The High Priestess - Rider-Waite-Smith tarot card

Major Arcana · 2

The High Priestess Tarot Card Meaning

Upright
intuitionhidden knowledgestillnessmysteryinner voice
Reversed
ignored instinctssecrets surfacingself-doubtnoise over signal
Yes or No
Maybe
Element
Water
Astrology
Moon

What the card shows

Between a black pillar marked B and a white pillar marked J, a robed woman sits utterly still. A veil embroidered with pomegranates hangs behind her, screening a glimmer of water beyond. She wears a horned crown holding a pale globe, a solar cross rests on her chest, and a crescent moon lies at her feet. In her lap she holds a partially rolled scroll marked Tora, keeping most of its text hidden. Nothing in the image moves. Everything in it waits.

The High Priestess: upright meaning

What do you already know that you have not let yourself say out loud? That is the High Priestess's question. She sits at the threshold of the hidden, and her appearance means the information you need will not arrive through more googling, more asking around, or more pushing. It arrives through quiet: the hunch you keep dismissing, the dream that will not fade, the sense that something is off or something is right before you can prove it. Not everything is meant to be public right now either. Keep your counsel, watch, and trust the part of you that noticed before your brain caught up.

The High Priestess: reversed meaning

Reversed, the Priestess usually means the inner voice is being shouted down. You asked five friends, read a dozen threads, made a pros-and-cons list, and are further from clarity than when you started, because the answer was never going to come from outside. It can also mean secrets are working their way toward the surface, yours or someone else's, and it may be better to bring them out on your own terms. The remedy is unglamorous: reduce the input. One quiet evening with your own thoughts will do more than another week of polling.

The High Priestess: love & relationships

Upright

Something in this connection is still veiled, feelings unspoken, a depth not yet shown, and it will surface on its own schedule. Read what is not being said: consistency, effort, how you feel after you part. If your gut has already delivered a verdict about this person, believe it before you believe the narrative.

Reversed

You may be silencing an instinct because the surface story is more comfortable. Or a secret is straining the relationship from underneath. Either way, honesty with yourself comes first; you cannot navigate what you refuse to notice.

The High Priestess: career & money

Upright

Hold your cards close. In work terms the Priestess favors observing before acting: there is more happening behind the scenes, in office politics, in a negotiation, in an unannounced change, than you can currently see. Financially, if a deal feels wrong despite good numbers, wait. The missing information tends to surface for those who pause.

Reversed

You might be overriding professional instincts to please a room, or missing what is happening around you because you are heads-down. Lift your gaze. Also check whether relevant information is being kept from you before you commit to anything binding.

The High Priestess: yes or no?

Maybe.

The High Priestess answers a question with a question: what does your gut already say? As a verdict she is a maybe, not from vagueness but because key information is still hidden and the situation has not finished forming. If you need a decision today, follow your instinct over the arguments. If you can wait, wait; the veil is going to move.

Related cards

Frequently asked questions

The black and white pillars, marked B and J, refer to Boaz and Jachin, the pillars of Solomon's Temple, a pairing Waite drew from temple symbolism. They frame the Priestess as the threshold between opposites: dark and light, known and hidden. Sitting exactly between them, she represents the balancing point, the knowledge that lives underneath both sides of any either-or question.

Cut the noise. Stop polling friends and forums for a day or two and pay attention to your first, uncensored reaction when you think about the question, especially the physical one, ease or dread, opening or tightening. Notice dreams and stray thoughts that keep returning. The Priestess's promise is that you already registered the answer; the practice is letting it get a word in.

It can, particularly reversed or beside cards of deceit, but do not jump straight there. More often it means the situation itself is not fully visible yet, information is still forming or simply has not reached you, without anyone lying. Sometimes the hidden thing is a feeling of your own you have not admitted. Watch and wait before you accuse.

Their feelings likely run deeper than their behavior shows. This card describes someone guarded, reflective, keeping their inner world veiled, often because it feels safer than exposure. It is rarely indifference; still water is not empty water. Pressing for declarations tends to backfire here. Consistent presence and patience are what invite this person out from behind the curtain.

Closely. The Priestess is astrologically assigned to the Moon, and a crescent lies at her feet on the Rider-Waite-Smith image; both cards deal with the unseen. The difference is tone: the Priestess is calm hidden knowledge, intuition you can trust, while the Moon card is the disorienting fog where fear and imagination distort what you perceive. One says listen inward; the other says be careful what you assume.

She holds a partly rolled scroll marked Tora, divine law, only a portion of it visible. It is the card's whole message in one prop: the knowledge you seek exists, but it is not fully disclosed yet, and some of it is revealed only to those who are patient enough to earn it. In practical terms, expect the fuller picture to open gradually, not on demand.

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