Temperance - Rider-Waite-Smith tarot card

Major Arcana · 14

Temperance Tarot Card Meaning

Upright
balancemoderationpatienceblendinghealing
Reversed
excessimbalanceimpatiencethings out of proportion
Yes or No
Yes
Element
Fire
Astrology
Sagittarius

What the card shows

A great winged angel stands with one foot on land and one in a pool of still water, pouring liquid between two golden cups in a stream that seems to defy the angle it travels. A radiant triangle sits within a square on the angel's white robe, and a sun-disc glows on the forehead. Behind, a path winds from the water's edge toward distant mountains, where a golden crown burns in the haze like a promise at the end of a long road.

Temperance: upright meaning

Watch what the angel is doing: not choosing between the two cups, but pouring one into the other until something new exists. Temperance is the art of the middle path, mixing work and rest, passion and patience, heart and head, in proportions that actually hold. It often arrives during recovery, after conflict, after loss, after burnout, because healing is exactly this: gradual, unglamorous, cumulative. One foot on land, one in water, the card asks you to stay grounded and stay feeling at once. Nothing here is rushed and nothing is wasted. Whatever you are building or mending, the moderate, steady version wins.

Temperance: reversed meaning

The mixture is off. Reversed, Temperance shows life out of proportion: all work or all escape, a temper or appetite running past its limits, a schedule so overloaded that nothing in it gets real attention. It can flag excess in the literal senses, drinking, spending, scrolling, any soothing that has quietly become the problem, or a clash of mismatched elements, people and plans that refuse to blend because someone keeps forcing the ratio. Impatience is usually the root: the long way felt too slow, so balance got skipped. Rebalance one ingredient at a time. Moderation restores faster than punishment does.

Temperance: love & relationships

Upright

A relationship finding its right temperature: passion and stability in workable proportion, differences blending rather than grinding. After conflict, this is one of the best cards for genuine reconciliation, gradual, mutual, real. Singles do best seeking a complement, not a clone; the good mix needs difference.

Reversed

The ratio is wrong somewhere, one person all-in while the other sips, intensity alternating with absence, or a difference in pace being forced instead of negotiated. Extremes are running the relationship. Name the imbalance gently and adjust in small increments; grand corrective gestures overshoot.

Temperance: career & money

Upright

Steady blending wins at work: competing demands managed in fair proportion, teams of unlike people combined into something better than their parts, progress made through patience rather than heroics. Financially Temperance is the moderation card, balanced budgets, diversified rather than concentrated bets, saving as a habit instead of a spasm.

Reversed

Work-life proportion has failed, overwork bleeding into everything, or scattered effort spread so thin it evaporates. Money may be swinging between splurge and clampdown, which is the same imbalance wearing two costumes. Pick sustainable numbers, hours and dollars both, and hold them for a boring, healing month.

Temperance: yes or no?

Yes.

Yes, at a measured pace. Temperance affirms your question but strips the urgency from it: the outcome favors you through patience, moderation, and steady blending, not through one dramatic push. If you can accept gradual progress and keep your extremes in check, the answer holds. Force the timeline and you unmix what this card is carefully combining.

Related cards

Frequently asked questions

Waite describes the angel pouring the essence of life from one cup to the other, and the stream travels at an angle no liquid should manage, the point being that this mixing is alchemy, not chemistry. The two cups hold your opposites: feeling and reason, past and future, one person's nature and another's. Temperance combines them into a third thing better than either. The card is the deck's master blender.

It is arguably the deck's primary healing card. Standing between Death and the Devil in the major sequence, Temperance is the recuperation after loss and before the next trial: gradual restoration of balance to a body, heart, or life that has been through something. Its counsel for recovery is specific, steady moderate steps, no shortcuts, no punishing regimens, time as an active ingredient. For medical matters, pair it with actual medical care.

Calm, sincere, and unhurried, this person's interest tends toward the steady flame rather than fireworks, and they likely want a connection that blends easily into real life. Temperance feelings build gradually and last accordingly. If you crave dramatic declarations, the quietness can read as lukewarm; it usually is not. Watch consistency over intensity. The one caution: they will retreat from pressure, so let the mix happen at its pace.

Start by disbelieving the urgency, Temperance's core claim is that almost nothing is as time-critical as it feels, and rushed mixtures fail. Practically: pick the one truly time-bound item and do it first; cap your hours on everything else; put real rest on the calendar as an appointment, not a leftover. The angel keeps one foot on solid ground at all times. That foot is your non-negotiable basics: sleep, meals, movement.

Because that is the order recovery actually happens. Death clears away what was finished; Temperance is the careful re-blending of a life afterward, taking what survived and mixing it into a new equilibrium. The sequence is the tarot's honest promise: endings are followed not by instant rebirth but by a patient healing middle. If you have recently been through a Death-card season, Temperance names your current work, gentle reconstruction.

It is a compact emblem of spirit contained within matter, the triangle of the divine or volatile held inside the square of the earthly and stable. On this card it restates the angel's stance, one foot in water, one on land: a workable life keeps the transcendent and the practical in one frame. For your reading, it endorses grounded spirituality and inspired practicality, each tempering the other.

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