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Six of Swords — Tarot card, Soblazn — Sensual Tarot deck
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Six of Swords

Soblazn — Sensual Tarot
transitionpassagemoving ongradual healingnecessary departure

Leaving the storm for still water. It's hard, but the boat is already carrying you to a better shore.

The card's image

At dusk, across calm water, a ferryman in a cloak slowly carries a woman with a bare back; six swords are planted in the boat's side, ahead the shore grows lighter, behind remains what wounded her. Her pose is quiet, weary, but turned forward. The Six of Swords — about a passage, a necessary parting with pain, a movement toward peace; about the road away from what caused suffering. This is the card of a healing departure: sorrowful but true, when you carry your wounds (the swords in the boat) away from their source. The bare back turned toward the new shore — about trusting the journey, about readiness to sail toward something better, even if it is hard and unclear now. The water ahead is smoother than the water behind; each stroke carries her farther from what never came together. The card says: leave, let go, allow yourself a change of scene and the chance to lick your wounds far from the pain. This is not flight but a wise passage — sometimes healing begins simply by sailing away from the shore where it hurt. Ahead, it is quieter.

Interpretation

The Six of Swords occupies a specific and precious place in human experience: the moment just after the crisis has passed, when you are no longer fighting but not yet healed. It is the exhale. The Swords suit tracks the life of the mind through conflict, clarity, grief, and isolation — and here, at six, the mind stops arguing and simply moves. There is no fanfare in this card, no victory banner. There is only a boat, a steady hand on the pole, and water growing calmer.

Within the arc of the Swords, the Six arrives after the wreckage of the Five of Swords — the ugly, hollow win, or the humiliating loss — and before the Seven of Swords, where cunning and self-preservation can tip into evasion. The Six is the corridor between those two rooms. It carries the emotional weight of Three of Swords and the enforced stillness of Four of Swords, but now the stillness is in motion — healing through displacement rather than through rest.

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Advice & forecast

The card's advice

If this card has appeared for you, the message is gentle and direct: go. Not with drama, not with a final speech, not with a backward glance — just go. The boat is ready and the water ahead is calmer than what is behind you. You are allowed to leave a situation, a mindset, a relationship, or a phase of life without resolving every tension it contained. The swords come with you; you cannot unlearn what you have lived through. But carrying knowledge is different from being pinned by it. Let someone or something help you across if you are too exhausted to pole your own boat. The far shore does not need to be paradise — it simply needs to be somewhere other than here.

What the forecast holds

Something is shifting in your near future — a change of scene, a change of context, possibly a literal journey but more likely an inner repositioning. The turbulence you have been navigating will not disappear overnight, but you will find yourself moving away from its centre, and the quality of daily life will improve as a result. Expect a gradual settling rather than a sudden breakthrough. The conditions ahead are workable, even if they are not yet known. What matters now is willingness — the capacity to accept the crossing as it comes, unhurried and unheroic, and to trust that movement itself is a form of healing.

Six of Swords reversed

When the Six of Swords is reversed, the boat is beached. Something has prevented the crossing — and it is worth sitting honestly with what that something is. Sometimes it is external: the circumstances genuinely will not release you yet, the timing is not right, there are real obligations that must be met before you can leave. But more often, in reversal, the obstacle is internal: a fear that the other shore might not be better, an attachment to the identity built inside the storm, a grief that hasn't been spoken aloud and so cannot be left behind. There may also be a pressure to surface — things that were kept quiet during the difficult period are demanding to be said. A confession, a declaration, an old anger — something that was submerged in the urgency of survival now insists on being acknowledged. The reversed Six can also indicate a situation where you have arrived somewhere new but are still living as if you were mid-crossing: replaying old conflicts, bracing for turbulence that is no longer there. The invitation is to look up and notice that the water has already changed.

The card in spreads

The same card reads differently depending on the spread and the question — compare real spreads:

How it differs from Manara

Six of Swords — Rider-Waite-Smith deck
Rider-Waite-SmithSix of Swords
Soblazn — Sensual TarotSix of Swords

In the Rider-Waite-Smith image, the Six of Swords is almost entirely about containment and quiet movement — cloaked figures, still purpose, the geometry of swords-as-fence. Emotion is present but suppressed beneath heavy fabric and the steady labour of crossing. Milo Manara's Erotic Tarot reimagines this card through the language of the body: where Waite places cloth and shadow, Manara gives skin and feeling, and the 'crossing' becomes intimate rather than geographic. Waite's version asks what you must carry with you when you leave; Manara's asks what you must finally allow yourself to feel once you are free of the storm. Both versions agree that transition is the subject — they disagree on whether it is experienced in the mind or in the flesh. The Waite reading is universal and slightly melancholy; the Manara reading is sensual and release-oriented.

ManaraSoblazn — Sensual Tarot
SceneA woman and man in intimate transit — the body as the vessel of transition, touch as the anchor in motionA cloaked woman and child ferried across troubled water by a pole-bearing guide, six swords standing in the bow
FocusEmotional and physical release; the relief of closeness after isolation; the body's intelligence about when it is time to moveMental endurance; the necessary carrying of past experience; the geometry of passage from turbulence to stillness
QuestionWhat do you allow yourself to feel — and share — once the storm is behind you?What do you carry with you, and what are you finally leaving behind?

Symbolism & correspondences

Mercury in Aquarius governs this card — the planet of thought and movement in the sign of detachment and wider perspective. This combination gives the Six of Swords its characteristic quality: the mind stepping back from personal pain far enough to see the larger pattern, then making the rational, humane decision to move toward something better. Aquarius lends a certain coolness to the crossing — it is not an emotional flight but a considered one. Mercury ensures the journey is purposeful: the swords are standing, not flying, because the mind has chosen to carry its experience rather than act from it.

Element
Air
Arcana
Minor
Suit
Swords

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