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🃏 Tarot Card Meaning

Knight of Swords — Rider-Waite tarot card
Knight of Swords
Minor Arcana · Swords · Knight
Upright: decisive charge, mission focus, intellectual force, rapid resolve, cutting through
Reversed: reckless argument, burnout velocity, tactless force, charging the wrong hill, mind without brakes
Upright Meaning

The Knight of Swords charges at full gallop into the wind, blade forward, cloak tearing — thought converted to attack speed. Some situations require exactly this: the injustice named today not diplomatically next quarter, the decision executed while others are still forming committees, the argument driven to its conclusion by sheer clarity and nerve. This Knight does not wonder whether the hill can be taken; he is already halfway up it.

Practically, the card authorizes decisive intellectual force — provided the target is chosen. Verify the hill deserves the charge, then commit without the corrosive half-speed of hedged effort. Momentum is the strategy; second-guessing is the only fatal weather.

What needs to be said or done this week at full speed, before caution talks you out of it?

Reversed Meaning

Reversed, the Knight of Swords is velocity without navigation. Arguments are won that should never have been fought; emails send themselves at midnight; the mission changes weekly but the gallop never slows, because motion has become the identity and stopping feels like death. People downstream collect the debris.

The reversal asks you to install brakes without pretending you must become a pacifist. Before the next charge: is this hill mine, is it now, and what does the horse — your body, your team, your family — say about its remaining mileage?

Which battle are you rushing toward mainly because stillness would force you to feel something?

Draw this card in a reading: 🃏 Tarot Reading →

Card imagery: Rider-Waite-Smith deck (1909), public domain.

Today's Moon 6 Jul
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28°16' ♓ Pisces
Waning Gibbous
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✦ Astro Quote
Sol and Mars are fiery; the heat of Mars is destructive, that of the Sun answers the vivifying heavenly fire. - William Lilly (1602.-1681.)