Daily Pull
One card. Five minutes of shuffling. Fifteen of conversation.
A single, small question or the theme of the day.
The simplest tarot spread is also the most underrated. A single card pulled at the start of a session, or first thing in the morning, sets a frame for the day or the question. There is no spread quite as useful when you are stuck deciding what the bigger spread should even be about.
The daily pull is the practice tarot readers do for themselves long before they read for anyone else. It has no fixed historical lineage · a Marseilles reader in the 18th century would have done a version of it; so would a modern witch on a TikTok feed.
Shuffle while holding a loose intention. Cut the deck into three piles with your non-dominant hand, then restack in any order. Draw the top card. Sit with it for two full breaths before interpreting. Notice your first instinct · that's usually the reading. The verbal interpretation that comes second is often a justification of the gut reading.
What each card means
- 1The card
The theme of the day, or the answer to the question.
Beginners learning the cards. Anyone wanting a check-in. Sessions where the client doesn't have a specific question and wants to see what surfaces.
Major life decisions. Anything where you really do need to see multiple forces at play. Pull one card and you'll be tempted to over-read it.
Three-card daily pull · past, present, future of the day. Card of the week. Card of the month. Each adds resolution at the cost of speed.
- How many cards in the Daily Pull?
- 1 card.
- How long does a Daily Pull reading take?
- About 15 minutes when read attentively. Some readers go longer.
- What is the Daily Pull best for?
- A single, small question or the theme of the day.
- Who shouldn't use the Daily Pull?
- Major life decisions. Anything where you really do need to see multiple forces at play. Pull one card and you'll be tempted to over-read it.