Unable to sleep, an old woman sits up in her bed. Nine swords loom over her thoughts as she is tormented by anxiety and nightmares. The executioner is her own mind.
Unable to fall asleep, an old woman has risen up in her bed. Nine swords hang in her thoughts as anxiety and night terrors torment her. Around her is the dead dark of the room, and the only things in this night are she herself and her fears. The swords do not touch her body; they loom over her thoughts. This is the dark night of the soul, in which the mind becomes its own executioner.
🌑The sleepless night — anxiety made physical; waking in the dark with no return to sleep
🗡️Nine swords over the thoughts — fears that loom but do not wound the body; the pain is made within the mind
👵The lonely old woman — despair without witnesses; the long weight of grief accumulated over years
😰Nightmares and torment — the mind turned executioner; suffering far exceeding its cause
Interpretation
The Nine of Swords here is the card of the dark night of the soul. An old woman cannot sleep, and nine swords hang in her thoughts while anxiety and nightmares torment her. This is the moment when worry turns physical: the body wakes in the middle of the night and cannot return to sleep. The mind has become its own executioner.
In the classic reading, the upright sense is the dark night of the soul, anxiety, insomnia, fear. The paradox of the card is that the swords do not touch the woman, do not wound her body — they hang in her thoughts. The pain is made within the mind, not from without. Perhaps she does not yet grasp the full weight of grief to come; or perhaps the grief is already here, in full force, living in her head rather than in the room.
Upright: anxiety, worry, stress, torment, despair. Suffering with no outer cause, or one many times smaller than the dread of it. Mental anguish, guilt, sorrow. This is a card of ill omen, but with an important caveat: the source of the pain is within.
With the Moon the Nine shares the motif of fears rising from the unconscious: the Moon shows images, the Nine shows thoughts. With the Devil — a trap that holds from within. And with the Ten it forms a link: anxiety driven to its limit resolves into the bottom, after which there is only the dawn. After the captivity of the Eight, if the exit goes unseen, this very night sets in.
The card's counsel is to check whether the swords are in the room or only in your thoughts. The suffering is real, but its source is within. Turn on the light, look around: your body is whole, the blades hang in imagination. This night must be lived through without believing it eternal — beyond the darkest thought rises the morning.
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Advice & forecast
✦ The card's advice
Turn on the light and look around: the swords hang in your thoughts, not in the room — your body is whole, and the real threat is far smaller than the dread of it. Do not trust the mind's nighttime reckoning: in the dark every worry swells into a nightmare, and by morning it proves solvable. Make no decisions and pass no verdicts at three in the morning — wait for the day. If the fear will not leave, speak it aloud or entrust it to someone close: a named anxiety loses half its power. Remember that your mind right now is both executioner and accuser, and so its verdicts cannot be trusted. Live through the night — morning will come.
🔮 What the forecast holds
Ahead lies a stretch of anxiety: sleepless nights, intrusive thoughts, fears that seem larger than their real cause. The mind will torment itself, swelling worry into nightmare, though the swords hang only in the thoughts and not over the body. This is a hard period but an important one to understand: the suffering is created within, and so within it can also be soothed. The forecast is not easy, yet it carries its caveat — beyond the darkest thought rises the morning. The dark night of the soul is not eternal; having lived through it, you will find many of the threats were phantoms.
↓ Nine of Swords reversed
Reversed, the Nine of Swords here means improving prospects, recovering health. The night is ending, the anxiety retreating, the mind reclaiming control — this is the morning after insomnia, a gradual emergence from despair. Wellbeing mends, fears scatter in the daylight, nightmares lose their power. A favorable, healing turn. But the reversed card has a heavy side too, inherited from the classic: an inner nightmare emerging into the open and being confirmed — a well-founded fear, shame, jealousy, a suspicion that proves true. In the soft reading the anxiety dissolves into dawn; in the hard reading it passes into fear-driven action and begins to destroy what had not yet been destroyed.
The card in spreads
The same card reads differently depending on the spread and the question — compare real spreads:
Spread "What troubles me"
Separate the real threat from the imagined
«How well-founded is my fear?»
The fear
Nine of Swords
What is real
Ace of Swords
What will calm it
The Star
The Nine of Swords as the fear — the anxiety looms, the mind torments itself, nightmares swell the threat; but the swords are in the thoughts, not the room. What is real Ace of Swords — the Ace of Swords: kindle clarity, look at the facts directly; a sharp mind will separate the true danger from the phantom, and it will prove far smaller. What will calm it The Star — the Star: a quiet light, hope, healing after the night. Do not trust the mind's nighttime reckoning. Switch on the clarity of the Ace, and the fear will shrink; behind it rises the Star of peace.
Spread "Night and dawn"
Understand how the hard stretch will resolve
«When will this difficult stretch end?»
Now
Nine of Swords
The bottom
Ten of Swords
The dawn
The Sun
The Nine of Swords now — the dark night of the soul, anxiety and insomnia; the mind has turned executioner, and it seems no light can break through. The bottom Ten of Swords — the Ten of Swords: the anxiety will reach its limit and resolve into full exhaustion, after which it can get no worse. The dawn The Sun — the Sun: clarity, joy, the full return to life. This is a hard but rising line: anxiety driven to the bottom burns itself out, and beyond the bottom rises the Sun. Live through the night — the morning is inevitable.
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Spread "Lesser Cross"
Clarify the essence and nature of the despair
«Where does this sorrow come from, and what do I do with it?»
Essence
Nine of Swords
The source
The Moon
What heals
Four of Swords
The Nine of Swords at the core — nighttime despair, a torment the mind creates itself, without an outer cause or beyond it. The source The Moon — the Moon: fears rising from the unconscious, illusions that warp reality in the dark. What heals Four of Swords — the Four of Swords: rest, silence, the healing sleep beneath the earth where the dream keeps roses in bloom. Do not war with the nighttime thoughts — let them quiet in the Four's repose. The Moon deceives until dawn; rest and silence will return your clarity.
✦ PremiumUnlock the Full ReadingSpread "Lesser Cross": position-by-position reading, card combinations, and guidanceOpen with subscription →first spread is free
How it differs from Waite
Rider-Waite-SmithNine of Swords
vs
Deviant Moon TarotNine of Swords
In the classic, the Nine of Swords is a woman sitting up in bed, her face buried in her hands, nine swords hanging on the wall; a quilt patterned with roses and the zodiac contrasts with the inner chaos, and a carved relief depicts a killing. This deck simplifies and ages the image: an old woman unable to sleep, the swords hanging directly 'in her thoughts.' The classic's decorative layers are stripped away; what remains is the essence — sleepless anxiety and loneliness in the dark. Both concern the same thing: the dark night of the soul, nightmares, the mind tormenting itself; the swords do not wound the body, the pain is within. But this deck makes it barer and more hopeless, without the classic's pattern of cosmic order around the suffering.
WaiteDeviant Moon Tarot
SceneA woman on her bed hides her face, swords on the wall.An old woman cannot sleep, nine swords hang in her thoughts.
ThemeDark night of the soul, anxiety, insomnia, fear, guilt.Anxiety, worry, stress, torment, despair.
EmphasisA pattern of zodiac and roses contrasts with inner chaos.Bare despair without ornament; the swords directly in the thoughts.
Symbolism & correspondences
Mars in Gemini: Mars (aggression, the blow, violence) in Gemini (mind, thought) — aggression turned inward, the mind attacking itself. Thought become a weapon against its own bearer: this deck's nine swords hang precisely in the old woman's thoughts — a Martian assault of the intellect upon itself within the airy element.
Element
Air
◆
Arcana
Minor
Suit
Swords
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