Hey everyone, so I finally got around to typing up my notes on reading the Air suits in Tarot. I remember when I first started out, the Swords felt like a massive headache. They always sound super dramatic and heavy, and frankly, I was messing up readings because I was overthinking the gloomy stuff.
My Journey into the Swords: Less Drama, More Brains
I started this whole Tarot thing maybe three years back, totally on a whim. I grabbed a RWS deck and immediately went for the big interpretations. Swords, representing the element of Air, were supposed to be all about conflict, trouble, and loss, right? The Ten of Swords? Brutal betrayal. The Three of Swords? Heartbreak city.
I was so focused on the doom and gloom, I missed the actual point. The Swords aren’t just about pain; they are about thought. They are the mind working overtime—sometimes for good, sometimes for bad.

First Step: Stripping Away the Fear
- I began by looking at the suit without the traditional keywords. I forced myself to see the literal images. What does a sword do? It cuts. It separates. It defines boundaries.
- Air is communication, intellect, and logic. So, every card in the Swords suite had to be related to those things, no matter how harsh the imagery looked.
For example, the Five of Swords. Everyone sees “Pyrrhic victory” or “walking away defeated.” I started seeing it as: “Someone used their sharp intellect (Swords) to win, but alienated everyone in the process.” It’s a strategic failure, not just emotional loss.
Getting Practical with the Court Cards
The Court Cards were another huge hurdle. I’m talking about the Pages, Knights, Queens, and Kings of Swords. They felt abstract until I started pinning them to real people I knew, or archetypes in movies.
I realized the Page of Swords is just someone starting to speak up—maybe they’re clumsy or a little too blunt, but the idea is there. They’ve picked up the intellectual tool.
The Knight of Swords? That’s the brain running at 100 mph. Super fast, super smart, but maybe totally reckless and charging forward without checking the map. I pulled this card a lot when I was trying to rush coding projects!
The Queen of Swords, she was the easiest breakthrough. She’s the boss who tells you exactly how it is. No sugarcoating. My interpretation became: “Clear, objective truth, even if it hurts.” She cuts through the nonsense with logic.
The King of Swords is the system builder. He’s the legal mind, the strategist, the one who establishes the logical framework. When he shows up, I know the reading is asking for a formal, detached, intellectual approach. That was a huge shift from viewing him as just another “cold intellectual.”
The Pips: Focusing on Mental States
I spent a solid month just journaling on the pips (Ace through Ten). Forget future events, I focused on the current state of mind represented by the card.
- Ace of Swords: A brand new idea. A breakthrough moment. The “lightbulb” turning on. Not conflict starting, but clarity beginning.
- Two of Swords: Mental blockage. Refusing to look at the facts. Blindness by choice.
- Eight of Swords: Feeling trapped because of limiting beliefs—the ropes are on the mind, not the body. It’s self-imprisonment via thought. This was a big personal realization for me.
- Nine of Swords: Anxiety, worry, sleepless nights. The mind torturing itself. This is always the one where I tell people to step away from their thoughts before they spiral.
The key was repetition and removing dramatic emotional projection. Once I saw the Swords as purely mental activity—from clarity to confusion, from brilliant ideas to cruel words—they stopped being scary and became incredibly informative. They show you exactly where the mental friction is in a situation, which is often the real root of any problem.
So, if you’re pulling Swords and panicking, just slow down. Ask yourself: “What logical or intellectual process is this card describing right now?” You’ll be surprised how much simpler the readings become.
