The Three of Spades in a French Deck of Playing Cards |
The deck we are mostly all familiar with consists of 52 cards total, 13 from each "suit": Spades ♠, Hearts ♥, Clubs ♣, Diamonds ♦. The typical Tarot deck also consists of four suits, but with 14 cards in each suit. The Tarot suits are as follows: Swords, Cups, Wands (or Staves), and Pentacles (or Discs, Rings, or Coins).
As it turns out, while there are indeed more differences than similarities between Tarot and standard playing cards, the suits in both decks have corollaries with each other. Spades correspond to Swords, Hearts to Cups, Wands to Clubs, and Pentacles to Diamonds. [A Pentacle--often represented by a gold coin or disc with a five-pointed star (or pentagram) on it--is a word of disputed origin, but is generally used in the sense of "amulet" or something with a symbol on it used for magical practices. Mathematically, a pentacle is simply a five-pointed star made up of ten equal lines without the interior lines present in a pentagram. A white pentacle can be seen 50 times on the American flag. But I didn't start this entry to talk about pentacles and stars, so I'll leave further discussion for a future entry.]
About 7 years ago, someone very dear to me was given a large novelty playing card, the Three of Spades, by a young child who said at the time, "This is your luck." This particular person has since then held onto the card in a very special place, until yesterday, when I discovered that the 3 of Spades is the same as the 3 of Swords in Tarot.
The Three of Swords in Tarot |
Three of Swords: The Wound. This card represents the aspect of the mind which is overly critical, especially of itself. The perverse impulse to dissect a problem beyond the point of usefulness. The three swords are often depicted piercing a bleeding heart. The swords symbolise the intellect, and the heart, the emotions which always suffer under this treatment.... This card depicts a pure piercing sorrow of the mind. The sorrow must be felt and experienced for closure and relief to come. Generally speaking, it is a negative card and often refers to loss.
We agreed that the card had perhaps played its part and been useful in this person's life, but was no longer of any productive worth, if in fact it ever was. The card was given to her at a particularly rough juncture in her life, and the meaning was not fully understood, and indeed was probably misinterpreted. We now know its significance, if not the full effect it may or may not have had, and so she decided to dispose of the card.
I'm left wondering what a suitable and more positive replacement would be. Perhaps the King of Hearts? Not for the "Suicide King" epithet, but more for the 1966 film and the 1992 Roy Orbison album.
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