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Live Tarot · Rider–Waite & Ceccoli

The cards remember what you forgot.

A live, intimate reading with a professional tarot reader. Two decks — one for the waking world, one for your dreams and the child still living inside you.

Consult Sofiya directly to know her fees for a Tarot reading — every session is personal, and pricing is shared on request.

Private & confidential Russian · English Almaty, Kazakhstan
Sofiya, A spiritual guide from the steppe
The Moon
The Sun
The Star
Sofiya, A spiritual guide from the steppe
Sofiya
Almaty, Kazakhstan
Your reader

A spiritual guide from the steppe

Sofiya is a professional tarot reader from Kazakhstan, raised between the silence of the steppe and the old shamanic traditions of her grandmothers. She reads the cards as a quiet act of prayer — listening, naming, and never forcing.

She works with the Rider–Waite deck for the practical questions of love, work and direction, and with the dream-soaked Nicoletta Ceccoli deck for what only the inner child knows — recurring dreams, old wounds, and the emotions you can't quite explain.

"The cards don't predict your future. They show you what your soul already knows."
Dream interpretationInner child workTrauma-informedEnergy protection
Two decks · One reader

Rider–Waite Tarot

Classical

Rider–Waite Tarot

The classical Western tarot.

Created in 1909 by A. E. Waite and illustrated by Pamela Colman Smith, the Rider–Waite deck is the foundation of modern Western tarot. Best for life direction, decisions, relationships, work and timing.

Card of the Day

Rider–Waite Tarot

The Fool
Rider–Waite · № 0
The Fool
Upright

Beginnings, innocence, leap of faith, spontaneity, free spirit.

Reversed

Recklessness, hesitation, naivety, foolish risks.

beginningsfreedomtrust
Three-Card Spread

Past · Present · Future

Hold a question in your heart. Tap each card to reveal it.

Take a breath. When you're ready, shuffle the deck.

Private Reading

Book a session with Sofiya

All bookings are arranged directly on WhatsApp. Send a message with your preferred deck, topic and time — Sofiya will confirm a slot that suits her practice.

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Scan the QR with your camera to open Instagram and message the reader directly.

Talk to Sofiya on WhatsApp

All readings are arranged on WhatsApp. She replies in Russian and English.

Learn

Tarot — the 78-card mirror of the psyche

The Tarot is a deck of 78 cards — 22 Major Arcana describing archetypal forces and 56 Minor Arcana mapping daily life through four suits (Cups, Pentacles, Swords, Wands). Used as a contemplative tool, it offers a symbolic mirror to your present situation rather than a deterministic forecast.

Major and Minor Arcana

The Major Arcana — from The Fool to The World — track the archetypal hero's journey through trial, transformation and renewal. The Minor Arcana — Ace through King in four suits — map everyday emotions (Cups), resources (Pentacles), thoughts (Swords) and energy (Wands).

Reading with intention

Tarot is most useful when you bring a clear question. Shuffle while holding the question in mind, draw the cards, and read them as a conversation between symbol and intuition. Reversed cards invite shadow or delayed expressions of the same energy.

What Tarot is not

Tarot is not fortune-telling. It does not name lottery numbers or fix outcomes. It is a reflective practice — a way to notice what you already feel and consider how to act with awareness.

Frequently asked questions

Do I need to be psychic to read Tarot?
No. Reading Tarot is a learnable interpretive skill. Begin by studying a card a day and noticing how its themes show up in your week.
What deck should I start with?
The Rider–Waite–Smith deck is the most widely studied and underlies most modern interpretations. Once familiar, explore decks like Ceccoli or the Marseille tradition.
Can a Tarot reading predict the future?
Tarot describes present energies and likely trajectories — not fixed outcomes. Choices you make after the reading change what unfolds.
How often should I read for myself?
A short daily card practice is excellent. For larger questions, a single thoughtful spread is more useful than repeated re-asks.