What is symbolism
Symbol — is a sign or image that points to a meaning beyond literal description. For example, circle may mean wholeness, cycle, or completion, and road — choice and movement. Symbolism is the practice of reading such “second meanings” and the skill of assembling them into a coherent narrative.
It is important to distinguish a symbol from a simple sign. A sign is usually unambiguous (for example, a road sign), while a symbol allows several levels of interpretation: cultural, personal, contextual. That is why the same image can work differently for different people and traditions.
How symbolic thinking works
Symbolic thinking links experience with images: we use metaphors to describe complex states that are difficult to express precisely. This is visible in language (“a difficult period”, “a bright thought”, “a bottleneck”) and in art.
In esoteric systems, symbolism is organized as a lexicon and grammar: there is a set of stable images (planets, signs, numbers, cards), and there are rules for their combination (aspects, positions, spreads). Such a structure helps not so much to “predict the future” as to organize thinking and highlight themes.
- Image — what exactly we see (symbol/scene).
- Context — in what situation it appeared (question, period, theme).
- Associations — cultural and personal meanings of the image.
- Connections — how the image combines with other symbols.
- Conclusion — a hypothesis and an action that can be tested.
Where symbols come from
Symbols are formed in culture and transmitted through myths, religion, art, language and rituals. Therefore a symbol's “meaning” is not a single formula, but a layer of tradition plus a layer of personal experience.
Myth and archetype
Mythological narratives set stable roles and motifs: hero, ordeal, gift, shadow, return. In psychology such recurring structures are often called archetypal — they describe typical forms of experience and behavior.
Natural cycles and observations
Seasons, phases of the Moon, the change of day and night, growth and decay — all these are natural “models” of cyclicity. In many traditions they become symbols of renewal, maturity, decline and completion.
Culture and personal experience
The same symbol can sound different in different cultures. And at the personal level, meaning is refined by biography: what is “home” for one person may be “boundaries” or “tension” for another.
Symbolism in practices
Tarot as a language of images
In tarot, symbolism appears through narrative scenes and composition: figures, objects, colors, directions of gaze. Reading a card is assembling meaning from details and their relationships, not searching for “the single correct answer”.
Astrology and the language of correspondences
Astrology uses the symbols of planets, signs and houses as a model of functions and life areas. The symbolism here is “structural”: not only the elements matter, but also the connections between them (aspects, rulers, accents).
Numerology and numerical images
In numerology, numbers are read as principles: one — initiative, two — interaction, four — structure, nine — completion. Properly presented, these are convenient “labels” for describing patterns, but not guarantees of facts.
How to read symbols practically
To prevent symbolism from turning into guessing, it's useful to keep a framework: interpret meaning as a hypothesis, test it against experience, and avoid “categorical verdicts”. Below is a simple algorithm.
- Describe the symbol literally: what exactly is depicted/named.
- Gather 2–3 meanings: traditional, cultural, personal.
- Tie it to the question: how does this relate to the topic of the query.
- Formulate a hypothesis as a question, not as a statement.
- Check: what fact/action would confirm or refute the conclusion.
Example note:
- symbol: "bridge"
- literal: connects banks, passage
- meanings: contact / transition / risk / connection
- context: conflict with a person
- hypothesis: "a bridge is needed — a conversation about communication rules"
- check: "will we agree on specific boundaries?"
- action: "propose a format: 10 minutes, one question, no accusations"
Mistakes and critical perspective
Symbolism is easy to "twist" if you take it as proof of external laws. Common traps: selective coincidences, the recognition effect and the desire to see order in randomness. Therefore it's useful to remember: symbols help to think, but they do not replace facts.
- Subjective validation — "it seems true, therefore it's true".
- Barnum effect — general formulations seem accurate.
- Searching for meaning in randomness — the brain fills in patterns.
A careful approach: use symbols as a language of self-description and discussion, but verify conclusions through experience, observation and actual behavior.
See also
Notes
- Symbols are ambiguous: meaning depends on context and tradition.
- Interpretations are more useful to formulate as hypotheses and questions, not as "precise statements".
- Symbolism is useful as a language of meaning and reflection, but it does not replace factual checks.
Literature
- Reference works on semiotics and the history of symbols (encyclopedias, symbol dictionaries).
- Works on mythology and cultural anthropology: the origins of narratives and images.
- Cognitive psychology: perception of uncertainty and effects of interpretation.