
Tarot card meaning, upright and reversed.
Page of Wands represents curiosity, exploration, and new ideas.
Reversed, Page of Wands points to scattered focus, unrealistic ideas, and impulsiveness.
The Page of Wands stands in open desert holding a sprouting staff and tilting his head back to look at its leafing top, more curious about the thing than sure what to do with it. His tunic is patterned with salamanders, little fire-creatures, and the land around him is wide and empty and his to wander. This is uncomplicated enthusiasm, a spark held up and studied for the pleasure of it. Let yourself play with the idea before you decide what it has to become.
Reversed, the Page keeps looking up at new staves without following any of them into the desert, enthusiasm scattering from one bright top to the next. Or the wand stays gripped and unraised, a spark he is hesitating to even lift. The salamanders still flicker on his tunic; the fire is there. Pick one thread and walk it a little further into the open before you judge it.
AffirmationI hold the sprouting wand up and let myself be curious about it.
What spark am I hesitating to even lift and look at?
Page of Wands represents curiosity, exploration, and new ideas. The Page of Wands stands in open desert holding a sprouting staff and tilting his head back to look at its leafing top, more curious about the thing than sure what to do with it. His tunic is patterned with salamanders, little fire-creatures, and the land around him is wide and empty and his to wander.
Reversed, Page of Wands points to scattered focus, unrealistic ideas, and impulsiveness. Reversed, the Page keeps looking up at new staves without following any of them into the desert, enthusiasm scattering from one bright top to the next.
Leaning yes. Page of Wands upright leans toward yes: it carries curiosity, exploration, and new ideas. Read it as encouragement with nuance, not a guarantee.
Auspice teaches you tarot one card at a time with spaced-repetition coaching, until you can read for yourself and for friends. Reading is reflection here, never fortune-telling.