A Tarot Fairy Tale – Tarot and AI

November 1st, 2024 § Comments Off on A Tarot Fairy Tale – Tarot and AI § permalink

In today’s foray into AI and the Tarot, I asked ChatGPT for a Tarot Fairy Tale. I’ve always been a fan of fairy tales … and of course, I’m a fan of Tarot … so let’s see what we get …

My prompt was: Tell me a one page sweet Tarot themed fairy tale in the style of the Brothers Grimm ….

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Once upon a time, in a village nestled at the edge of an enchanted forest, there lived a young girl named Elara. Elara was unlike the other villagers—she possessed the gift of foresight, a talent inherited from her grandmother, a revered seer who read the cards of fate. However, Elara was afraid of her own power. The Tarot cards her grandmother had given her lay untouched, gathering dust, for she feared the truths they might reveal.

One autumn evening, as the first chill of winter settled over the land, a strange mist rolled through the village. With it came rumours of a dark creature, the Shadow Beast, lurking deep in the woods, stealing dreams from those it encountered, leaving them to wander without purpose. Night by night, the creature crept closer, and soon, fear spread like wildfire.

One moonless night, as Elara lay in bed, her Tarot deck began to glow faintly, humming with a power she had never felt before. Unable to resist, she opened the box and spread the cards across her wooden table. The first card she drew was The Moon, symbolizing illusion and unseen dangers. Her heart raced. The second card was The Devil, a warning of dark forces at play. Finally, trembling, she pulled the third card: The Fool.

At that moment, a knock echoed at her door. Standing there was an old woman cloaked in gray, eyes twinkling beneath a hood. “The Fool must face the Shadow Beast,” the woman whispered, her voice like the wind through ancient trees. “Or the village will fall.”

Elara knew the Fool represented a leap of faith, a journey into the unknown. She understood now that the cards had chosen her. She was the Fool, and the Shadow Beast awaited her. Gathering her courage, Elara ventured into the forest, her Tarot deck tucked close to her heart.

The forest was darker than she had imagined, the trees towering like twisted sentinels. As she walked deeper, a low growl echoed around her. The Shadow Beast appeared, its form shifting, eyes gleaming with stolen dreams. Elara trembled but remembered the final card. “I am the Fool,” she whispered, “and I choose to face you.”

She drew a card blindly from her deck—The Star. A brilliant light erupted from the card, illuminating the forest. The Shadow Beast recoiled, shrinking under the radiant glow. The creature vanished into mist, its hold over the village broken.

Elara returned home a heroine, no longer afraid of her gift. The cards were her allies, guiding her through the mysteries of life, and she, the Fool who had dared to face the darkness, was forever changed.

And so, the village slept peacefully once more, under the watchful eyes of the stars, with Elara as their quiet protector.

The End.

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Well … there we have it, a little rough, but I kind of like it … especially the part about the Shadow Beast stealing people’s dreams, leaving them to walk around without purpose. That’s scary.

And I also liked how the Star (probably my favourite card in the deck) ends up saving the day.

But I did have to look up the name Elara. I don’t think I’ve ever met anyone with that name.

Apparently it’s the name of one of the moons of Jupiter, and in Greek Mythology Elara was a human princess romantically involved with Zeus.

But the Spanish interpretation seems most apt for our fairy tale. The name/word Elara is apparently connected to the word luz, which means light and brings to mind ideas of illumination, radiance, and enlightenment. That’s our Elara – illuminated, radiant, and enlightened. Sweet!

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Oh … and I dumped the whole story back into ChatGPT and asked it to draw me a picture to go with the tale. You can see what it gave me above. Kind of cute.

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