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Five of Cups, Five of Swords: Two Sides of Shame
The Five of Cups and the Five of Swords can perform as opposites. They look at the extremes of shame. At best, shame is a bell, alerting us to reality, but fleeting.
Living in Our Feelings: Rereading Tarot's Cups
“Tarot's Cups ask who we want to be. They ask us "how do you want to feel?"
This is a question that requires both creativity and intuition, one of the other virtues of tarot's suit of Cups.
The Queen of Cups, the King of Cups, the Page of Cups and even the Four and Seven of Cups show the connection between creativity and intuition.”
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Through free thought, by which I mean attention to detail, inquiry, and understanding, we can see that the work of tarot’s Swords isn’t good or bad.
Through free thought, we can see the role systems play in our limited ability to see the truth and accept reality. Our unwillingness or inability to think and scheme freely limits our capacity for action.
It all but ensures that we will act without thinking, and reap the consequences about which the Swords warn.