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The Hanged Man — Tarot card, Tarot de Marseille (Conver) deck
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The Hanged Man

Tarot de Marseille (Conver)
surrendersuspensionnew perspectivevoluntary sacrifice

The number 12 — the analogue of the Papesse in the second series: accumulation, a halt, withdrawal. He hangs head downward, awaiting birth; his fall is an ascent.

The card's image

A figure is suspended by one leg from a flesh-colored crossbeam between two trees; the only connection to the human world is a rope. His arms are crossed behind his back, his legs folded for complete immobilization; the position of the legs slightly echoes the Emperor's, but here for the sake of stillness. On either side — stumps of cut branches. His hair is dark yellow. At the point where the rope touches the heel — a triangle within a circle. The pockets of his coat are crescent-shaped — one giving, one receiving. Ten buttons on the coat. Twelve cut wounds on the trees.

Interpretation

Beginning with Strength Strength, the numbering of the series strives to complete the descent toward the source of primal force in the chaos of the unconscious; the Hanged Man submits to this pull toward the bottom and expresses it through complete stillness — he hangs head downward, his hair submerging in the depths, taking root there.

Upright — a halt, a pause, meditation, the offering of oneself as a gift. A time not to choose and not to act — the incubation of a spiritual or material birth. An inverted perspective: the intellect has been cast down, rationality has ceased to dominate, and consciousness has become receptive to deep inner wisdom.

If the Papesse The Popess was the incubator, the Hanged Man himself is being incubated: he has entered the state of a fetus in order to create a new being, and hangs between heaven and earth, awaiting birth. He does nothing and chooses nothing: his fall is an ascent — having surrendered the neurotic theater of the ego, he offers the ego's anxieties as a sacrifice to the inner work.

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Advice & forecast

The card's advice

Do not choose, let go, surrender the ego's anxieties to the inner work; shift your point of view. Now is the time of non-doing, not action: incubation proceeds best in stillness and surrender. An inverted perspective will open deep wisdom inaccessible to the rational mind. Beside the unnamed arcanum Death it is precisely your surrender that will turn the coming transformation into a transition rather than a catastrophe.

What the forecast holds

Something is preparing to be born through surrender; your perspective will be inverted. Ahead lies a pause, a sacrifice, a period of suspension and rethinking, when the habitual way of viewing life will shift. This is not stagnation but incubation: you have entered the state of a fetus in order to create a new being. After the halt, if it is accepted, a spiritual birth and a new point of view will come.

The Hanged Man reversed

The reversed Hanged Man — the halt turned into captivity: delay, illness, punishment, enforced immobility. Guilt, imagined transgressions (twelve bleeding wounds on the trees), a sacrifice the person is condemned to make. The powerlessness of a victim hanging head downward because of neurotic situations in the parental lines ('the two trees'), hiding shameful secrets behind their back. Loss — in the deep sense, the sacrifice of the ego's illusory 'riches.'

The card in spreads

The same card reads differently depending on the spread and the question — compare real spreads:

How it differs from Waite

The Hanged Man — Rider-Waite-Smith deck
Rider-Waite-SmithThe Hanged Man
Tarot de Marseille (Conver)The Hanged Man

Waite surrounds the Hanged Man's head with a golden nimbus and places the emphasis on enlightenment: the suspended man attains illumination, his sacrifice is radiant, his face serene. The Marseille Hanged Man is more earthly and ambiguous: there is no nimbus, only a rope, stumps of branches, and twelve wounds on the trees. His essence is incubation: if the Papesse was the incubator, he himself is being incubated — he has entered the state of a fetus. Waite shows voluntary illumination through sacrifice; Marseille shows surrender and non-doing, the relinquishment of the neurotic theater of the ego in favor of inner work, without any guarantee of a nimbus.

WaiteTarot de Marseille (Conver)
HeadGolden nimbus — illumination has been attained.No nimbus; hair submerging in the depths, taking root.
EmphasisEnlightenment through voluntary sacrifice.Incubation, a fetus awaiting birth.
ToneThe serenity of the illuminated.Surrender, non-doing, the sacrifice of the ego's anxieties.

Symbolism & correspondences

The degree of number 12 (the second degree of the second series) — the analogue of two: accumulation, a halt, incubation. This is receptive, passive energy of surrender and gestation, the descent to the bottom of the unconscious. Numerologically — the pause of an inverted perspective: the intellect is cast down in favor of deep wisdom, the fetus awaits birth.

Element
Water
Astrology
Neptune · Water · Hebrew letter Mem
Arcana
Major

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