Fool’s Journey: Which Queen is Your Mentor?

Header by Rory Midhani

Each of the tarot’s 16 court cards (those are the Kings, Queens, Knights and Pages) express an aspect of our ‘self.’ Whilst no single character is intended to be a complete summary of a person — they’re really too one-dimensional for this — these cards can highlight certain qualities, traits or behaviours that are relevant to your life.

Because they are the ‘people’ of the tarot, a diverse cast of characters covering different ages and areas of our lives, we tend to form relationships with the court cards, identifying with them, or calling on them for guidance at particular times. I like to think that court cards can act as mentors or spiritual guides when we need them. So you might place the Knight of Wands on your altar to inspire boldness and action, or keep the Page of Swords in your wallet to remind you to study hard.

By far the best-loved of the court cards (at least according to my own research) are the queens. Whether it’s the tough-as-nails Queen of Swords who’s seen more than her fair share of shit, or the practical, down-to-earth Queen of Pentacles cooking up a feast for family and friends, tarot folks really seem to relate to these four powerful femmes and the qualities they represent. So let’s get to know them!

All cards shown in this post are from the Shadowscapes Tarot by Stephanie Piu-Mun Law.

In Seventy-Eight Degrees of Wisdom, Rachel Pollack writes that each queen “represents an appreciation of [her suit’s] element rather than the King’s social use of it. This does not mean that the Queens indicate weakness, or even inaction, but rather the element translated into feelings and understanding.”

Pollack’s classic text helped to form the way I interpret tarot cards, but over the years I’ve come to see the four queens slightly differently. Rather than an ‘appreciation’ of the suit’s qualities, I see them as having really mastered their element. These are people who have ‘done the work’. Where a King might use their suit’s qualities externally (e.g. to lead, manage, control or build), a queen has taken these qualities within, reflected internally, grown stronger on a very personal level through working with the themes of her suit. If we look at the stories told throughout the Ace-to-Ten cards in that suit, we can see the various trials and tribulations she has faced, and can imagine how she overcame each one, gradually becoming stronger and wiser, gradually ‘becoming’ the queen. In this way, understanding the suit as a whole is key to understanding its queen.

By the way, I’m referring to these cards as ‘queens’ in this article because this is by far the most common title used in tarot. However, many tarot decks rename their court cards, sidestepping what many (including me) feel is a hierarchical and gendered binary. I’m also using ‘she’ and ‘they’ pronouns interchangeably here because this is Autostraddle, but please remember that it’s absolutely fine to play with gender in the tarot, a queen can easily be a ‘he’, a king or a knight might be a ‘she’, and so on.


Queen of Wands

The Queen of Wands is someone who has learned to deal with her own ego. She is confident and bold, characterised by self-belief and a passion for life, and although she knows how to assert herself without compromise, she’s never annoying about it. The Queen of Wands encourages you to be unashamedly yourself, to love yourself, your body, your life. She expects success to come from her projects, and because she expects it, success is usually what happens! At the same time, she knows how to deal with failure too — when things go wrong, she’s able to learn and grow, rather than feeling knocked back.

If we look at the Wands suit, we see how she reached this point. It’s a suit filled with petty conflict, conceiving, communicating and acting on bold ideas, success and failure, overwhelm, burnout, and the trappings of ego. The Queen of Wands has worked her way through all of this and found her sweet-spot: the ability to simply be yourself, to give zero fucks, and to follow your passions through to joyful results.

I’m going through a really full-on time right now — over the past year I feel like I’ve been kinda ‘broken down’ and am now putting myself back together again, learning how I’ve changed and deciding big things like who I want to be in this next chapter of my life. The Queen of Wands came up very prominently in a recent reading, and it was really clear to me that they were there to tell me not to be scared of myself, not to be scared to really be myself. They told me that I had changed, and that I had something different to offer the world, which made me feel excited about delving into all that, experimenting and exploring.


Queen of Swords

They say what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger, and that could be the Queen of Swords’ motto. The suit of swords is where we find some of life’s toughest lessons: heartbreak, insecurity, fear, jealousy and more besides. Because humans are humans, and one thing we’re great at is being harsh to ourselves and the people we love, right?

The Queen of Swords has seen it all. She’s been there with the heartbreak, she’s been broken and she’s gotten back on her horse more times than you can know. She represents your best self in the face of a tough situation, able to get a clear perspective, to stand up and speak the truth. She’s tough because she’s had to be, but she’s deeply compassionate, too, because she’s been there herself. Let’s say someone in your circle of friends has had a hard time lately, and is taking it out the rest of you. The Queen of Swords is the one who’ll actually talk to her and give her that tough kind of love, telling her that this behaviour isn’t okay, but that they’re there to support her when she’s ready to sort herself out.

Swords are about truth, justice and clear perception, and the Queen of Swords is a person who can see a bigger picture. Not just witnessing injustice as it manifests around them, but also the root causes of that injustice. As an activist, this is someone who ‘gets it’, who understands how the system works. They’re wry, because they know how this shit works, but they’re not cynical. There’s the willingness to call stuff out, but it’s underpinned by love and compassion, the determination to support people to be the best they can be, not just knock them down.


Queen of Pentacles

We hear so much about ‘self-care’ and getting our needs met. The Queen of Pentacles shows us what these things look like in action. Grounded, down-to-earth, this is a person who really knows how to create solid foundations for themself, who puts a high value on the ‘little things’ in life, spending time in nature, eating good food, community, home, making stuff, doing work you love, and so on. And because they know how to practice self care, they’re great at providing community care, too! This queen is the one who’s always got the kettle on, who’ll offer you a bed for the night or bring a big tin of flapjacks to the protest to keep everyone going.

The suit of Pentacles teaches us to find magic in the everyday, to take pleasure in using our hands, the joy of hard work, dedication and practice. Alongside the loftier themes of self-actualisation, justice and passion found in the other suits, Pentacles remind us that our material lives need attention too, and that we all have finite resources, or capacity, or spoons. One big lesson that this suit teaches, for me at least, is that it’s an act of compassion to ensure I have my own needs met, as it is only then that I can be of service to others. The Queen of Pentacles is an expert at this: they know how to say ‘no’ when they need to conserve energy for themselves, and so at other times they’re able to be generous and share their resources with others. Because of this, the Queen of Pentacles seems to have an abundant, comfortable life and appears to have a great capacity for nurturing others. Their secret? Genuine self-care. They’ve learned to listen to their body and their heart and hear what is needed, meeting those needs before seeing to others.

(By the way, if you’re interested in exploring the concept of ‘grounding’ and what that looks like in practice, we talked about it in this community roundtable!)


Queen of Cups

The cups suit is the realm of spirituality and emotion, it’s where we cultivate our intuition and (hopefully) learn to truly feel our feelings, whatever they are. There’s both ecstatic joy and deep sadness here, and everything in between. The suit of cups teaches us that light and shadow are of equal importance in our lives, and that real strength is not about being happy all the time, but learning to navigate through the whole maze whilst remaining true to ourselves.

That’s the Queen of Cups. Every situation is viewed through the prism of how it feels, what it means on a deeper level. The Queen of Cups is strong in herself because she’s able to express herself truthfully in each moment. She’s about authenticity, prizing emotional integrity over any idea of ‘right and wrong’. She’s the journaller, the diarist, the free-spirited artist, the person who understands that all things are connected, who explores her spirituality, values therapy and personal development.

Cups’ element is water, so it’s energy flowing, shape-shifting, hard to pin down or express in words. The Queen of Cups has learned to be comfortable with change — specifically internal change — and sees shifting emotions as an opportunity to learn more about ourselves, to dig deeper into our subconscious, to explore themes of fulfillment and wholeness not as prescribed goals with a start and end point, but as an ever-evolving journey. And, because she’s done so much of this work on herself, she’s able to offer this wisdom to others, too. Where the Queen of Pentacles is able to hold physical space and offer a comfortable, nurturing physical environment, the Queen of Cups can do this emotionally and psychically. She’s the kind of person who will comfort and reassure you, and accompany you on the toughest emotional journey.


The above are simple and one-dimensional interpretations. Depending on where these cards appear in your readings, they may mean very different things, not all of them so blatantly positive (I’ve seen the Queen of Pentacles represent someone who mollycoddled a partner, the Queen of Swords as being too sharp, for example.) But as mentors and symbols of qualities we need to call into our lives, each of these cards brings us powerful lessons to help us ‘do the work’. For me, I have the Queen of Wands on my desk as I write, she’s reminding me that right now I’m transitioning, and that it doesn’t matter one bit what anyone else thinks about it. I’m grateful for her confident posture, her sunflowers and her knowing smile, and I feel like she’s cheering me on during this often-fraught process of ‘becoming’.

How about you? Do you have a favourite queen, or one who feels especially important to you right now? Tell me all about it!

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Beth

Beth Maiden is a tarot reader and writer based in Machynlleth, mid-Wales. She has two cats, a hot builder girlfriend, far too many tarot decks and not enough coffee cups. She's really into bread, the colour red, camping and brand new notebooks. She'd love to cut your hair, read your cards or hang out with you on her blog, Little Red Tarot!

Beth has written 111 articles for us.

10 Comments

  1. Wow, Beth! This was absolutely beautiful. Fool’s Journey is now officially my favorite part of Auto Straddle ^_^ I get new insights into my readings every time I visit.

  2. Woah!! This was great. I have always been drawn to pentacles, and I’ve sometimes had a hard time reconciling that with the standard understanding of the suit, which can sometimes feel… superficial? worldly? overly focused on wealth and material things? …But this interpretation of the Queen of Pentacles resonates with me SO MUCH. Self-care, nesting, hospitality, generosity, welcoming and sharing, these are all things that feel quite meaningful to me, and that I’ll be looking for when this card, and this suit, come up for me now.

    • So glad it helped @katekari! I’ve been through a similar thing with Pentacles. ‘Standard’ tarot books very often focus on money and work when discussing Pentacles – whilst these themes are definitely there, it can be off-putting for a lot of us. Money and work affect all of us, but it’s not the best introduction to a suit that’s so much richer and deeper than this!

      I found that the star on the pentacle symbol was key to finding my own interpretations: there’s magic in the mundane and the material, and all of us – even if we’re radically anticapitalist or place zero importance on wealth – have physical, material needs (see Maslow’s hierarchy!) It’s about sustainability.

  3. Thank you, Beth! I’ve done so many things to try to understand the court cards better, but they still put me in knots. This post helped the queens come alive for me and feel like people I can relate to, rather than one-dimensional caricatures. I also loved the idea of moving through the number cards to get the queen’s mastery–that makes so much sense! Awesome article.

  4. I am taking away with me a very important lesson today. I had never seen the numbered cards of the Minor Arcana through this lens before. But after reading this it makes so much sense that the trials and tribulations tie into how the Queens master their elements.

    Like you, I connect with the Queen of Wands. I don’t think I am her yet, even though my deck keeps giving me that card, but I feel I understand her a whole lot better now. Thank you so much for writing this in such an easy to understand way.

    And I love the photographs. The backdrop is amazing! :)

    • I’m so glad that resonated Valeria – it actually never occurred to me that I read the suits that way until I started writing this piece and suddenly there it was on the page! Another ‘penny drops’ moment :)

  5. Thank you, Beth, for such an incisive analysis of these figures! You’re so skilled at really getting to the heart of the matter.

    I’ve always felt most connected to water/cups: my moon is in scorpio, and the number of planets I have in water signs is only equaled by the ones I have in fire. I’m drawn to the mystical aspects of the queen of cups, as well; the suit’s emphasis on dreams, mysteries, and the divine feminine.

    The most frequent queen card that comes up for me, however, is the queen of swords. As an academic and writer who works primarily with communication, this makes sense. But I had an interesting experience recently while doing the spring cleaning spread I found on Little Red Tarot–the card that came up for ‘something I need to throw out’ was the queen of swords. I interpreted this to mean that perhaps I was relying too much on my intellectual capacities to define my self-worth. I’m curious if you have other ideas as to how this could be interpreted!

    –Ryn

  6. Such beautiful clarity and form…thank you. This created the opportunity for me to enjoy the integration of wisdom that becoming an elder offers. All hard and well earned. It allows me to feel the 4 pillars of the crone canopy. x

  7. I love this, particularly your narrative that the numbered cards of each suit establish the journey that each queen has been to become herself. I definitely identify most with the Queen of Cups (so much Scorpio in my chart too) but need some energy and inspiration from the Queen of Wands right now too.

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