Tarot · Spread — Waning Gibbous · 6 positions
Breathe deep. Ask clearly.
Ask your question, or let the cards send you a message. The spread holds whatever you bring.
Six cards for your shadow work
The waning gibbous is the sister of shadow work. The full moon has passed, the joy of harvest fades, and what comes next is what we like to overlook during the day: our fears, what we hide, the illusions we have bought into, the regrets we carry, and the part of ourselves we have rejected. This six-card spread is the most honest of the moon spreads — it is not for days when you need a quick answer. It is for evenings when you can actually look at what otherwise stays in shadow.
What this shadow work is built for
The waning-gibbous spread is built as shadow work. Card 1 (Full potential) shows what is waiting in you, unlived — what you have not yet drawn on. Cards 2 to 6 show the five layers that obscure the potential: card 2 (Fears) shows what you hide from. Card 3 (Hidden self) shows what you conceal from others — sometimes from yourself. Card 4 (Illusion) shows a story you are telling yourself that is not true. Card 5 (Regret) shows what you most wish you could undo. Card 6 (Rejected self) is the most important — it shows a part of you you have rejected, even though it belongs to you. Six cards, an honest meeting with what otherwise stays underground.
When this spread fits
The waning-gibbous spread fits when:
- you are in the second half of the lunar cycle and want to do shadow work
- you are working on yourself psychologically and want a deep self-check
- you are doing a quiet evening reading, perhaps with candle and notebook
- you are going to therapy or coaching and want material to bring
- you celebrated the full moon and now want to face the more honest part
How to actually read the six cards
Read the spread in three layers. Layer 1 (card 1 — full potential): start here. What does this card show about what is sitting unused in you right now? Write down a sentence. Layer 2 (cards 2 and 3 — fears and hidden self): the outer shadows. What is keeping you from living the potential? Card 2 shows the fear, card 3 the hiding game. Read them as two sides of the same coin: what you fear is usually also what you hide. Layer 3 (cards 4, 5, 6 — illusion, regret, rejected self): the deeper shadows. They are not for every evening. If you read them honestly, you need time and quiet afterward. Card 6 (rejected self) matters most — it shows what you have refused in yourself, even though it belongs to you. Integrating it is the work of the coming lunar cycles.
Waning gibbous — frequently asked questions
- Is this spread for everyone?
- Not really. If you are in a hard phase or in a crisis right now, this spread may be too intense. In that case start with a gentler moon spread — the last-quarter or the full-moon spread.
- When is the best time?
- About three days after the full moon, when the moon is three-quarters and waning. Ideally in the evening, with a candle, no screen, with a notebook.
- What if the "rejected self" card scares me?
- Common. The rejected self is usually not a monster — it is just the part of you that you cannot handle right now. Let the card stand. Come back in a week.
- How is this different from the archetypes spread?
- The archetypes spread is more structured (persona, shadow, anima, animus, self). The waning-gibbous spread is lunar-cycle driven and more feeling-led. If you like Jung, combine both — archetypes as the structural picture, this one as the moon practice.