Rider-Waite (Primary): The Process of Experience / Zen Tarot (Auxiliary): Guidance for the Soul
Nine of Swords
This card is the “Actual Display” of your current situation. “The Nine of Swords” in Rider-Waite is known as the “Nightmare Card.” A person wakes up in the middle of the night, covering their face with their hands, appearing in extreme pain or anxiety. Nine swords hang on the wall, symbolizing the thoughts oppressing them. On a practical level, this indicates you are under immense mental stress, possibly insomnia, anxiety, excessive worry about the future, or being tormented by guilt. This is a fear created by the “mind” about things that haven’t happened yet.
Due to copyright issues, BJD Tarot is used to replace Rider-Waite

📖 Rider-Waite: The Actual Display of Reality
| Area | Upright (Bad/Warning: Anxiety/Insomnia) | Reversed (Good/Turning Point: Release/Dawn) |
|---|---|---|
| Love | Feeling extremely insecure, paranoid, fear of abandonment, insomnia due to relationship issues, guilt. | Anxiety reduced, honest communication about fears, realizing it was overthinking, darkness before dawn has passed. |
| Career | Overwhelmed by work stress, fear of failure, worrying about layoffs, inability to work due to anxiety, nervous breakdown. | Release of pressure, finding solutions, facing the worst-case scenario and finding it’s not that bad. |
| Academic | Pre-exam anxiety, fear of failing, insomnia affecting memory, excessive worry about grades. | Relaxing, returning to normal schedule, stopping overthinking. |
| Friendship | Worrying about offending friends, social anxiety, self-isolation, feeling no one understands your pain. | Confiding in friends, receiving support, walking out of loneliness. |
| Cooperation | Distrusting cooperation, fear of betrayal, excessive caution leading to stagnation, mental tension. | Doubts cleared, honest interaction, risk assessment shows it’s manageable. |
| Wealth | Panic about debt, worrying about bankruptcy (often imagined), financial anxiety disorder. | Financial situation improving, no longer losing sleep over money, making concrete repayment plans. |

Zen Observation: Nine of Swords
The Nine of Swords represents the sleepless night: a figure sitting up in bed, face buried in hands, with nine swords hanging in the black void. This is the peak of anxiety, guilt, and mental torment. In Zen practice, this is the “Monkey Mind” running wild in the darkness.
Night is when the mind is most vulnerable; the defenses of logic fall, and worries or regrets are magnified into monsters. You agonize over future catastrophes that haven’t happened or ruminate on past mistakes that cannot be changed. But observe the present reality: right now, your room is safe, your bed is warm, and no physical sword is piercing you. The suffering is entirely within the realm of “imagination.”
The Zen antidote here is “mindfulness of the present.” When anxiety strikes, do not fight it, nor follow it down the rabbit hole of horror stories. Bring your attention out of your head and into your body. Feel the texture of the quilt, notice the temperature of the air entering your nostrils. Every breath is a new beginning, proof that you are alive and supported by life. The night will pass; dawn is inevitable. Forgive yourself for being fragile. Say to your chaotic thoughts, “I see you, but you are not me,” and gently return to the sanctuary of your breath.
想親身體驗 MSER 的靈性轉化嗎?
Wish to experience the MSER spiritual journey?