In the Three of Swords, working through P.E.N.S.I. reminds me that clarity hurts more than confusion ever did. While confusion delays pain, clarity delivers it cleanly. As a result, this card asks what truth pierced the heart, which words or realizations caused the wound, and whether I am processing it or simply replaying it on a loop. Ultimately, the wisdom here lies in letting the truth cut once, not turning it into a daily ritual.

Three of Swords, 1st Layer of Context: Position
We’re not in a spread, though I will present many spreads for you down the road. For now, take the card out and actually look at it while reading this. Because the greyscale images in most books limit conscious and subconscious association, they rarely help here.
Remember from the original P.E.N.S.I. lesson that 3 is where things stop being theoretical. At this point, something becomes undeniable.
2nd Layer: Element is Air
Air rules thought, words, communication, and understanding. In the Three of Swords, however, air becomes sharp and exact. This is not emotional chaos or overwhelming feeling. Rather, it is pain caused by something said, learned, or understood too clearly to ignore. First, the mind arrives at the truth. Then, the heart absorbs the impact.
3rd Layer for Three of Swords: Numerology of 3
In P.E.N.S.I., three is where energy fully expresses itself. Remember with any three, something has formed, an initial stage of completion. Up until this point, thoughts may circle or hesitate. Here, they land. In this card, that landing hurts. The third sword does not confuse the issue or add noise. Instead, it completes the realization. The truth has arrived, whether I welcome it or not.
4th layer: Symbolism
Three swords pierce a heart beneath storm clouds. Nothing about the image is subtle, yet nothing about it is chaotic either. The heart is exposed, not defended. Meanwhile, the blades are clean, deliberate, and precise. The rain does not exist for drama. Instead, it washes. Altogether, the image speaks to sorrow caused by truth, grief born of clarity, and pain that must be acknowledged to pass through.
5th Layer of Context: Intuition
This card feels like the exact moment I stop lying to myself. Although it hurts, it does so because it is honest, not because it is cruel. There is no performance here and no spiritual bypassing. Instead, there is a clean break between what I hoped would be true and what actually is. The pain is real, yet it only lingers if I keep reopening it with my own thoughts.
Often what comes to me in a reading with this card is heartbreaking delays, or deep sense of betrayal. Once in a while, the story is a bit different and the sense is about a deep, personal loss.
Three of Swords: Reversed Meaning
Reversed, this card points to pain that is being buried, delayed healing, or grief turned inward instead of released. Think the same, not the opposite, but not processing it well. But the healing path is blocked. The person needs to embrace the pain, allow themselves to feel and process it. Until they do, they will feel very stuck in life. They must work through it.
Sympathetic Decks
In pip-heavy or minimalist decks, the Three of Swords remains direct and uncompromising. Even without a heart depicted, three blades are enough. Because of this, the message does not depend on imagery alone. Thought has cut emotion. The meaning survives shifts in art style because it is anchored in number and suit.
II haven’t seen many decks with an image too different that the Rider-Waite-Smith decks. However, every deck with a three of swords seems to depict this painful state.
Correspondences
- Astrology: Saturn in Libra
- Element: Air
- Planet: Saturn
- Number: 3
Tarot Spell: Three of Swords
I write the truth I have been avoiding on paper. Afterward, I read it out loud once, without theatrics. Then, I fold the paper and place it under a clear glass of water overnight. In the morning, I pour the water out and discard the paper, saying, “The truth has spoken. I release the wound.”
Tarot Spell: Three of Swords Reversed
I write a recurring painful thought on paper. Next, I draw one clean line through it and say, “This no longer defines me.” After that, I tear the paper once, not repeatedly, and discard it. The point is release, not reenactment.
Final Notes and Conclusion
The Three of Swords is not about suffering for sport. Upright, it marks the moment truth hurts but also clarifies. Reversed, it warns against unprocessed grief or shows the beginning of real healing. At its core, this card teaches me that pain ends when truth is acknowledged and no longer rehearsed.
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I am wondering about tarot cards, three of swords being an example, is it all the possible meanings or just one specifically? How do you know?
Its all about personal interpretation. Thats the beauty of tarot – no right or wrong. Trust your intuition.
🙂 Agreed …. that’s a hugely important part of it Jericho. Thanks for chiming in. 🙂 Blessed Be.
Hello Brooklyn, 🙂 It can be “E-all of the above” so to speak, sure, but often is one or the other, or a combination. First, it has to be taken in context, look at the other cards in the spread, important positions that set the tone or base of the reading. Then look at cards immediately before and after the card in question. And, as you work through the steps of P.E.N.S.I., you’ll be surprised what sparks your intuition.
So if this card comes up in say a one card pull while you are meditating on a situation where you need truth. Would you say its telling you to trust your intuition and that what your gut (“gut”-feeling-because of indirect conversations youve had or little things youve witnessed, but nothing concrete) is telling you is truth? Maybe not everything your intuition is telling you is absolute truth, but at least the the main gist, or overall theme of your gut feeling is truth? Kind of like, the card is telling you to face reality even though it can be painful?