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Asherah Tarot Review

Goddess Wisdom, Earth Magic, and 75 Available Cards 8 min read

4.9/5 - (11 votes)

I read the Asherah Tarot as a goddess-centered deck with both feet in the soil. It has a sacred feminine mood, but it does not feel soft in a shallow way. The deck’s voice is earthy, bodily, cyclical, and emotionally honest. It asks me to notice my own seasons: when I am growing, grieving, resting, protecting, creating, or needing to come back home to myself.

The name Asherah points toward an ancient mother-goddess current: tree, sea, womb, land, protection, and life-force. In practice, this deck feels less like a neat textbook tarot and more like a ritual space. I would reach for it when a reading needs intuition, ancestral feeling, healing around the body, relationship to nature, or a deeper question about what wants to be nourished.

The TarotFans native gallery currently shows 75 available Asherah Tarot card-front images. I am treating this page as an honest partial gallery, not a claim that every card image is displayed here. The gallery is now labeled with real card names and SEO-friendly filenames, so it is easier to browse the Major Arcana and the available Wands, Cups, Swords, and Discs.

What makes Asherah Tarot feel different?

The first thing I notice is how embodied the deck feels. Some tarot decks stay mostly in the head: symbols, keywords, systems, and clever correspondences. Asherah Tarot pulls me down into the chest, belly, hands, and ground. It is a deck for asking, “What does my body already know?” or “What cycle am I inside right now?” That makes it especially powerful for reflective readings, moon work, seasonal spreads, and emotional repair.

Queen of Discs card from the Asherah Tarot deck
Queen of Discs

Card study

Queen of Discs: body wisdom before strategy

This is the card I would start with when someone is trying to force a decision from the mind alone. The Queen of Discs brings the reading back to the body, the garden, the chair, the breath, and the animal self. In this deck she feels like a quiet permission to choose what is fertile rather than what is merely impressive.

I also like that its goddess energy is not just decorative. The feminine divine here is not only pretty robes and soft light. It includes boundaries, shadow, longing, change, old grief, sexual energy, creative power, and the need for rest. The deck can be tender, but it can also be direct. In a reading, I would expect it to name what has been ignored under the surface.

How I use this deck in real readings

My favorite questions for Asherah Tarot are gentle but brave: “What part of me needs tending?” “Where am I giving away my life-force?” “What is ready to be born?” “What boundary protects my peace?” It is also a beautiful deck for checking the emotional weather before a practical decision. Instead of rushing straight to yes or no, it shows the soul climate around the choice.

Four-card moment

Ground, listen, open, protect

Ace of Discs card from the Asherah Tarot deck
Ace of Discs
Three of Discs card from the Asherah Tarot deck
Three of Discs
Six of Discs card from the Asherah Tarot deck
Six of Discs
Ten of Discs card from the Asherah Tarot deck
Ten of Discs

This first four-card line feels like a simple Asherah Tarot practice. The Ace of Discs asks for grounding, the Three of Discs gives the pattern a body, the Six of Discs restores exchange, and the Ten of Discs reminds the reading that spiritual care should become livable support.

For love readings, I would use it carefully and honestly. It can show attraction, attachment, grief, devotion, and healing, but I would not force it into gossip-style prediction. It is better for asking what a relationship is teaching the body and spirit. For career or money questions, I would translate its earth language into practical action: protect your energy, choose the fertile ground, stop feeding what drains you, and honor slow growth.

Who will love Asherah Tarot?

I think Asherah Tarot will speak most strongly to readers who love goddess spirituality, nature-based ritual, intuitive healing, sacred sexuality, land connection, shadow work, and slow journaling. It is not the deck I would choose for someone who wants crisp minimalist symbols or a very traditional classroom deck. It is more like a personal temple in card form.

Seven of Swords card from the Asherah Tarot deck
Seven of Swords

Card study

Seven of Swords: devotion needs boundaries

In this deck the Seven of Swords reads less like simple trickery and more like the moment when energy must be protected. I would use it to ask where the querent is leaking attention, hiding from an honest conversation, or giving spiritual language to a situation that really needs a clear boundary.

It may also appeal to artists, therapists, bodyworkers, moon-cycle journalers, and readers who want tarot to feel intimate rather than flashy. The cards invite a soft gaze. I find myself asking what the image is doing inside me before I ask what the card “means.” That is a different pace, and for the right reader it is the whole gift.

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Reading style and limitations

Asherah Tarot is strongest when the question has soul texture. It can answer practical questions, but it answers them through image, symbol, and feeling. If I ask, “Should I take this job?” the deck may talk about energy, safety, growth, nourishment, and whether the land under the offer feels fertile. That can be more useful than a flat yes or no, but it requires the reader to translate the message into action.

Four-card moment

Healing an old emotional pattern

Two of Cups card from the Asherah Tarot deck
Two of Cups
Five of Cups card from the Asherah Tarot deck
Five of Cups
Six of Cups card from the Asherah Tarot deck
Six of Cups
Eight of Cups card from the Asherah Tarot deck
Eight of Cups

This Cups line is useful after a hard week. Two of Cups names the relational mirror, Five of Cups lets the grief be real, Six of Cups remembers the softer history, and Eight of Cups gives permission to leave what no longer restores the heart.

The limitation is speed. This is not my first choice for a rushed party reading or a quick “what do they think of me?” pull. Its best answers come when I sit with the card and let the image work on me. If a reader wants a fast, traditional, easy-to-teach deck, I would suggest pairing Asherah with a clearer Rider-Waite-style deck.

The Tower card from the Asherah Tarot deck
The Tower

Card study

The Tower: descent without panic

The Tower is the card I would use when the reading needs honesty without cruelty. Here it does not say that the querent has failed. It says the structure cannot hold the life-force anymore. The medicine is to stop decorating the unstable thing and begin choosing support, truth, and a cleaner foundation.

My favorite spread for Asherah Tarot

I like a five-card spread with this deck: root, body, wound, medicine, and next act of devotion. The root card shows the deeper story. The body card shows what the nervous system or heart already knows. The wound card names what needs care. The medicine card offers support. The final card asks for one action that honors life instead of draining it.

Four-card moment

Creative rebirth

Ace of Wands card from the Asherah Tarot deck
Ace of Wands
Three of Wands card from the Asherah Tarot deck
Three of Wands
Six of Wands card from the Asherah Tarot deck
Six of Wands
Queen of Wands card from the Asherah Tarot deck
Queen of Wands

This Wands pack has a brighter, more creative heat. Ace of Wands lights the first spark, Three of Wands gives it direction, Six of Wands lets it be witnessed, and Queen of Wands holds the flame as mature creative authority rather than quick excitement.

For reversals, I keep the language gentle. A reversed card may show blocked nourishment, ignored intuition, overgiving, shame around the body, a cycle being resisted, or medicine that has not been accepted yet. I do not read reversals as punishment. In this deck, they feel more like places where the life-force wants to move again.

Four-card moment

Earth advice for a hard choice

Justice card from the Asherah Tarot deck
Justice
The Hermit card from the Asherah Tarot deck
The Hermit
Wheel of Fortune card from the Asherah Tarot deck
Wheel of Fortune
The Universe card from the Asherah Tarot deck
The Universe

This final four-card moment turns the deck practical again. Justice asks for clean truth, The Hermit asks for inner listening, Wheel of Fortune reminds us that timing and cycles matter, and The Universe shows the wider pattern. It is mystical, but it still leads to one grounded next step.

Final thoughts

Asherah Tarot is a warm, deep, and strongly intuitive deck for readers who want tarot to feel connected to the feminine divine, the body, the land, and natural cycles. It is not trying to be the fastest or most traditional deck on the shelf. Its strength is atmosphere, healing, and the feeling of being called back to something ancient and alive.

If you want a deck for goddess work, shadow journaling, moon rituals, body wisdom, emotional truth, or grounded spiritual practice, Asherah Tarot is worth exploring. I would use it slowly, respectfully, and with questions that make space for honest answers. It feels like a deck that says: you are not separate from the earth, your body is part of the reading, and your healing has seasons.

Asherah Tarot product box lifestyle imageSee Asherah Tarot on DriveThruCards

Asherah Tarot FAQ

Is Asherah Tarot beginner-friendly?

It can be beginner-friendly for intuitive readers, especially if goddess and earth imagery already speaks to you. For learning classic tarot structure, I would pair it with a simple tarot guide or a Rider-Waite-style deck.

What kind of readings is Asherah Tarot best for?

I like it for body wisdom, emotional healing, moon or seasonal readings, goddess practice, relationship-to-self questions, creative rebirth, and slow journaling spreads.

Does Asherah Tarot use traditional tarot meanings?

It can be read through tarot structure, but the deck’s strongest voice is intuitive and symbolic. I would not expect every card to behave like a plain Rider-Waite teaching image.

Is this deck only for women?

No. The deck centers the feminine divine, but its themes of land, body, cycles, protection, grief, and creativity can speak to any reader who feels called to that language.

Is Asherah Tarot good for reversals?

Yes, if you read reversals gently. I use them to show blocked intuition, overgiving, resisted cycles, body shame, or medicine that needs more time to be received.

Does this TarotFans gallery show all 78 cards?

This page currently shows 75 available Asherah Tarot card-front images in the native gallery. I treat it as a useful partial gallery rather than claiming that every card image is shown here.