Most folks have a deck of cards lying around somewhere -- in a kitchen drawer, on a shelf gathering dust, maybe left over from the last family poker night. What many don't know is that before tarot became the go-to divination deck for modern practitioners, regular playing cards were the fortune-telling tool of choice for root doctors, conjure workers, and everyday people seeking answers. They were what Carmen used to see she was fated to die.
Playing card divination has deep roots in hoodoo tradition. It was accessible, inconspicuous, and didn't require special ordering (tarot cards were a specialty item until about the 1970s.) A root doctor could carry a deck anywhere without raising eyebrows -- after all, plenty of folks played cards for entertainment. But in the right hands, that same deck could reveal secrets, predict outcomes, and divine the best course of action for love, money, or protection work.Here is a simple system for card reading where everything makes intuitive sense:
HEARTS. Love, relationships, emotions, family matters, the home. If you're asking about romance or how someone feels, hearts are what you want to see.
DIAMONDS. Money, business, material success, practical matters. These are your "cash money" cards, showing financial flow and material concerns.
CLUBS. Work, communication, growth, smaller troubles. Clubs can indicate messages coming your way or the daily grind of making your way in the world.
SPADES. Troubles, obstacles, enemies, endings, and yes -- sometimes death and grave concerns. Don't panic when you see spades, though. Sometimes you need to know about troubles to overcome them.
The number meanings stay fairly consistent across suits, though the suit colors the interpretation:
Ace - New beginnings, important news, the root of the matter
Two - Partnership, balance, or being torn between choices
Three - Growth, expansion, groups, or three-party situations
Four - Stability, foundation, but sometimes stagnation
Five - Conflict, instability, change, arguments
Six - Harmony, small victories, movement after struggle
Seven - Spiritual matters, challenges that test you, mysteries
Eight - Movement, speed, power, mastery
Nine - Completion, wishes, the last stage before ending
Ten - Completion, full manifestation of the suit's power
Jack - A young person or message, someone immature or starting out
Queen - A woman, feminine energy, receptive power
King - A man, masculine energy, active power
The court cards often represent actual people, and many readers have traditional associations: the Queen of Spades might be a widow or angry woman, the King of Hearts a kind older man, the Jack of Diamonds a young person bringing money news.
The Cut
The simplest divination in hoodoo tradition. Shuffle while thinking of your question, cut the deck, and look at the bottom card of the cut portion. This shows the heart of the matter or the answer to a yes/no question. Red cards generally mean yes or positive, black cards mean no or negative, though court cards might indicate you need to consider a specific person's influence.
The Three-Card Draw
After shuffling, draw three cards. These represent:
1. The situation as it stands
2. What's working for or against you
3. The likely outcome
This spread's particularly good for checking on spell work -- if you've laid a trick or burned a candle, this can tell you how it's progressing.
The Five-Card Cross
Lay out five cards in a cross pattern:
- Card 1 (center): The present situation
- Card 2 (left): What's behind you/the past
- Card 3 (right): What's ahead/the future
- Card 4 (top): What helps you
- Card 5 (bottom): What challenges you
This gives you a fuller picture and is especially useful for complex situations where you need to understand multiple influences.
The Seven-Card Week
Draw seven cards, one for each day of the week ahead. Start with Sunday if you draw on Saturday night, or whatever day you're reading. This helps you plan spiritual work -- if you see the Five of Spades coming Thursday, maybe that's not the day to approach your boss for a raise, but it might be perfect timing for some protective work.
The Nine-Card Square
This is a traditional hoodoo spread that some say comes from the old fortune-telling parlors. Lay out nine cards in a 3x3 grid:
Top row (cards 1-3): The past
Middle row (cards 4-6): The present
Bottom row (cards 7-9): The future
But here's the trick -- you also read the columns:
Left column: Your thoughts and plans
Middle column: Your current circumstances
Right column: The influences of others
And the diagonals tell their own stories about how energies are flowing from past to future. This spread takes practice but reveals layers of meaning.
Some root doctors keep their reading deck separate from any deck used for games. If you're going to read regular, it's said you should sleep with the deck under your pillow for seven nights to bond with it. Others pass their deck through incense smoke before reading -- particularly Van Van for clarity or Psychic Vision for enhanced sight.
Pay attention to cards that jump out while shuffling -- these are trying to get your attention. If the same card shows up repeatedly in different readings, that's a message you need to hear even if you don't want to.
When reading for conjure work specifically, look for patterns: lots of spades might mean you need to focus on protection or reversal work before trying to draw good fortune. Multiple hearts could mean emotional work needs to come before practical magic. Diamonds clustering together suggest money work will be particularly effective.
Unlike tarot with its elaborate symbols and esoteric meanings, playing cards speak plain. They're not trying to mystify or impress -- they're trying to tell you what you need to know so you can do what needs doing. That straightforward, practical approach is what makes them perfect for hoodoo tradition.
