Introduction
When you’re learning tarot, one of the most valuable skills is learning how a card changes depending on the life situation in front of you. The Knight of Wands is a perfect example. At first glance, this card seems simple: courage, movement, passion, ambition, travel, adventure, bold decisions. But in real readings, that same fire can look very different from person to person.
Sometimes the Knight of Wands is the green light: go, move, try, dare, take the opportunity.
Sometimes it is a warning: slow down, check the details, do not let excitement carry you straight into unnecessary risk.
That is what we’ll practice here.
Here’s how it works: you’ll receive a mock email from a fictional querent, written like the kind of message a professional reader might receive. Your job is to step into the role of the tarot reader and answer as if this were a real client.
You can always read however you like. Pull one card, pull three, use a larger spread, or return to the email later with a completely different layout. But for the structure of this course, we’ll first imagine that you draw the Knight of Wands on its own. Then we’ll revisit the same question with the Knight of Wands plus two additional cards.
After each exercise, you’ll find my sample answer hidden in a spoiler. These examples are not the only possible interpretations. They are here to show how one professional might turn the card into a clear, useful and emotionally intelligent reply.
Let’s begin.
Exercise 1
Fictional client email
Subject: Study Abroad Opportunity, But I’m Worried About the Agency
Hi,
my name is Arjun. I’m from Pune, India, and I recently got the chance to apply for a master’s program abroad. My friend Rohan is already studying there, and he keeps telling me it was the best decision he ever made. He says the exposure, independence and career options are much better than what he had here.
The problem is that everything feels expensive and complicated. My family can help a little, but not endlessly. There is an agency that says they can handle the visa process, university paperwork, accommodation support and everything else, but their fee is very high. Rohan says he used them and it worked out for him, but I still feel nervous.
Part of me wants to move fast before I lose the chance. Another part of me worries that I am getting carried away because my friend is already there and I don’t want to be left behind.
Can the cards tell me if I should go ahead with this plan, and especially whether I should trust the agency?
Thank you,
Arjun
🎯 Your Exercise
For this reading, imagine you draw the Knight of Wands.
Write your own answer first. The Knight of Wands is bold, adventurous and strongly connected with travel, movement and taking action. But he can also be impatient and careless with details. In Arjun’s situation, your job is to read both sides: the exciting opportunity and the need to slow down enough to protect himself.
When you’re ready, open the spoiler below.
Hi Arjun,
Thank you for trusting me with this question. The card that comes forward for you is the Knight of Wands, and it speaks very strongly to the energy around your situation.
This card is full of movement. It is the card of travel, ambition, courage and the desire to break out of familiar surroundings. In that sense, it supports your wish to study abroad. There is real fire in you right now, and I do not feel that your dream is random or childish. You are ready to see more of the world, test yourself in a new environment and chase a future that feels bigger than the path directly in front of you.
At the same time, the Knight of Wands is famous for rushing. He sees the road opening and wants to gallop before checking the map, the costs, the documents or the fine print. That is the part of the card you need to be very careful with here.
I would read this as a yes to the broader dream of studying abroad, but not as a blind yes to booking the expensive agency immediately. The card says your excitement is real, but excitement alone is not due diligence. Before paying anything, ask for a full written breakdown of their services, refund policies, timelines, success rates and what happens if the visa is delayed or refused. Speak not only to your friend, but to other students who used them. Check reviews outside their own website. Compare them with at least two other agencies. If possible, see what parts of the visa process you can handle directly through official channels.
The Knight of Wands wants you to move, but not to be reckless. He says: follow the opportunity, but keep your hands on the reins. You can be brave and still be careful. You can want this deeply and still ask hard questions before spending your family’s money.
So my answer is this: the study abroad path has strong potential for you, but the agency must prove itself before you trust it. Let the Knight give you courage, not impatience. If this is truly your road, it will still be your road after you have checked the details properly.
Exercise 1.2
Now imagine you draw three cards for Arjun:
Knight of Wands, Three of Wands, Seven of Swords
Take a moment to feel how these cards work together. We have movement, overseas expansion and a warning around hidden information or unclear motives. How would you phrase that without crushing his dream, but also without letting him run into a trap?
Hi Arjun,
For your question, I drew the Knight of Wands, the Three of Wands and the Seven of Swords. This is a very clear spread for a study abroad question, and it gives both encouragement and a serious caution.
The Knight of Wands shows your current desire to move forward quickly. You are fired up, restless and ready for a bigger life. This card often appears when someone wants to travel, relocate, study abroad or take a bold step toward independence. It confirms that the pull you feel is genuine. You are not wrong for wanting more.
The Three of Wands strengthens that message. This is one of the classic cards of overseas plans, long-distance opportunities and looking beyond the familiar horizon. In many readings, it suggests expansion through international connections. It also shows that your friend’s example has opened a window in your mind. You can now imagine a version of your life that is wider than before, and that matters.
But the Seven of Swords changes the tone around the agency. This card asks for caution around hidden information, vague promises, unclear contracts or people who may not be telling you the full story. It does not automatically mean the agency is fraudulent, but it does say you do not yet have enough transparency to hand over a large amount of money with full confidence.
Together, these cards say that the dream itself looks strong, but the route must be checked carefully. The Knight and Three of Wands support the idea of going abroad. The Seven of Swords warns you not to let excitement, comparison or fear of missing out make you careless with the practical steps.
Before you book anything, get everything in writing. Ask exactly what the agency does and what it does not do. Ask what happens if there is a delay, rejection or cancellation. Do not rely only on one friend’s good outcome. Speak to multiple former clients. Check official visa requirements yourself, even if the agency says they handle everything. If there are hidden fees, pressure tactics or answers that keep changing, take that as a serious sign to step back.
This spread does not tell you to abandon the dream. It tells you to protect the dream from poor decisions. Your future abroad may be absolutely possible, but it should begin with clarity, not panic. Move like the Knight of Wands, but investigate like someone who knows the value of every rupee being spent.
Exercise 2
From passion to pressure
The Knight of Wands in love can be exciting. It can show attraction, desire, chemistry, fast movement and the feeling that life suddenly became brighter. But this card can also move too quickly. It may rush into a decision before the heart, mind and practical reality have all caught up.
That becomes especially important in questions about marriage, family expectations and timing. Sometimes a person truly feels ready. Sometimes they like someone, but the speed is coming from outside pressure rather than inner certainty.
That’s what we’ll explore in the next exercise.
Fictional client email
Subject: My Parents Want Me to Marry Soon, But I Feel Pressured
Hi,
my name is Ananya. I’m 27, and my parents have been very focused on my marriage lately. They say this is the right time and that I should not delay too much. They recently introduced me to Vikram, and honestly, he seems like a good man. He is respectful, well settled, and our families get along.
I do like him. We have spoken a few times, and there is some attraction. He is confident and warm, and I can imagine there could be something between us. But everything is moving so fast. My mother keeps saying that good matches do not wait forever, and my father says I should make a practical decision before I overthink it.
I feel torn. I don’t want to disappoint my parents. I also don’t want to reject a man just because I am scared. But I keep asking myself whether I am choosing this, or whether I am obeying the pressure around me.
Can the cards show me whether I should move forward with Vikram, or whether I need more time?
Thank you,
Ananya
🎯 Your Exercise
For this reading, imagine you draw the Knight of Wands.
Think about how this card behaves in a relationship question. It can show chemistry and attraction, but also speed, urgency and impulsive decisions. Your answer should respect the broader context of Ananya’s situation.
When you’re ready, open the spoiler below.
Hi Ananya,
Thank you for writing so honestly. I can feel how carefully you are trying to hold everyone’s feelings: your parents’ hopes, Vikram’s potential, and your own need to make a decision that truly belongs to you.
The card that appears for you is the Knight of Wands. This card brings warmth, attraction and movement. It suggests that the spark you feel with Vikram is not imaginary. There is energy here. There may be chemistry, interest and the possibility of something exciting developing between you.
But the Knight of Wands also moves fast, sometimes faster than the situation can safely support. In your reading, I would not treat this card as a simple “yes, marry him quickly.” I would read it as a sign that everything around this match is heated and accelerated. The attraction may be real, but so is the pressure.
The most important message here is that you need to separate desire from urgency. Do you like Vikram when you imagine meeting him without your mother’s anxiety in the background. Do you feel curious about him when you take away the timelines, the family expectations and the fear of losing a “good match.” If the answer is still yes, then there may be something worth exploring. If your yes only exists because everyone is pushing, then your heart is not being given enough room to speak.
The Knight of Wands encourages movement, but movement does not have to mean immediate commitment. It may mean asking for more conversations, more time alone in appropriate settings, more honest discussion about values, future plans, lifestyle, work, children, family responsibilities and what both of you actually want from marriage.
You do not have to reject him to protect yourself, and you do not have to rush into marriage to please others. There is a middle path: slow the pace enough that your own voice can enter the decision.
So my answer is: continue getting to know Vikram if you genuinely feel drawn to him, but do not let the speed be decided only by your parents’ fear. A marriage may involve families, but the life inside that marriage will be yours. Your yes needs to come from your own heart, not only from obedience.
Exercise 2.2
Now imagine you draw three cards for Ananya:
Knight of Wands, Two of Wands, Justice
Take a moment to consider how these cards speak together. We have attraction and momentum, a future decision, and the need for fairness, truth and clear judgment.
Hi Ananya,
For your question, I drew the Knight of Wands, the Two of Wands and Justice. Together, these cards show a situation with real potential, but they also insist that the decision must be made consciously and fairly.
The Knight of Wands shows the attraction and momentum around Vikram. He may genuinely appeal to you, and there is a lively, warm quality in the connection. This card also reflects the speed of the situation. There is a sense of “decide quickly, move quickly, do not miss the chance.” That energy can be exciting, but it can also make it difficult to hear your own inner voice.
The Two of Wands is the card of standing at the threshold and looking at the future. It tells me that you are not only choosing a person. You are choosing a direction for your life. What kind of marriage do you want. What kind of freedom, partnership, home, family rhythm and future do you imagine. This card asks you to step back from the emotional heat and think about the longer road ahead.
Justice then brings the clearest advice in the spread: make the decision honestly and fairly. Fair to your parents, yes, but also fair to yourself. Fair to Vikram too, because he deserves a partner who is choosing him sincerely, not someone who is quietly surrendering to pressure and may resent the choice later.
These cards do not say that Vikram is a bad match. In fact, the Knight of Wands suggests there is attraction and possibility. But Justice says the process matters. If the process is rushed, pressured or emotionally one sided, even a good match can begin on unstable ground.
The best way forward is to ask for enough time to make a clean decision. Speak to Vikram more directly. Discuss real-life questions, not only polite introductions. Notice whether he respects your need for time, or whether he also pushes for speed. His response will tell you a lot about what marriage with him might feel like.
If, after that, your heart says yes, then your yes will be much stronger because it belongs to you. If your heart says no, then Justice asks you to honor that truth, even if it disappoints others.
A decision made from pressure creates confusion. A decision made from clarity creates peace. These cards are asking you to choose from clarity.
Closing Thoughts
The Knight of Wands is bold, warm and hungry for life. He wants movement, adventure, passion and experience. In these exercises, you’ve seen how that energy can appear in two very different situations: a young man dreaming of studying abroad, and a young woman trying to understand whether she is following her heart or being swept along by family pressure.
This card teaches an important lesson for real readings: speed is not always wrong, but it must be held with awareness. Sometimes the Knight of Wands gives someone the courage to go. Other times, he reminds them to slow down just enough to avoid being carried away by excitement, comparison, desire or urgency.
You can return to these fictional emails whenever you like. Pull one card, three cards or a full spread from your own deck and see how your interpretation changes. Each practice round helps you understand not only the Knight of Wands, but also the art of reading fast-moving situations with care.
✨ Support & Continue Your Journey
If you enjoyed working through these Knight of Wands exercises and would like a personal tarot reading with this same level of attention and nuance, you can book one at www.empowering-tarot.com. Your own situation deserves guidance that sees both the fire in your heart and the practical reality around you.
If this free course has helped you, you can also support my work through the tip jar in the sidebar on desktop or at the bottom of the page on mobile. Every contribution helps keep resources like this available for the tarot community.
Thank you for practising with me today. May the Knight of Wands remind you that courage is powerful, but it becomes wisdom when it knows where it is going.