The Celtic Cross. Man, every book, every website, they all make it look easy. Just ten cards, right? Position One is the self, Position Two crosses it, and bam, you got a full life reading. That’s what they sell you.
I remember when I first started pulling these cards for myself. I sat down, all excited, shuffled them until my fingers hurt, and then I laid out the iconic cross and staff. And then I just stared at the cards. For like five solid minutes. It looked like ten separate, angry pieces of a puzzle that did not want to go together. I didn’t have a story; I had a list of ten random, conflicting adjectives. My initial readings were always disjointed nonsense. I wrestled with this spread for months before I figured out the three big traps that trip up every new reader.
The Messy Start: What I Kept Doing Wrong
I followed the book’s instructions meticulously, and that was the first mistake. Following the instructions means you treat the ten positions as separate entities, and that’s a disaster. I read the cards in numerical order: One, then Two, then Three, and so on. That is a guaranteed way to confuse yourself.
Here’s what I did to finally break free from that numerical trap:

- I stopped reading them one by one. I began to read them in three main clusters, and I forced them to tell a single story.
- I focused only on the core action: The Central Block (1, 2). What is the main thing happening and what is blocking it? I locked my eyes on those two until I spotted the tension.
- Then, I moved to The Basis (3, 4). What is beneath everything (The foundation, 3) and what is leaving (The past, 4)? I used these to validate the conflict in the center.
- Only then did I tackle The Future and Environment (5, 6). I looked at the environment (5) and saw how it influenced the near future (6).
This simple shift—from a list of ten to three narrative blocks—completely changed how I processed the information. I demanded a flow, and the cards finally delivered it.
Mistake #1: Overthinking the Side-Stuff
This is where I wasted hours when I should have been practicing the basics. I fell into the hole of overcomplicating things. I worried about two main things that are basically noise when you’re starting out: Reversals and Elemental Balance.
I spent so much time agonizing over the fact that I had five Swords and only one Cup. “Oh no, too much intellect, not enough emotion!” I’d think. And then the next reading, I’d have too many Pentacles. It paralyzed me. I couldn’t see the forest for the trees.
So, I made a decision. For six straight months, I ignored reversals. I tucked away all my knowledge about elemental balance. I told myself, “Read the basic upright meaning. Get the core message. If you can’t tell the story with just the upright meaning, you don’t need the complexity.” I stripped my readings down to their simplest form, and it was liberating. Suddenly, the story popped out. The complexity is just seasoning, you don’t need it for the main dish.
Mistake #2: Getting Stuck on Position Names
Every book gives you fixed names: Position 8 is “Others,” Position 9 is “Hopes and Fears.” I struggled so much with Position 9, especially. Is it what I hope will happen, or what I fear will happen? If I pulled the Three of Cups, was I hoping for a party, or fearing excessive drinking? It never made sense.
The biggest breakthrough came when I chucked those rigid names and reassigned them based on function. I simplified them mentally:
- Position 7 (The Self/Attitude): Just “How I feel.”
- Position 8 (Others/Environment): Just “What’s around me.”
- Position 9 (Hopes and Fears): Just “My inner mind talk.”
- Position 10 (The Outcome): Just “Where this is going.”
The moment I turned Position 9 into “inner mind talk,” the cards made sense. If I pulled the Tower, it wasn’t about “fearing a collapse” or “hoping for radical change.” It was simply that the querent’s mind was focused on radical, chaotic change. That click saved me so much frustration.
The Real Reason I Know This
Why am I so dogged about these beginner mistakes? Because I screwed up a reading for a close friend of mine—let’s call her Sarah—so badly that I wanted to quit the hobby entirely. She asked a simple question about a new job prospect.
I laid out the CC, and I tried to follow the rules—the numerical order, the elemental count, the strict position definitions. I delivered a reading that was literally ten contradictory sentences. I said things like, “Your self is strong (Card 1), but you’ll fail (Card 2). Your past is good (Card 4), but your foundation is weak (Card 3).” Sarah just stared at me with this blank, confused look. She walked away less informed than when she sat down. I felt like an absolute fraud.
I went home and took a picture of that spread. I taped it to my wall. I refused to do another reading for anyone else until I could look at that ten-card spread and extract one single, coherent, clear paragraph. I practiced on that one spread for a solid week, forcing myself to find the narrative blocks, ignoring the reversals, and simplifying the positions. That embarrassment burned away my beginner mistakes faster than any book ever could. I realized this spread isn’t ten problems; it’s one story told in ten parts. And that’s the only way you read it.
