
LENORMAND CARD NUMBERS
Anyone who has used a Lenormand deck or examined one knows that its cards are ordered by their number, starting with the Rider as card 1 and ending with the Cross as card 36.
I always found it tricky to memorize Lenormandās card numbers. Itās even tricky to look them up in a guidebook!
Thatās because there isnāt a meaningful association between a Lenormand card and its number, so it takes time to memorize it.
And Lenormandās card numbers donāt operate like numbers in other decks, especially the Tarot and others where numerology makes a difference.
So letās explore Lenormandās card numbers a little.
NOT LIKE THE TAROTāS NUMEROLOGY
The Tarotās numerology is powerful.
Every card is associated with a number, and that number has numerological qualities that are directly associated with the meaning of the card.
The major arcana run from 0 for the Fool, to 21 for the World. Each minor arcana suit runs from 1 to 10 and has four court cards: A page, knight, queen, and king.
Though the major arcana need a bit of practice before we fluently associate their number with their symbol, the minor arcana are very easy to remember because the card is its number - e.g. the 6 of swords or ace of cups.
But this is not the case with Lenormandās deck.
Lenormandās card numbers donāt have a numerological quality associated with their symbols.
At least not that we know of and not in an obvious way.
Yes, the Rider who kicks off the deck can be associated with the number 1, but itās not clear what the association would be between 36 and the Cross, or 21 and the Mountain.
And even if we reduced these two-digit numbers to single digits, itās still not clear that thereās a connection: 36 reduces to 9, and itās still not clear why the Cross would be associated with the number 9. If anything it should be associated with the number 4.
And 21 reduces to 3, which is often considered festive, procreative, and abundant, which is not aligned with the cold and distant energies of the Mountain.
As such, Lenormandās card numbers are not meaningful in a numerological sense and so they donāt add value to a cardās meaning or help us with interpreting it.
This said, Iāve come across authors who add up numbers in a reading to come up with an outcome card.
For example, suppose we do a three-card reading and we get the Sun, the Rider, and the Ring.
The summing up technique involves adding up each cardās number to find the outcome card. Thatās 31 + 1 + 25 = 57, which reduces to 12 or the Bird. The problem with this technique is that we can further reduce 12 to 3, which is the Ship.
And thatās why Iām not given to this technique: Itās not clear at which point we stop reducing and if we stick with a rule, like reducing once, we risk not getting a single digit card number that could be relevant to the reading.
NUMERICAL VS. ALPHABETICAL ORDER OF THE CARDS
Lenormandās cards are ordered from 1, the Rider, to 36, the Cross.
But because there isnāt a meaningful association between a cardās number and its symbol, itās not easy to memorize the card numbers.
Thatās why I prefer to organize Lenormandās cards in alphabetical order - because itās then much easier to look them up in my book - and I say āmyā book because all other Lenormand books organize the cards in their classical order.
For this purpose, how we name the cards becomes relevant.
Some of the card names I use are different from other decks.
Differences can just be a matter of singular vs. plural versions of the same word. Or they can be at the level of the word itself, where the name I use for a card is completely different from the one used in other decks.
Letās use the classical Blue or Red Owl decks to make a few comparisons.
In the Blue/Red Owl decks the Birds are plural, mine is singular. Similarly, the Lilies, Mice, Roads, and Stars, are all pluralized in the Blue/Red Owl decks, whereas I keep them in singular form.
Other names are completely different or a variant of the word. For example, my Clover is the Cloverleaf in the Blue/Red Owl decks. My Flowers is the Bouquet, my Snake is the Serpent, my Tower is the Hightower, and my Whip is the Birchrod.
What names are used for the cards will naturally affect their alphabetical order.
I use my alphabetical order for the card meanings on Lenormand Readerās website.
THE HOUSES LAYOUT AND CARD ORDER
There is one important and very interesting use of the card numbers and thatās the Houses spread.
This is an interesting Grand Tableau technique that involves drawing the cards over their āHousesā.
First, the cards are laid out in their numerical order and in a Tableau configuration. These are the āHousesā and they can be an actual deck of cards that you lay out in numerical order and in the Tableau version that you want to draw. Some Readers use a tablecloth with the cards drawn on it. Or the Houses can just be imaginary.
I just keep this diagram of the Houses in front me, on my computer when Iām running this Tableau technique. This one is for the Grand Tableau of Nines, but you would use the one for the Piquet Tableau if that's what you're drawing.
Next, we draw our actual Tableau cards on top of the Houses, and interpret how they interact with their Houses. It can be as simple as interpreting a card combination, or having the Tableau card tell us whatās going on in that House.
In her amazing book, The Complete Lenormand Oracle Handbook, Caitlin Matthews suggests: āThe card you lay is the constant, representing itself. The House is the variable. For instance, you are always yourself, but you may modify your behavior in different situations.ā
I feel that the House provides the context - or the stage - within which the card we lay is operating.
Try your hand at the Houses spread, and if you want to learn more about it, check out Lenormand Readerās Handbook of Layouts.
This sums the key points around Lenormandās card number. If you have other ideas about them, Iād love to hear them. So be sure to follow up on social media and ping me on there.
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