Inner Child Work with Tarot: Healing Your Younger Self
BY NICOLE LAU
Inside you, there's a child. Maybe they're 5 years old, or 8, or 12. They're still there, carrying the wounds from when they were hurt, neglected, or didn't get what they needed.
That inner child influences your adult life more than you realize. They're the reason you people-please, or shut down when criticized, or can't accept love. They're running the show from the shadows.
Inner child work is the practice of connecting with, listening to, and healing those younger parts of yourself. And tarot is a powerful tool for this workβit gives your inner child a voice, reveals what they need, and guides the healing process.
This is your complete guide to inner child work with tarot.
What Is Inner Child Work?
Your inner child is the part of you that holds your childhood experiences, emotions, and unmet needs.
When you were young and something painful happenedβabuse, neglect, abandonment, shameβthat experience didn't just disappear. It got stored in your psyche as a younger version of you, frozen in that moment.
Inner child work involves:
- Connecting with these younger parts of yourself
- Listening to what they needed then (and still need now)
- Providing the love, safety, and validation they didn't receive
- Integrating these parts so they're no longer running your life unconsciously
Why Use Tarot for Inner Child Work?
Tarot bypasses the rational mind Your inner child doesn't speak in logicβthey speak in symbols, feelings, and images. Tarot speaks that language.
Tarot gives your inner child a voice When you can't access what your younger self needs, tarot can reveal it.
Tarot provides guidance It shows you what your inner child needs to heal and how to provide it.
Tarot creates safety The ritual of pulling cards creates a sacred container for vulnerable inner child work.
The Inner Child Tarot Spread
This 7-card spread is designed specifically for inner child healing.
The Spread Layout
- Card 1 (Center): Who is my inner child? (What age, what energy)
- Card 2 (Left): What wound does my inner child carry?
- Card 3 (Right): What did my inner child need but didn't receive?
- Card 4 (Bottom): How is my inner child affecting my adult life now?
- Card 5 (Top): What does my inner child need from me today?
- Card 6 (Upper Left): How can I provide healing for my inner child?
- Card 7 (Upper Right): What gift does my healed inner child offer me?
How to Read the Spread
Card 1: This reveals the age or energy of the inner child you're working with. Pages often indicate young children. Court cards can show the child's personality.
Card 2: This shows the core wound. Difficult cards (Tower, 5 of Cups, 3 of Swords) reveal trauma. Pay attention to the imageryβwhat story does it tell?
Card 3: This reveals unmet needs. Cups = emotional needs. Pentacles = safety/security needs. Swords = mental/communication needs. Wands = creative/autonomy needs.
Card 4: This shows how the wounded inner child is influencing your current behavior. Look for patterns you recognize.
Card 5: This is the most important cardβit tells you what action to take. Listen to this guidance.
Card 6: Practical steps for healing. This might be therapy, journaling, reparenting practices, or specific actions.
Card 7: The hope card. This shows what becomes possible when your inner child heals.
Tarot Cards and Inner Child Meanings
Major Arcana as Inner Child Archetypes
The Fool: The innocent, curious child. Wound: Loss of innocence or wonder. Need: Permission to play and explore.
The Magician: The creative, capable child. Wound: Being told they're not good enough. Need: Validation of their abilities.
The High Priestess: The intuitive, sensitive child. Wound: Being told their intuition is wrong. Need: Trust in their inner knowing.
The Empress: The nurtured child. Wound: Lack of nurturing or maternal love. Need: Unconditional love and care.
The Emperor: The protected child. Wound: Lack of safety or paternal protection. Need: Structure and boundaries.
The Hierophant: The child seeking guidance. Wound: Lack of mentorship or spiritual guidance. Need: Wise, safe teachers.
The Lovers: The child learning about love. Wound: Conditional love or early relationship trauma. Need: Unconditional acceptance.
The Chariot: The child learning autonomy. Wound: Being controlled or having no agency. Need: Freedom to make choices.
Strength: The gentle, compassionate child. Wound: Being shamed for sensitivity. Need: Permission to be gentle.
The Hermit: The introspective child. Wound: Being forced to be social or extroverted. Need: Solitude and inner reflection.
Wheel of Fortune: The child learning about change. Wound: Instability or chaos. Need: Understanding that change is natural.
Justice: The child seeking fairness. Wound: Injustice or unfair treatment. Need: Validation that what happened was wrong.
The Hanged Man: The child who had to sacrifice. Wound: Being forced to give up their needs. Need: Permission to prioritize themselves.
Death: The child who experienced loss. Wound: Grief, endings, or transformation too young. Need: Support through grief.
Temperance: The child seeking balance. Wound: Extremes or instability. Need: Moderation and peace.
The Devil: The child who experienced shame or addiction. Wound: Shame, control, or exposure to addiction. Need: Freedom from shame.
The Tower: The child who experienced trauma. Wound: Sudden upheaval or violence. Need: Safety and rebuilding.
The Star: The hopeful child. Wound: Loss of hope or faith. Need: Restoration of hope.
The Moon: The child who felt confused or afraid. Wound: Confusion, fear, or gaslighting. Need: Clarity and reassurance.
The Sun: The joyful, authentic child. Wound: Being shamed for joy or authenticity. Need: Permission to shine.
Judgment: The child seeking redemption. Wound: Being judged or condemned. Need: Forgiveness and acceptance.
The World: The child who achieved completion. Wound: Never feeling "done" or good enough. Need: Celebration of accomplishments.
Minor Arcana as Inner Child Needs
Cups: Emotional needs (love, validation, emotional safety)
Pentacles: Physical needs (food, shelter, stability, touch)
Swords: Mental needs (being heard, understood, having their thoughts validated)
Wands: Creative/autonomy needs (freedom, play, self-expression)
The Inner Child Dialogue Practice
Use tarot to have a conversation with your inner child.
The Practice (30 minutes)
- Create sacred space (5 min): Light a candle, set up your altar, ground yourself.
- Set intention (2 min): "I am here to listen to my inner child. I am ready to hear what they need."
- Pull a card for your inner child (3 min): Ask: "Inner child, what do you want me to know today?" Pull one card.
- Journal from your inner child's perspective (10 min): Write in first person as your younger self. Let them speak through you. Don't censor.
- Pull a card for your adult self (3 min): Ask: "What does my inner child need from me?" Pull one card.
- Respond to your inner child (7 min): Write a letter to your younger self, addressing what they shared and what they need.
Reparenting Your Inner Child with Tarot Guidance
Reparenting is giving your inner child what they didn't receive.
Monthly Reparenting Spread
Pull one card each month asking: "What does my inner child need from me this month?"
Examples:
- 4 of Cups: Your inner child needs rest and emotional processing. Don't push them to be productive.
- 6 of Pentacles: Your inner child needs you to receive help. Let others support you.
- Page of Wands: Your inner child needs play and creativity. Do something fun with no purpose.
- The Empress: Your inner child needs nurturing. Take a bath, cook a nourishing meal, rest.
Reparenting Actions Based on Tarot Suits
If you pull Cups: Emotional reparenting (journaling, therapy, crying, self-compassion)
If you pull Pentacles: Physical reparenting (nourishing food, rest, safe home, financial security)
If you pull Swords: Mental reparenting (validating your thoughts, learning, therapy, communication)
If you pull Wands: Creative reparenting (play, art, movement, freedom, adventure)
Working with Specific Inner Child Wounds
The Abandoned Child (3 of Swords, 5 of Cups)
Wound: Being left, rejected, or abandoned
Tarot guidance: Pull a card asking "How can I show my inner child I won't abandon them?"
Reparenting: Consistency, showing up for yourself, not abandoning yourself when things get hard
The Shamed Child (The Devil, 5 of Pentacles)
Wound: Being shamed for who they are or what they need
Tarot guidance: Pull a card asking "What does my inner child need to release shame?"
Reparenting: Self-compassion, challenging shame messages, celebrating your authentic self
The Neglected Child (4 of Pentacles, The Hermit reversed)
Wound: Emotional or physical neglect
Tarot guidance: Pull a card asking "How can I nurture my inner child?"
Reparenting: Meeting your own needs, self-care, allowing yourself to be needy
The Controlled Child (8 of Swords, The Hanged Man)
Wound: Being controlled, having no autonomy
Tarot guidance: Pull a card asking "How can I give my inner child freedom?"
Reparenting: Making your own choices, setting boundaries, reclaiming autonomy
Integration: Bringing Your Inner Child Into Your Adult Life
The goal isn't to "fix" or "get rid of" your inner child. It's to integrate them.
Integration Spread (3 cards)
- Card 1: What does my inner child bring to my adult life? (Their gifts)
- Card 2: What does my adult self bring to my inner child? (Your wisdom and protection)
- Card 3: How can we work together? (Integration)
The Deeper Truth
Your inner child isn't a problem to solve. They're a part of you that needs love, attention, and healing.
When you do this workβwhen you listen, when you reparent, when you give them what they neededβsomething shifts. The patterns break. The wounds soften. You become more whole.
Tarot is the bridge between your adult self and your inner child. Use it. Listen. Heal.
Your younger self is waiting for you. And they have so much to teach you.
Next: Reparenting Yourselfβspiritual practices for unmet childhood needs.
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