandable than Tarot of Transformation, and more traditional in its images than the Doreen Virtue Angel Tarot. For me, its vibe is somewhat similar to both those decks.

The Sirian Starseed Tarot will be a good fit for a great number of readers, both beginner and advanced. I particularly recommend it to those who want a more spiritual deck and to those who want a more inclusive deck. Of course, I recommend the Sirian Starseed Tarot to those who look to the stars in the night sky and long to return home, and to those who hear a calling to bring the message of the star people to the planet Earth.

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Sirian Starseed Tarot Review by Demonessa

The Sirian Starseed Tarot is one of the “New Age” decks where Tarot has been restructured to the certain point to reflect the new reality channeled to the creator by the spiritual beings. The cards bear “star signs” – the background looks like a starry sky and the back has the channeled symbol – a Sirian Seal – on it. Though the deck may be called a “New Age RWS”, certain titles (Major Arcana, suits and the court cards) were changed though the reader familiar with the “classic Tarot” will easily recognize and grasp the concept.

I was instantly attracted to the deck because I love the decks which give people positive guidance and are concentrated on the spiritual development rather than the darker sides of the reality. However, at the current stage I am a bit disappointed in channeling and the positive psychology because all that is quite vague and does not heal all the wounds or address all the issues. Nevertheless, I decided to give the deck a chance because of its beauty and great labor embedded into it.

I am not a strict observer of rituals, either – I am rather inclined to think that hard work makes more than magic – so the idea that you do not need to charge or cleanse the deck does not appeal to me much because I am not doing this with other decks either. Nevertheless, the info that the deck is very responsive is true – when I received the deck, I was able to perform a test spread right away, the spread was really informative and addressed all the questions I had at the moment.

When I started to study the deck further, I discovered more advantages in it. Firstly, the book. The descriptions are really great, and the questions asked to each card (except court cards) are very helpful. When I was translating them into my native language, I wondered how well they described either my state/situation, or situations of other people I knew. Second, when I set on writing down my own associations I discovered that the Major Arcana reflected the stage of the spiritual development or pointed out the exact practice which could be used to remedy the ongoing problem of the querent while the Minor Arcana addressed situations connected with passions (flames), emotions (chalices), ideas or intellectual hobbies (orbs), crafts or material hobbies (crystals).

Therefore, my not belonging to the Sirian Starseed circle did not prevent me from using and enjoying the deck. Even the court cards not described by the author individually proved easy to understand, and in fact more straightforward than “classical” Tarot court cards. They are giving very clear images of various persons. The only disadvantage is the huge size of the deck. Though the cards are thick and beautiful due to their size, it is not very convenient to operate them if the reader has small hands. I hope there will be a new edition some day in the standard or even the pocket size.

Per my experience, the Sirian Starseed Tarot is a good deck for people who love the Waite system, are interested in the psychology and the spiritual development, work with querents who want to know themselves better, find an ideal job or hobby, and of course, to the fans and supporters of Patricia Cori who believe in the Sirian Revelations.

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Complete Details of Sirian Starseed Tarot

Creators: Patricia Cori, Alysa Bartha
Publisher: North Atlantic Books 2012
Deck Type: Tarot Deck
Cards: 78
Major Arcana: 22
Minor Arcana: 56
Card Language: English
Companion Material: 96 page companion booklet

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