Relationship Analysis
Every relationship is its own living system. This deep-dive spread examines the full terrain of your connection - strengths, fr. Embeddable domain-locked widget, mobile-responsive.

A relationship is two people, two sets of patterns, and whatever forms in the space between them. That third thing - the dynamic itself - is what this spread looks at. Seven positions cover: what you're bringing, what they're bringing, the current state of the connection, what's working without being named, what's blocked or stuck, what needs attention, and where the relationship is pointed. Not a verdict. A map.
How it works
Hold both people in mind - you and them, honestly, without flattening either one. Draw seven cards. The spread works for romantic partnerships, close friendships, or significant family dynamics - any relationship where the pattern matters. Each position receives a targeted interpretation. Read the two individual positions first, then the dynamic cards.
Understanding your result
The 'space between' position (card three) is often the most revealing. When it shows a Major Arcana card, something archetypal is running the dynamic - Justice suggests a power or fairness question; The Lovers suggests a choice is active. When it shows a Court card, one person's influence is dominating the shared space. The outcome card reflects tendency, not certainty - relationships can change.
Frequently asked questions
Can I do this spread for a relationship I'm not in yet - a crush or potential partner?
Yes - the spread works for any significant connection. For potential relationships, the cards will reflect what's present in the early dynamic, not a projection of how it will develop.
What if the cards make the relationship look difficult?
Difficult cards in a relationship spread are information, not a sentence. The 'what needs attention' position exists precisely for this - it points toward what could shift the dynamic.
Should I do this spread with my partner's knowledge?
That's your call. Some people find it useful to share readings with a partner as a conversation starter; others use it privately as a reflection tool. Neither approach is wrong.
Is this for entertainment?
Yes - self-reflection and entertainment. We make no claims about what another person thinks, feels, or will do.