Nine of Swords

Tarot

Nine of Swords

← Karl Swainston / Tarot

Keywords — Nine of Swords

Banishing Guilt & Remorse Back to Keywords

When the Nine of Swords is turned over, it can bring a fleeting sense of remorse for past decisions. It is a universal human experience to err, and reflecting on your choices is a noble trait. However, you must actively prevent this remorse from thickening into heavy, toxic guilt.

Guilt serves no positive purpose, bringing only depression and a festering of the spirit. While being firm with yourself occasionally helps you grow, your primary duty belongs to your present peace and future happiness.

Mastering Anxiety & Fear Back to Keywords

This can be an anxious time, making it essential to guard your mind against brooding over potential ills. Feeding these worries with focused attention only manifests further anxiety.

Remember the absolute truth about fear: it is nothing more than an illusion of the mind. Like any bad dream, fear can be completely banished through disciplined thought alone.

Wrenching the Mind to the Present Back to Keywords

The moment you catch your mind drifting into heavy, negative reveries, consciously wrench your thoughts away from them.

Focus intently on the vibrant, energetic pulse of life beating outside of you. Now is not the time to become listless or reclusive; it is the perfect time to get out into the world, forget the past, and leave silly fears exactly where they belong—behind you.

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Karl Swainston

About Karl Swainston

Karl Swainston is a writer and storyteller whose work is forged from a life lived across the North of England and far beyond. Growing up on a Leeds council estate in the 1960s, Karl's journey was anything but linear. By the age of thirty, he had already lived a dozen lives: from the rigors of grammar school to a degree in Latin, a stint as a fishmonger, a period of discovery living in Marseille, and a return to the hustle of London. Whether working as a postman, a builder, or competing as a county-level chess player, he was, above all, an avid reader—constantly documenting the world around him. This restless spirit continued into his professional life. Karl later taught in Bradford, where he ran a specialist unit for 244 of the most excluded students from across the region—young people whom even the local Pupil Referral Units could not accommodate. Working alongside his old friend Malcolm, Karl spent his days navigating the volatility of Bradford's most aggressive and dysfunctional teenagers. Throughout his life, Karl has been an avid runner and has always shared his home with a rotating cast of beloved dogs and cats—companions who have been constant witnesses to his work. As a writer, Karl's range is as expansive as his history. He works across a wide breadth of genres, including fiction and short stories, autobiography and memoir, biography, non-fiction, and metaphysical writing, as well as providing sharp commentary, opinion, analysis, and essays. Whether writing about his years managing the Harrogate Arms or offering insights from his current adopted home in South East India, where he lives in a simple village with his dog, Bambi, Karl's voice reflects the full, untidy, and deeply human breadth of life. He continues to draw on the rich, decades-long tapestry of his experiences to tell stories that matter, proving that no matter where you live, the human story remains the same.

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