That Time Knight of Swords Showed Up and I Totally Messed Up the Timing
You see this card, the Knight of Swords, screaming at you from the “Outcome” spot, and your first thought is always the same: move. Fast. Aggressive action. Charge the damn hill. That’s the classic reading, right? But I’ve learned the hard way that sometimes, that speed is less about execution and more about sheer, uncontrollable momentum that steamrolls everything, including your actual plans.
My lesson on this one wasn’t cheap. It involved a potential business partnership—a massive deal, the kind that could fund five years of runway. I was running a small consultancy, and this corporate giant dangled a contract that required us to pivot our main tech stack and commit to a launch timeline that was physically impossible. They wanted it deployed in six weeks. My engineers, bless them, swore we needed three months just for stable testing.
I wrestled with it for a whole weekend. Sign the contract and risk a catastrophic failure because we rushed, or walk away from the biggest payday we’d ever seen. I pulled the cards on Sunday night, sitting at my kitchen table, desperate for a clear sign. The question was simple: “If I sign the contract now (Monday morning), what is the outcome?”
The layout dropped. And there it was, glaring at me in the final position: The Knight of Swords.

I knew what it meant, or what I thought it meant: decisive, swift victory. If I move fast, I win. The card was confirming the company’s insistence on speed. It felt like validation. My gut, however, was churning, telling me this speed was reckless.
Ignoring the Warning Signs and Hitting the Accelerator
Monday morning, fueled by that image of the charging Knight, I went in and signed the papers. I threw caution straight out the window. I told the team, “Forget the three months, we are hitting this in six weeks. We’ll sleep under the desks if we have to.” We immediately launched into hyperdrive. We started cutting corners, skipping sanity checks, and pushing unstable code to test environments just to meet the metrics the client demanded.
We thought the Knight meant we had to move fast. What I realized later was that the Knight of Swords often means the situation itself is moving fast, whether you initiate the speed or not. And once that train leaves the station, you don’t steer it; you just try not to get crushed.
The speed we adopted introduced total chaos. The client, who was already disorganized, ramped up their demands daily. Every meeting turned into a screaming match about deadlines that had been negotiated hours earlier. Our internal communication completely broke down. My lead developer quit mid-sprint. It was a disaster.
We technically delivered the product on time. We actually managed to push something that technically met the bullet points in the contract. But it was buggy, brittle, and unstable. It failed spectacularly two weeks later during a major presentation the corporate giant was giving to their investors. Total public meltdown.
The Real Meaning of the Charge
The Knight of Swords didn’t mean fast action led to victory. It meant fast action was unavoidable, and the outcome would be messy, aggressive, and utterly draining. It meant the speed of the situation would overtake the sanity of the process. I didn’t get to choose the pace; the Knight was just describing the inevitable resulting velocity.
We got paid for the initial deployment, thankfully, because we met the contractual obligation, but the relationship was torched. We spent the next six months in legal limbo trying to untangle the mess, and the reputational hit cost us three other major clients who heard the whispers about our chaotic delivery schedule.
How did I finally cement this understanding of the card? Well, when the legal fallout started, I tried to handle it myself. Big mistake. I got a notice from their lawyers that was aggressive, poorly written, and delivered via courier at 7 AM on a Sunday morning—completely unnecessary speed and sheer belligerence. It was the legal equivalent of the Knight of Swords charging into my living room.
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I finally understood the card isn’t about acting quickly; it’s about aggressive momentum and often, a lack of planning.
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It was a warning that the situation would become rapid and aggressive, demanding defensive, immediate action—not necessarily successful offensive action.
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Should I have acted now? No. I should have recognized the pace of the external force (the client/contract) was already a Knight of Swords situation, and my only smart move was to slow down, protect my perimeter, and maybe hire a lawyer before signing, instead of charging in myself.
That contract almost wiped us out. The only thing that saved us was pivoting hard into a different, much smaller niche where speed was achievable and necessary. I learned that when the Knight of Swords shows up as the outcome, you don’t necessarily need to start acting fast. You need to recognize the incoming storm and prepare for the battle that momentum will force upon you, whether you like it or not.
So next time you pull that card, don’t ask if you should act now. Ask yourself: Is this situation already moving too fast? If the answer is yes, pull back and fortify your position. Don’t add your own aggressive charge to an already out-of-control momentum. Trust me on this one; my bank account still aches from the lesson.
