Search for Answers Through Your Intuition
Draw the cards, ground them in your birth chart, and read whether there's still love worth saving.
Ask the cards
Begin with your question. The clearer and more open it is, the clearer the reading.
Open-ended questions read best — "What do I need to know about…" rather than a yes/no.
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From a question to a reading
Hold the relationship you actually want to understand. The cards meet you where the question is honest.
Breathe, shuffle, and cut. Each card takes its place — the Wound, the Bridge, the Crossing.
Your date — and, if you have them, time and place — so the reading sets your cards against your chart.
A written report reads every card in light of your question and your chart, then ties the thread together.
Every reading is written for your cards and your chart. Here is an example, in full.
Is There Still Love Worth Saving?
“We keep hurting each other and I can't tell anymore whether we're fighting for this or just afraid to let go. Is there still love here worth saving — or am I holding on to something that's already ended?”




Three cards, one ache. You open in real heartbreak — a hurt that is not imaginary and not yours alone to carry. Yet the present card does not say leave; it shows two people who could still turn toward each other as equals. And the last card promises the same thing whichever way you choose: a passage out of these choppy waters toward somewhere calmer.
A reading of your bond as the three cards see it right now — not a fate, a weather report. The whole point of the spread is that this needle can move with a single honest conversation.
The Two of Cups is unmistakable — the bond itself is intact. You still reach for each other underneath the hurt.
The Three of Swords lives here — the unsaid things, the hurt never named aloud. This is the meter the whole reading asks you to raise.
The Six of Swords promises movement toward calmer water — but it does not choose the shore for you. That part is still being decided.

Three of Swords
Let's not soften it: this card holds what brought you here. The pain you have felt in this relationship is real — not oversensitivity, not something to talk yourself out of. It already happened, and naming it plainly is the first honest thing the spread asks of you.
There are three swords, not one — rarely is heartbreak a single clean cut. But the swords are clear steel, the element of Air: this is the suffering of the mind as much as the heart — the story you tell about what it means.
Feel it before you fix it. The pain isn't proof the relationship has failed — it's proof that something here still matters to you. You cannot move forward clearly from inside a hurt you won't admit you carry.
Stop minimising it. Say the true sentence — this is what cut me — without softening it into something easier to wave away.
They may not know the depth of it. A hurt named gently is something they can respond to; a hurt hidden becomes a wall neither of you can see.

Two of Cups
This is the card that answers your real question — is there still love worth saving? — and its answer is yes. Right now, underneath the hurt, the bond between you is still real and mutual; the love did not leave when the pain arrived.
Between the two figures rises the caduceus crowned by a winged lion's head — raw passion healed into harmony. Their garments mirror each other: a meeting of equals, not one person doing all the repairing.
Make one honest, undefended gesture toward the other person — the true thing you have been holding back. Connection only holds if there is a hand reaching from the other side too — offer yours, and watch whether theirs comes.
Make the first undefended move. Not the perfect words — the honest ones. Offer your cup before you're certain theirs will rise.
Their part is to receive it as an equal — to set down the scorekeeping and answer with a gesture of their own, not a verdict on yours.

Six of Swords
Here is the mercy of the spread: wherever this goes, you are moving toward calmer water. This is not a card that promises the relationship is saved — it promises you will not stay in this storm forever. If you both step into the boat, you travel on together. If only one of you does, you still move on — toward peace, on your own terms.
The water ahead is glass-smooth where the water behind was rough. The six swords stand upright in the hull: the hurts are aboard, acknowledged, carried — but no longer drawn as weapons against each other.
Stop rowing in circles around the same argument. Choose a direction and let the passage be gradual. Whether the boat carries two of you or one, it is taking you somewhere you can finally breathe.
Choose your shore and row toward it steadily, whether or not they take the other oar. Your peace cannot wait on their pace.
If they're ready, this is the calm you reach together. If they're not, let them keep their own time — you needn't stay in the storm to prove your love.
The Narrative Arc
The heartbreak is real — and it is not the end of the story. The Three of Swords names the cut that already happened; the Two of Cups says the bond underneath it is still intact and mutual today. The pain and the love are both true at once.
Reaching toward each other now is what sets the direction. The honest gesture of the Two of Cups is exactly what carries you both out of the storm in the Six of Swords. Repair in the present is what makes calm in the future possible.
Two swords cards bracket a single cup. The hurt is held in the mind on both sides; the love sits quietly in the middle. One message in three beats: name what happened, reach across it now, and let it carry you toward peace.
Taken together, the spread is tender with you but honest. The hurt you walked in with is not a sign you are weak or overreacting — it is the Three of Swords, real and named. But the reading refuses to end there. The Two of Cups insists the love between you is still living, still mutual, still worth the reach.
So the answer to your question is this: yes, there is something here worth saving — if it can be saved by two people and not one. Make the honest gesture. Offer your cup and watch whether theirs comes back. If it does, the Six of Swords carries you both to calmer water. If it does not, that same boat still carries you — out of the storm, toward peace. Either way, you are not staying in this pain. The journey forward has already begun.
Questions for Reflection
What is the truest name for the hurt I have been carrying — and have I ever said it out loud to them?
What honest gesture have I been withholding — and what am I protecting by withholding it?
If I reached out and the hand didn't come back — could I still row myself to calmer water?
Am I fighting for this relationship — or just afraid of the quiet on the other side of letting go?
The Letter You Might Send
The Two of Cups asks for one honest, undefended gesture. Here is a shape for it — make it yours, then decide whether to send it.
I've been quiet about something, and the quiet hasn't helped either of us.
The honest truth is that you hurt me. The bigger truth is that I'm still here — which must mean this still matters to me. I don't want to keep score, and I don't need to win. I want to know whether we can find our way back to each other.
Could we talk — not to settle who was right, but to see if we still want the same thing? I am ready to listen.
Tending the Bond — Four Small Rituals
Your spread is all Air and Water — thought and feeling. What it cannot give you, your daily life must: the Fire of warmth and the Earth of ordinary care. Restore all four elements and you give the reading somewhere to land.
Once, out loud, say the true sentence — this is what cut me — without softening it or building the case around it. Let it be heard, then let it rest.
Make one undefended gesture toward them this week — a touch, a thank-you, the sentence you have been holding back. Not a demand, not a verdict. Just your hand, extended first.
No card brought desire or play, so bring it yourself. Do one thing that has nothing to do with the problem — a shared meal, a walk, a memory revisited. Let the bond feel alive, not only repaired.
Love is also logistics. Do the small, dull, faithful thing — the chore they dread, the appointment they forgot, the coffee made without being asked. Reliability is how trust is slowly rebuilt.
The Composite Chart & Elemental Balance
A relationship has a chart of its own. Each card adds a planetary and elemental signature, sketching the weather the two of you are standing in — and revealing which elements you share and which neither is bringing.
The reading is Air-heavy — two Swords frame a single Cup. So much of this hurt lives in the mind: the replayed conversations, the stories about what it meant. Fire and Earth are both absent. The connection is being thought about and grieved more than it is being lived. If it is to be saved, it needs less analysis and more warmth and ordinary tending.
How the Two of You Meet the Cards
The spread's three rulers — Saturn, Venus, and Mercury — are exactly the bodies your two charts position between you. Where the cards describe the timing of this relationship, your synastry describes the temperaments meeting inside it.
The Three of Swords answers to Saturn — grief, boundaries, hard lessons. Wherever your natal Saturn falls is where you learned to brace for hurt. Feel the loss fully, but do not let an old fear write the verdict on a new love.
Two of Cups is ruled by Venus — tender, loyal, a little self-protective. Wherever your natal Venus falls is the arena being asked to open again. If it carries tension, the first gesture will cost something — and the card says make it anyway.
With two Swords and one Cup, the spread is all mind and feeling — no Fire and no Earth. The cards tell you whether the love is alive; your Fire and Earth tell you whether you are both still feeding it.
Honour your Saturn before you decide. Feel the hurt fully — but check whether the verdict you are reaching is about this person, or an older fear they happened to touch.
Lead with your Venus. Make the first move toward repair in the way you most naturally love — that is where the Two of Cups wants to be spent.
Mind the Fire & Earth gap — bring back one small act of warmth and one of ordinary care this week.
The Season Ahead
A three-card spread is also a sequence in time. Read left to right, the cards sketch the months in front of you — a current, not a calendar. These are the tides to expect, whichever shore you choose.
The hurt surfaces and asks to be spoken. Expect a tender, raw stretch — the storm before the air clears. Let the truth out rather than back in. Nothing is decided here; it is only being made honest.
The window for repair opens. One honest, undefended gesture from either side can turn the whole season. Watch for whether the cup is answered — their response tells you which way forward is yours to make.
However it resolves, the water grows still. If you moved on together, this is the quiet after repair. If you moved on alone, it is the relief of no longer living in the storm. Either way, you arrive somewhere you can breathe.
A relationship that has been through the fire and chosen each other on the far side of it — steadier, more honest, no longer pretending the hurt was not there. Not the love you had, but a truer one.
A clean release rather than a slow erosion — leaving while the love was still real, carried with grace instead of resentment. The same boat, the same calmer water, reached on your own terms.
The cards describe a current, not a verdict. They show where the water runs — whether you cross it together or alone is yours to choose.
Ask the reader up to 2 free follow-up questions — sit with the reading, then ask the one thing it left open.
Keep the calibration going
A single reading is one moment in time. For ongoing insight — as your chart, your luck cycles, and the transits keep moving — continue with a MingAI plan.
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