Welcome to my personal blog.
Here you will find my musings, thoughts and observations, all inspired by my experiences as a full-time professional tarot reader.
Compare and Contrast Eight of Cups and Six of Swords
Discover what these cards have in common, and how they differ.
An important exercise to learn and to understand tarot is to compare and contrast two cards which have something in common.
Two important things are true about the language of tarot. One is that each card carries unique energies and interpretations. The second is that each card will have some things in common with a few other cards.
Even beyond obvious associations like elements and numbers, some cards will bear similarities one to another. When cards that have similarities appear in a reading together, their collective meaning can become a theme of the reading.
For newer tarotists, however, these similarities can make it hard to understand the significant differences between the cards.
I’ve discussed this before, most recently in a post that suggests using venn diagrams to figure out similarities and differences between two or more cards.
The Eight of Cups and the Six of Swords are a good pair to try this exercise with. In terms of numbers and elements, they have little in common. Swords are masculine, Cups are feminine. Six and Eight are both even numbers, but not particularly similar in their energy.
Yet, we see enough similarity in these two cards that sometimes newer readers have a difficult time distinguishing their unique energies.
What are the similarities between the Six of Swords and the Eight of Cups?
In the Waite-Smith tradition, both images show motion. Both these cards can convey a sense of travel, either literally or metaphorically. They are usually less about the beginning of an important journey, as the Fool or the Chariot might depict. Instead, both of these cards are about moving away from something, toward something better.
In both of these cards, there can be a sense of needing to move away from emotional difficulty, toward a greater sense of calm.
Both these cards relate to water. The Six of Swords, though an Air card, is in a boat. The Eight of Cups is at a beach.
Both of these cards suggest that there has been some trauma or difficulty in the past.
Both of these cards suggest that it will take some time to move toward something better.
What is unique about the Six of Swords?
Traditional fortune tellers often see this card as predicting a ‘journey over water’. Aleister Crowley called the Six of Swords the card of ‘Science’. Even in the Waite image, we see how the swords of logical thought float over the water of emotion.
The Six of Swords can discuss science and technology.
In the Six of Swords, we are sailing toward smoother waters. This card includes an inherent prediction that things are getting better.
What is unique about the Eight of Cups?
While the Six of Swords seems to be sailing toward something, the Eight of Cups seems to be walking away from something. In this card we see abandonment. The Eight of Cups may refer to the damage done by childhood abandonment. It might suggest that we feel abandoned in a relationship. Or, it might suggest that it is time to abandon an unsuccessful undertaking.
Aleister Crowley called the Eight of Cups ‘Indolence’. From this perspective, we can see that the Eight of Cups might involve a desire to avoid a situation, or something that we don’t have the will or energy to complete.
Often in this card I see the emotional process of healing that comes when we stop trying to fix something that can’t be fixed.
The next time you are stuck trying to understand how two or more similar cards differ from one another, try this simple exercise and see how much you learn about each card’s distinct qualities, as well as their similarities.
The Process in a Tarot Card
Try these simple exercises and divination techniques to enhance your work with tarot.
There are so many ways to understand a tarot card, so many different depictions of the archetypes of tarot, and so many ways to use the brilliant tool that is tarot. Today I am thinking about one particular way to use tarot – to find a process within each card.
I first started thinking about this about ten years ago when I wrote my first tarot poem about the Eight of Cups. That poem is now published in Arcana: The Tarot Poetry Anthology. (You can also read it here on my website.)
It’s still fascinating to me that we can know our cards well, use them daily, and still find in a card, at a certain moment, something we had never seen before, or thought about before. On the day I wrote that first tarot poem, what I saw in the Eight of Cups was a process of healing.
Over the ten years since I first saw a process in a tarot card, I’ve been thinking a lot about how each tarot card might convey a process. We could use this concept in a few different ways.
First, as an exercise in viewing the cards a new way we can look at each card and see the process within it. This is much more than asking what the person is doing in the image, or what the action is within the image. Rather, this is looking at each card as a metaphor for something larger. For example, we often see the Four of Pentacles as being a miser or holding on to resources inappropriately. Yet, when I look at this card with the goal of seeing a process, I might see a process of self-protection such as establishing boundaries or increasing self-care. A card without a person pictured can still discuss a process. For example, the Ace of Wands could speak to me about the process of stoking one’s internal flame.
Another way to play with this concept is in divination. If you pull a single card at random and look for the process within it, you might find a reflection of a process you are already doing in your life, or advice for a process you need to begin.
You could also try a two-card spread, with the first card indicating the process you need to begin, and the second card offering advice on how to make it happen.
When we find within each tarot card a process, we make the wisdom of tarot even more pertinent and actionable in our daily lives.