the star
Hope, renewal, and the return to truth.
After the destruction of The Tower, The Star brings calm.
It represents healing, openness, and the restoration of trust — in life, in spirit, and in oneself.
This is the card of quiet faith, the deep exhale that follows upheaval, when all pretence has fallen away and authenticity shines through.
In the Rider–Waite–Smith deck (1909), a naked woman kneels by a pool beneath a canopy of seven small stars and one great central star. She pours water from two vessels — one into the pool, one onto the land — replenishing both the visible and unseen worlds. Behind her, a bird rests on a tree branch: renewal through rest and patience.
Earlier decks such as the Tarot de Marseille depicted a similar scene — a maiden under a night sky, pouring water as stars shimmer above. In the Thoth Tarot, The Star is radiant and expansive: the cosmic feminine, the soul’s purest self revealed.
Across traditions, The Star embodies the moment after the storm — clarity of heart, spiritual renewal, and the quiet knowing that healing doesn’t need to be forced.
