The Five of Wands hits with noise and friction, and conflict waits in each corner. It is easy to learn this card with my P.E.N.S.I Method First, this card brings heat that forces growth through struggle. Next, it pushes you to face truth instead of hiding. Tension rises fast, and it refuses to soften. Still, you learn what you want when everything feels loud.
This post uses my P.E.N.S.I Method Position, Element, Numerology, Symbolism, and Intuition to build a full picture of the card, and it gives structure. Next, each layer adds shape, meaning, and guidance, and you can use it right now.
Five of Wands, 1st Layer of Context: Position
We are not concerned with position in a reading just yet. In the future, I’ll be doing lots of spreads. But for now, for a little context, it’s going to be about clashes at work or on creative projects.
This card drops when voices collide, and it demands your full attention. Next, it shows stress, rivalry, and strong wills that clash hard, so courage matters. Then, it asks you to choose action instead of silence, and it reminds you to move. Still, it suggests that chaos can build strength when you stay grounded, and it pushes you to hold steady. Finally, it points to hard talks, group challenges, or inner storms, so presence matters.
How do you remember that? Well, don’t memorize, learn to associate instead. If you have not, read the first P.E.N.S.I. lesson, it will help you make sense of tarot cards much easier.
2nd Layer of Context: Element is Fire
In P.E.N.S.I., fire is passion and often career and creative endeavors. It’s all about what we are passionate about. Very simple. Remember, fire maybe destructive, but it is always creating. One thing falls away or is undone, and something new is created that takes its place.
First, the Five of Wands lives in Fire, and it speaks with bold force. Next, this element burns with passion and sharp truth, so it clears confusion. Then, it pushes movement when things feel stuck, and it wakes sleeping power. Still, conflict flares because each person holds strong need, so tension builds. Later, Fire clears the air and forces honesty, and it strips away lies. Finally, it brings heat that shapes strength, not ruin, so power grows.
3rd Layer of Context for Five of Wands: Numerology of Five
Five in P.EN.S.I. is always about sorrow, loss, regret or all three. And this always precedes a better time, and one should have hope of better. First, five marks change and the breaking of old patterns. Next, it pulls you from comfort and shakes loose what no longer fits. Then, it shows a turning point when struggle must lead to motion. Still, it teaches that change feels rough before it feels right. Finally, it calls for courage and clear direction, so you can rise.
4th Layer of Context: Symbolism
First, the raised wands show challenge and clashing goals. Next, the scattered ground shows weak footing, so balance matters. Then, the open sky shows space to grow. Still, the bodies in motion show skill built through effort, so practice counts. Finally, the bright colors show energy that refuses to dim. This is along the lines of generic descriptions found in guidebooks.
But if we examine the symbols with a lens of “actual life”, that is all true, but I get a lot more out of it. Knowing this is about passion, creative projects, career matters, ask if it looks like people are getting along. I do not think so. It looks like conflict, not war, but conflict.
I see conflict, disagreements, challenges like petty squabbling in the workplace or in a coven or tight social group. There is a real need to put some serious effort into problem solving.
5th Layer of Context: Intuition
First, listen close because the Five of Wands pushes honesty. Next, step forward instead of stepping aside. Still, speak what burns inside you, and hold your ground without cruelty. Finally, trust your fire, so strength leads you.
When all the factors of P.E.N.S.I. come together, you get the above. But, more specific, I often know there’s a clash of creative ideas, everyone pushing their ideas to the point of bruising other’s egos. I challenge the client I am reading for to take leadership, acknowledge other people’s ideas, give them kudos. Strive to see how all those ideas can work together, the sum of the ideas are greater than the ideas alone.
Reversed Meaning
First, when reversed, tension turns toxic, and peace breaks down. Next, it shows shouting without reason and battles without aim, so you must stop wasting strength. Still, reset the field before blame grows. Finally, step back and choose calm, so truth can breathe. It still warrants taking a leadership role, and a higher road.
Sympathetic Decks
In its era, this would have been about serious business, and grand projects with large scale. But in this day and age it can fit just about any work environment or creative group. This card pairs well with decks that show sharp lines and bold color but whose art includes heat, motion and real bodies.
All versions of the Rider–Waite deck have depictions of five “combatants”. The deck I use the most these days and professionally, (Ellen Dugan’s Witches’ Tarot) features dragon riders, but again, it’s not war, just competition of egos that is unhealthy for the group.
Correspondences
- Fire
- Mars
- Leo
- Number Five
Tarot Spell: Five of Wands
First, place the Five of Wands card before you, and set a candle just above it to call in fire. Next, stand with your feet firm and hold a wand or branch in your strong hand, so your body feels grounded. Then focus on the card and speak the conflict aloud and let your voice shake loose blocked heat. Strike the ground once and name the result you choose, so the action becomes real.
Finally, let wax fall near the card without touching it, and thank the flame for the strength now set in motion. Think conflict resolution, and a meeting of the minds, an acceptable agreement.
Tarot Spell: Ace of Wands (Reversed)
First, place the Five of Wands card face up beside a bowl of water, so calm surrounds the fire. Next, write each conflict you must end on a small slip of paper, and speak them with steady breath. Then rest your fingers on the card and read the list aloud, so the tension leaves your body.
Fold the paper tight and drop it into the water, and watch the words soften. Finally, tilt the card away from you and walk forward without looking back, so release becomes truth. Use this spell when you seek an end to a conflict you believe will not end but need to walk away from.
Final Note
First, the Five of Wands asks for bold strength. Next, it shows struggle that teaches power through fire. Still, you rise when you move with purpose. Finally, choose battles with care, and step forward with intent.
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I cant help but wonder, do you think the Five of Wands represents chaos or healthy competition?
Hi Anna, đŸ™‚ In this energy, it’s not healthy, more of a strain to unhealthy. Again, it is like the bruising of egos to assert one’s own ideas or someone bruising you for being so assertive with their ideas. I try to get folk to take a leadership role when I see this card, to acknowledge everyone’s ideas and creativities, but to bring it all together instead of conflict over ideas.
new to tarot, loving these tarot card lessons, when do you think you’ll get to court cards?
Yeah, I always struggle with court cards too, looking forward to that.
Hi Casey, đŸ˜‰ thanks for asking, the short answer is once I get all the pips posted. I’ve been posting one a week but intend on stepping that up to two or more a week. Hate to say it but it will be a while. Thanks for your patience.
Five of wands makes so much more sense now. I love the angle about “bruising each other’s egos” in the workplace. I read a little tarot, but your method and lessons are really helping. Thanks.
đŸ™‚ thx Maximus, I appreciate you, glad you are enjoying the lessons.
I love that the reverse meanings are not just opposite of the upright with PENSI. I know some people read without doing reverse. Do you think that’s smart? Or should you go with the reverse as well an upright?
Hi Luna, great observation! Yes, sometimes a reverse tarot card is the opposite. But, sometimes it is the same but different, the same issue(s) but different reasoning/motivation. And, sometimes it is the upright meaning amplified. I always choose to include reverse meanings, because it adds yet another bunch of layers to my tarot readings. It’s not to hard to get their reverse meanings down, especially learning to associate but also steady and consistently reading over time.
When I look at this card I see a group of people that seem to have the same goal in mind but different, and probably conflicting, ideas on how to achieve the goal. The ground they are standing on is turned up, or rocky. Meaning their ideas are not aligning. The ground in the forefront is smooth and solid, respresenting having ideas that work together. This leads me to think if they all shift their stance to the smooth ground, they can then begin to align to achieve their goal.
I see this sometimes in spreads and a lot of time I see this as refusing to take accountability of their actions. They are procrastinating with their job they want more but will not push to better themselves. I dunno that’s usually how I feel sometimes when reading for others with this card
I can see that, although what I typically get is petty squabbling at work. Everyone thinks they have best idea and push it (ego). But to the point it is bruising other people’s egos, and they are all guilty of it. I counsel them to take a leadership role with the Five of Wands, upright. Acknowledge everyone’s ideas. Collaborate, combine, make everyone feel they are valid and have something to contribute. That’s what a team is all about. In the Five of Wands, it is like too many captains, too many “front-men” or “too many cooks in the kitchen” if that makes sense. đŸ™‚ Blessings!