5 Ancient Divination Methods

Your passion for gaining the knowledge of destiny will lead you to the practice of divination. This practice goes back to millennia and presents itself as a midpoint in time between past and future.

Divination’s essential purpose is that if you successfully decode an omen, you will understand the intermediate circumstances corresponding to your present. The art of divination has countless channels to manifest your intuition in the form of detailed observation. 


5 Ancient Divination Channels

Here are 5 of the most ancient divination methods that will help you understand divination and admire its practice beyond witchcraft.

 

1. Tea Reading

You must have heard about the divination of someone's future through a cup of leftover tea. This reading of leftover tea leaves is similar to tasseography and complex in nature. As a reader, you will often find numerous and varied forms. For instance, a figure resembling a fish is a sign of good luck, whereas a mountain may indicate a series of obstacles in the future. 

 

2. Sand Divination

Reading shapes on stones or sand is also known as Geomancy. It is one of the most beautiful divination forms. People have read vestiges within sand's layers. Those convinced of this divination technique have a strong belief in the earth's aura, i.e., "vital energy" when you throw sand randomly on a board or in a desert. 

However, it is important for you to familiarize yourself with geometric figures and the relevant codes. 

3. Tarot

Tarot card reading has been one of the most popular and widely known divination techniques.  Approximately 7,000 different decks of tarot cards have been created so far under a single eschatological code. 

Beyond tarot’s divinatory intent, it is a method to make all possible and current situations and connections visible. 

 

4. Scrying

Scrying is also known as “Reflection Divination” and is probably one of the oldest divination methods. You will find its practice in various cultures where they could even read reflections in the water. Ancient Egyptians practiced crying with ink, whereas ancient Mesopotamia used bowls filled with oil to Scrying. 

Ancient Greeks practiced it on mirrors and metals, and the Aztec tlatoani used obsidian to read reflections. This art of crying further led to reading crystals to see and analyze someone’s future. 

5. Divination through Grains of Corn

The method of divination can trace its roots back into pre-Hispanic civilizations who were possessed with gaining advanced knowledge to ace divination. Here they combined practices with the science of meteorology and astronomy. The civilizations used this knowledge towards calendar formation, counting time, and predicting life events. 

Predicting events before time using grains of corns was a more personal divination method, just like divination by sand. In this case, you throw corn’s grains on white canvas or any other surface of your choice. 

You will then analyze the positions of the grain they fall into and make a determination. You can use grains of different colors. In Indian cultures, the number of grains cast can be anything between 4 and 100. However, the wonder of this divination method lies in decoding the revolution of your energy. 

The Takeaway

If you are new to divination or an aficionado who would love to learn several divination techniques, then learning any or all of these five most ancient practices is the best way forward. However, pick one and excel at analyzing the current signs to make accurate predictions.