Poker Comment Miser
Piker definition is - one who gambles or speculates with small amounts of money. How to use piker in a sentence. Mike Postle was on another tear. The moonfaced 42-year-old was deep into a marathon poker session at Stones Gambling Hall, a boxy glass-and-steel casino wedged between Interstate 80 and a Popeye's. The miser will keep his cards close to his chest without sharing. In my case, I must open myself up more to others, to people I am close to and share what I am feeling. If I keep my cards and my feelings to myself, I do not allow others to share their knowledge with me, or share my knowledge with them.
Poker Comment Miserable
Over the past week, I have found that I have pulled the same cards several days in a row. Here are the cards that keep coming up in my life at the moment.
Osho Zen – The Miser – Card #71
CC’s interpretation:
The miser will keep his cards close to his chest without sharing. In my case, I must open myself up more to others, to people I am close to and share what I am feeling. If I keep my cards and my feelings to myself, I do not allow others to share their knowledge with me, or share my knowledge with them. This card looks as if it has to do with money and material possessions, however in this case, I feel it has to do with personal resources, knowledge and feelings. It is what comes to mind when I look at the card. There is probably some fear that what I have to share has no value to others, or that I don’t want to hear what others have to say. My lesson is to learn to share more and not keep my resources — whatever they may be — close to my chest.
Book Interpretation:
This woman has created a fortress around herself, and she is clinging to all the possessions she thinks are her treasures. In fact she has accumulated so much stuff with which to adorn herself–including the feathers and furs of living creatures–that she has made herself ugly in the effort. This card challenges us to look at what we are clinging to, and what we feel we possess that is so valuable it needs to be protected by a fortress. It needn’t be a big bank balance or a box full of jewels–it could be something as simple as sharing our time with a friend, or taking the risk of expressing our love to another. Like a well that is sealed up and becomes stagnant from disuse, our treasures become tarnished and worthless if we refuse to share them. Whatever you’re holding on to, remember that you can’t take it with you. Loosen your grip and feel the freedom and expansiveness sharing can bring.
Osho Zen – The Burden – Card #63
Poker Comment Bien Miser
CC’s interpretation:
The card depicts an older wiser person pointing the way to a younger one. Is the older wiser person really that much wiser? When we are growing up, we hear a lot of things from those we assume are wiser, but sometimes the things we hear do not work for us. Our parents, teachers and elders assume that the lessons they learned will fit us, and don’t allow the younger generation to bloom and blossom except by their rules. I have had to strip those lessons away that I have learned that did not suit or fit me. I had tried hard to fit and hold myself to those lessons even though they did not ‘fit’ me. It is not easy to erase away some of the things we have heard over and over. Sometimes they are so ingrained in our memories that even when we do not agree with them, we still hear them. I heard very often “Beggars can’t be choosers,” and I have always been adamantly against that because everyone has a choice, even beggars. Nevertheless, I still hear it sometimes when I am in the process of making a choice or decision, and I have to stop myself from making choices based on what I have heard. It’s a hard exercise, but extremely important to make sure that the choices that I make are based on my own personal desires, needs, and reality (facts).
Book Interpretation:
When we carry a load of shoulds and shouldn’ts imposed on us by others we become like this ragged, struggling figure trying to make his way uphill. “Go faster, try harder, reach the top!” shouts the foolish tyrant he carries on his shoulder, while the tyrant himself is crowned with an imperious rooster. If life these days feels like just a struggle from the cradle to the grave, it could be time to shrug your shoulders and see what it feels like to walk without these characters on your back. You have your own mountains to conquer, your own dreams to fulfill, but you will never have the energy to pursue them until you release yourself from all the expectations you’ve gathered from others but now think are your own. Chances are they exist only in your own mind, but that doesn’t mean they can’t weigh you down. It’s time to lighten up, and send them on their way.
Osho Zen – Ripeness – Card #76
CC’s interpretation:
When we are ready to blossom we should not hold back, but sometimes fear — any kind of fear — will stop us from moving forward. I have picked this card a few times, and I think it relates to my being ready to unveil the novel I have finally completed. My fear of imperfection, of rejection, and of letting go of something that I have finally completed is holding me back. I keep reading my book over and over to edit and fix it – to make it that much more “perfect” but I must let go at some point and just present it to the world.
Book Interpretation:
Poker Comment Miserables
When the fruit is ripe, it drops from the tree by itself. One moment it hangs by a thread from the branches of the tree, bursting with juice. The next moment it falls–not because it has been forced to fall, or has made the effort to jump, but because the tree has recognized its ripeness and simply let it go. When this card appears in a reading it indicates that you are ready to share your inner riches, your ‘juice’. All you need to do is relax right where you are, and be willing for it to happen. This sharing of yourself, this expression of your creativity, can come in many ways–in your work, your relationships, your everyday life experiences. No special preparation or effort on your part is required. It is simply the right time.