The 9 Enneagram Types × Major Arcana: Your Personality's Tarot Mirror

BY NICOLE LAU

Introduction: Two Maps of the Same Territory

The Enneagram describes nine fundamental personality types—nine ways of seeing the world, nine core motivations, nine patterns of behavior. The tarot Major Arcana describes archetypal forces and stages of consciousness development. These aren't separate systems. They're both mapping the same territory: the structure of human consciousness, the patterns of the psyche, the universal logic of how personality forms and transforms.

Each Enneagram type corresponds to specific Major Arcana cards that mirror its core motivation, fear, desire, and path of growth. Understanding these correspondences transforms both systems—the Enneagram becomes more archetypal and spiritual, the tarot becomes more psychological and practical.

This article reveals the complete correspondences between the nine Enneagram types and the Major Arcana, showing how your personality type is reflected in the tarot and how to use both systems for deep self-understanding and transformation.

Understanding the Systems

The Enneagram: Nine Personality Types

What It Is: A personality typology system describing nine fundamental types, each with its own core motivation, fear, desire, and pattern of behavior

The Nine Types:

  • Type 1: The Perfectionist/Reformer
  • Type 2: The Helper/Giver
  • Type 3: The Achiever/Performer
  • Type 4: The Individualist/Romantic
  • Type 5: The Investigator/Observer
  • Type 6: The Loyalist/Skeptic
  • Type 7: The Enthusiast/Epicure
  • Type 8: The Challenger/Leader
  • Type 9: The Peacemaker/Mediator

Key Insight: Your type isn't what you do—it's why you do it. It's your core motivation, the lens through which you see reality.

The Major Arcana: Archetypal Forces

What It Is: 22 cards representing archetypal forces, stages of consciousness development, and universal patterns of transformation

Key Insight: The Major Arcana cards are not just symbols—they're living archetypes that operate through human consciousness, including through personality types.

Why They Correspond

Both systems are describing the same underlying reality—the patterns of consciousness that structure human experience. The Enneagram approaches it through personality psychology. The tarot approaches it through archetypal symbolism. But both are mapping the same nine (plus) fundamental patterns of how consciousness organizes itself.

The Complete Correspondence Table

Type Name Primary Card Core Motivation Core Fear Path Card
1 Perfectionist Justice To be good, right, perfect Being wrong, corrupt, evil The Fool
2 Helper The Empress To be loved, needed Being unloved, unwanted The Hermit
3 Achiever The Chariot To be successful, valuable Being worthless, failing The Hanged Man
4 Individualist The Hermit To be unique, authentic Being ordinary, without identity The Star
5 Investigator The Hierophant To be competent, knowledgeable Being incompetent, overwhelmed The Lovers
6 Loyalist The Devil To be secure, supported Being without support, abandoned Strength
7 Enthusiast The Fool To be happy, satisfied Being trapped in pain Temperance
8 Challenger The Emperor To be strong, in control Being weak, controlled The High Priestess
9 Peacemaker Temperance To have peace, harmony Conflict, disconnection The Tower

Detailed Type Correspondences

Type 1: The Perfectionist × Justice

Why Justice: Justice represents the principle of rightness, balance, fairness, perfection—exactly what Type 1 seeks. The scales must be balanced, everything must be correct, justice must be served.

Core Pattern:

  • Motivation: To be good, right, perfect, to improve the world
  • Fear: Being wrong, corrupt, evil, making mistakes
  • Desire: To have integrity, to be balanced and correct
  • Vice: Anger (at imperfection in self and world)
  • Virtue: Serenity (accepting what is)

How Justice Manifests:

  • Constant internal critic judging everything
  • High standards for self and others
  • Sense of mission to correct what's wrong
  • Difficulty accepting imperfection
  • The sword of Justice cutting away what's not right

Path of Growth (The Fool): Type 1 grows by learning to be spontaneous, imperfect, playful—embodying The Fool's innocent acceptance rather than Justice's harsh judgment

Type 2: The Helper × The Empress

Why The Empress: The Empress represents nurturing, giving, abundance, mothering—exactly what Type 2 expresses. She gives freely, nurtures all, creates abundance through love.

Core Pattern:

  • Motivation: To be loved, needed, appreciated
  • Fear: Being unloved, unwanted, unneeded
  • Desire: To feel loved and essential to others
  • Vice: Pride (in being needed, indispensable)
  • Virtue: Humility (recognizing own needs)

How The Empress Manifests:

  • Constant giving, nurturing, helping others
  • Difficulty receiving or acknowledging own needs
  • Creating abundance for others while depleting self
  • Manipulating through giving ("I gave you so much...")
  • The Empress's overflow becomes codependency

Path of Growth (The Hermit): Type 2 grows by learning solitude, self-reflection, meeting own needs—embodying The Hermit's self-sufficiency rather than The Empress's constant giving

Type 3: The Achiever × The Chariot

Why The Chariot: The Chariot represents victory, achievement, success, forward movement—exactly what Type 3 pursues. The charioteer drives toward the goal, conquering obstacles, winning.

Core Pattern:

  • Motivation: To be successful, valuable, admired
  • Fear: Being worthless, failing, being seen as unsuccessful
  • Desire: To feel valuable and worthwhile
  • Vice: Deceit (creating false image of success)
  • Virtue: Authenticity (being real, not just successful)

How The Chariot Manifests:

  • Constant drive toward goals and achievement
  • Image-consciousness, creating successful persona
  • Difficulty being vs. doing
  • Workaholic tendencies, always moving forward
  • The Chariot's victory becomes empty if not authentic

Path of Growth (The Hanged Man): Type 3 grows by learning to stop, surrender, be rather than do—embodying The Hanged Man's suspension rather than The Chariot's constant forward drive

Type 4: The Individualist × The Hermit

Why The Hermit: The Hermit represents solitude, depth, uniqueness, the inner journey—exactly what Type 4 embodies. The Hermit withdraws to find authentic self, holds the lamp of individual truth.

Core Pattern:

  • Motivation: To be unique, authentic, to find identity
  • Fear: Being ordinary, without identity or significance
  • Desire: To find themselves and their significance
  • Vice: Envy (of others' apparent wholeness)
  • Virtue: Equanimity (accepting ordinariness)

How The Hermit Manifests:

  • Constant search for authentic self
  • Feeling fundamentally different from others
  • Romanticizing suffering and depth
  • Difficulty with ordinary, mundane life
  • The Hermit's solitude becomes isolation

Path of Growth (The Star): Type 4 grows by connecting to universal hope and belonging—embodying The Star's connection to all rather than The Hermit's isolated uniqueness

Type 5: The Investigator × The Hierophant

Why The Hierophant: The Hierophant represents knowledge, wisdom, understanding systems, teaching—exactly what Type 5 seeks. He is the keeper of knowledge, the one who understands the sacred structure.

Core Pattern:

  • Motivation: To be competent, knowledgeable, capable
  • Fear: Being incompetent, ignorant, overwhelmed
  • Desire: To be capable and knowledgeable
  • Vice: Avarice (hoarding knowledge and resources)
  • Virtue: Non-attachment (sharing freely)

How The Hierophant Manifests:

  • Constant accumulation of knowledge
  • Withdrawal to conserve energy and resources
  • Difficulty with emotional engagement
  • Observing life rather than participating
  • The Hierophant's wisdom becomes isolated expertise

Path of Growth (The Lovers): Type 5 grows by engaging emotionally, choosing connection—embodying The Lovers' engagement rather than The Hierophant's detached observation

Type 6: The Loyalist × The Devil

Why The Devil: The Devil represents fear, bondage, loyalty to authority/security, the chains we create—exactly what Type 6 struggles with. The Devil shows how fear creates bondage, how seeking security can trap us.

Core Pattern:

  • Motivation: To be secure, safe, supported
  • Fear: Being without support, guidance, security
  • Desire: To have security and support
  • Vice: Fear (constant anxiety about what could go wrong)
  • Virtue: Courage (acting despite fear)

How The Devil Manifests:

  • Constant scanning for danger and threat
  • Loyalty to authority or rebellion against it (both from fear)
  • Difficulty trusting self and others
  • Creating worst-case scenarios
  • The Devil's chains are the security structures Type 6 creates

Path of Growth (Strength): Type 6 grows by developing inner strength and courage—embodying Strength's gentle power rather than The Devil's fearful bondage

Type 7: The Enthusiast × The Fool

Why The Fool: The Fool represents joy, adventure, optimism, new experiences—exactly what Type 7 seeks. The Fool leaps into the unknown with enthusiasm, always seeking the next adventure.

Core Pattern:

  • Motivation: To be happy, satisfied, free
  • Fear: Being trapped in pain, limitation, boredom
  • Desire: To be happy and fulfilled
  • Vice: Gluttony (excessive consumption of experiences)
  • Virtue: Sobriety (being present with what is)

How The Fool Manifests:

  • Constant seeking of new experiences and possibilities
  • Difficulty staying with pain or limitation
  • Reframing everything positively
  • Fear of missing out, always planning next adventure
  • The Fool's joy becomes escapism

Path of Growth (Temperance): Type 7 grows by learning balance, staying present, integrating—embodying Temperance's moderation rather than The Fool's constant seeking

Type 8: The Challenger × The Emperor

Why The Emperor: The Emperor represents power, control, authority, strength—exactly what Type 8 embodies. The Emperor rules, protects, controls his domain with strength.

Core Pattern:

  • Motivation: To be strong, in control, self-reliant
  • Fear: Being weak, controlled, vulnerable
  • Desire: To protect themselves and those they care about
  • Vice: Lust (excessive intensity and control)
  • Virtue: Innocence (allowing vulnerability)

How The Emperor Manifests:

  • Constant assertion of power and control
  • Difficulty with vulnerability and softness
  • Protecting the weak, challenging the strong
  • All-or-nothing intensity
  • The Emperor's strength becomes domination

Path of Growth (The High Priestess): Type 8 grows by developing receptivity, intuition, softness—embodying The High Priestess's receptive wisdom rather than The Emperor's forceful control

Type 9: The Peacemaker × Temperance

Why Temperance: Temperance represents balance, harmony, peace, integration—exactly what Type 9 seeks. The angel mixes opposites into harmony, creates peace through balance.

Core Pattern:

  • Motivation: To have peace, harmony, union
  • Fear: Conflict, disconnection, fragmentation
  • Desire: To have inner and outer peace
  • Vice: Sloth (spiritual laziness, self-forgetting)
  • Virtue: Right action (engaging fully)

How Temperance Manifests:

  • Constant merging with others' agendas
  • Difficulty asserting own needs and opinions
  • Creating harmony by self-erasure
  • Numbing out to avoid conflict
  • Temperance's balance becomes self-forgetting

Path of Growth (The Tower): Type 9 grows by allowing necessary conflict and disruption—embodying The Tower's breakthrough rather than Temperance's constant smoothing over

Practical Applications

Using Your Type's Card for Self-Understanding

  1. Identify your Enneagram type (if you don't know, take a test or study the types)
  2. Study your corresponding Major Arcana card deeply
  3. See how the card's symbolism reflects your core patterns
  4. Use the card for meditation and self-reflection
  5. Notice when you're embodying the card's shadow vs. light

Example: Type 3 working with The Chariot

  • Meditate on The Chariot card
  • Notice: Am I driving toward authentic goals or just seeking victory?
  • Recognize: The Chariot's power when aligned with truth, its emptiness when just achieving
  • Practice: Pause the drive, check if the goal is real or just image

Using Your Growth Path Card

Your growth path card shows the energy you need to develop to balance your type's pattern:

  • Type 1 → The Fool: Practice spontaneity, imperfection, play
  • Type 2 → The Hermit: Practice solitude, self-care, independence
  • Type 3 → The Hanged Man: Practice being, surrendering, stopping
  • Type 4 → The Star: Practice hope, connection, universality
  • Type 5 → The Lovers: Practice engagement, choice, connection
  • Type 6 → Strength: Practice courage, inner strength, trust
  • Type 7 → Temperance: Practice moderation, presence, integration
  • Type 8 → The High Priestess: Practice receptivity, intuition, softness
  • Type 9 → The Tower: Practice assertion, necessary conflict, waking up

Tarot Readings Through Enneagram Lens

When doing tarot readings, consider your Enneagram type:

If your type's card appears:

  • You're operating from your core pattern
  • Check: Is this the healthy or unhealthy expression?
  • Question: Am I stuck in my type's limitation?

If your growth path card appears:

  • You're being called to develop that energy
  • This is your growth edge
  • Opportunity: Integrate this card's wisdom

Conclusion: Your Personality's Mirror

The Enneagram and the tarot are both mirrors reflecting the structure of human consciousness. Your Enneagram type shows your core pattern—the lens through which you see reality, the motivation that drives you, the fear that limits you. Your corresponding Major Arcana card shows this same pattern in archetypal form—the universal force operating through your particular personality.

Understanding this correspondence deepens both systems. The Enneagram becomes more archetypal, more spiritual, more connected to universal patterns. The tarot becomes more psychological, more practical, more applicable to everyday personality patterns.

You are not just your type—you're a unique expression of universal archetypes. The cards are not just symbols—they're living forces operating through your personality. And the work of transformation is learning to embody the light of your type's card while integrating the wisdom of your growth path.

The mirror is clear. The reflection is you. The work continues.

As you continue to explore the radiant intersections of your inner world, let the 40 manifestation rituals intention to reality guide your discoveries into tangible form, while the tarot journaling prompts 100 questions for self discovery gently mirror the unique patterns of your soul, and the 30 day tarot practice workbook becomes your steady companion for deepening this luminous conversation between your personality and the archetypes that call to you.

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About Nicole's Ritual Universe

Nicole Lau — UK certified Advanced Angel Healing Practitioner, PhD in Management, published author.

She built Mystic Ryst on a single belief: that spiritual practice doesn't require a retreat or a perfect moment. It belongs in the ordinary — in the morning before work, in the breath between meetings, in the objects you choose to surround yourself with.

Through thousands of learning resources, books, and ritual tools, Mystic Ryst helps you weave mysticism into daily life — so that even the busiest day carries intention, meaning, and depth.