Man, life throws curveballs, right? You hit a certain age, you think you’ve got things mostly figured out, and then bam! A big decision hits you, and suddenly you’re stuck staring at the wall at three in the morning. I’m usually the guy who relies on spreadsheets and logic, but recently, spreadsheets just weren’t cutting it. I needed something simple, something fast, and honestly, something a little bit weird to cut through the noise. That’s how I finally hauled out that dusty deck of Tarot cards my cousin gave me ages ago.
My Failed Start and Why I Switched to Three Cards
The first thing I did was what everybody else does: I Googled “Tarot reading for beginners.” And of course, every guide threw the massive Celtic Cross spread at me. Twelve cards, different positions for hopes, fears, the environment, external influences—it was a total disaster. I sat there for an hour, shuffling, laying them out, and then staring blankly. I tried to decipher the whole story, but all I ended up with was a headache and more confusion than when I started. The complexity was overwhelming; I just needed a snapshot, not a whole movie.
I realized I needed to dial it back, way back. So, I grabbed the deck, shoved it back in the box, and decided to rethink the whole process. I decided to ignore the fancy guides and just use the simplest setup possible. That’s how I settled on the three-card spread. It forces you to focus. It stops the overthinking. It gives you the necessary structure without burying you in detail.
Stripping It Down: The Practice Process
The whole point of this practice for me was speed and clarity. I decided I would dedicate just five minutes to a reading, start to finish, or I’d walk away. This kept me honest and stopped me from getting sucked into analyzing every single detail on the card art.

Here’s the straightforward routine I hammered out. I didn’t worry about complicated rituals; I just focused on the hands-on process.
- First, I Cleared the Mess: I started every session by picking up the deck and just knocking on it a few times. I read somewhere that this “clears the energy.” I don’t know if that’s true, but it felt good. It was my physical signal to myself to shut up and pay attention.
- I Asked a Simple Question: This was crucial. I banned any question starting with “Should I?” Those questions are too vague. I forced myself to use action verbs: “What is the energy surrounding X decision right now?” or “What do I need to let go of to move forward with Y?” I wrote the question down so I couldn’t change it mid-shuffle.
Then came the actual shuffle. I handle the cards roughly. I cut the deck multiple times, mixing them up until my hands started feeling tired. Once I felt like they were sufficiently scrambled—and this is key—I gathered them up and laid them flat on the table.
My final step before laying them out was to simply cut the deck into three roughly equal piles. I didn’t count the cards; I just split them by feel. The stack on the left became Card 1, the middle became Card 2, and the right became Card 3. Simple as that. No fancy bridge shuffles, no elaborate cuts.
Laying Down the Basics: The P-P-F Spread
For a beginner, the interpretation needs to be immediate and undeniable. I figured out that the easiest template to slap onto those three cards is Past, Present, Future (P-P-F). It gives you a clear timeline, and it makes interpreting the connection between the cards way less intimidating.
I flipped the three cards over, left to right, and defined the meaning of each position before I even looked at the imagery:
- Card 1 (The Past): This is the foundation. It tells me what I’ve already done, what got me to the current situation. I look for the defining action or attitude that led up to my question.
- Card 2 (The Present): This is the meat of the situation. What is happening right now, whether I recognize it or not? This card always hits the hardest and usually forces me to confront reality.
- Card 3 (The Future): This isn’t set in stone. This is the likely outcome if I continue down the current path defined by Card 2. It’s the result, the potential consequence, or the advice on where I should steer things next.
I found that if I drew two positive cards and one negative, or vice versa, the timeline helped me contextualize the whole thing. If I had a tough Card 1 (Past) but a great Card 2 (Present), it meant I had successfully moved past the struggle. If Card 2 was tough, but Card 3 looked promising, it meant the current struggle was just temporary and manageable.
Example Interpretation: The other day, I drew the Ten of Swords (Past), the Two of Pentacles (Present), and the Ace of Wands (Future). I didn’t rush to the book. I just looked at them.
Ten of Swords? That’s rock bottom. Painful ending. That was definitely the past few months at work. Two of Pentacles? Juggling. Balancing demands. Yeah, that’s exactly what I’m doing now, trying to keep two projects afloat. Ace of Wands? New beginnings, energy, passion. That told me if I kept juggling and managing the current chaos, a new, exciting opportunity was coming up soon. That combination made immediate, actionable sense, far more than that ridiculous Celtic Cross ever did.
My simple practice cut out all the anxiety. I now grab the deck, ask a question, shuffle, lay three down, and get a quick, straightforward answer within five minutes. If you’re a beginner who keeps messing up with the big, fancy spreads, forget the complex guides. Just cut three cards, define them as P-P-F, and trust what your gut tells you. It genuinely works.
