Tarot Readings
The Tarot Answers
Over 40 tarot readings on concrete life questions: love, work, money, family, spirituality and personal growth. With AI interpretation.
Love and Relationships
Tarot readings on love, partnership, reconciliation and attraction. Clear answers about your love life with AI interpretation.
Work and Purpose
Tarot readings on profession, career, calling and professional success. Answers for your next career step.
Money and Abundance
Tarot readings on finances, money, investments and material abundance. Clarity about your economic future.
Personal Growth
Tarot readings on growth, life lessons and personal development. Recognize what you need to release or learn.
Family and Bonds
Tarot readings on family, family conflicts and bonds. Answers about boundaries, reconciliation and toxic relationships.
Spirituality
Tarot readings on your spiritual mission, life purpose, energies and messages from the universe.
Sometimes you do not need 78 cards and an open reading. You need an answer to one specific question: Will this relationship last? Should I take the offer? Why does this fear keep coming back? This hub gathers over 40 question-readings, organized by life topic — love, work, money, family, growth, spirituality. Each reading is calibrated to its question. The tarot stays the same; the focus is sharpened.
Specific question vs. open reading — why it matters
An open tarot reading ("show me what I need to see") is useful when you do not yet know your question. It surfaces themes. The risk: if you do not have a question, you will read your hopes into the cards. A question-reading works the other way: you bring the question, the spread is built for it, and the cards have something concrete to mirror. The interpretation gets sharper because the frame is sharper.
The trade-off is honesty. A specific question forces you to admit what you actually want to know — which is often the harder part. "Will my ex come back?" is the real question; "What do the cards want to tell me about love?" is the polite version. The 40+ readings on this hub are organized so you can find the question you are actually asking, not the one you wish you were asking.
How a question-reading works
The classical structure is the three-card spread: past, present, future, or situation, action, outcome, or what you bring, what blocks you, what is possible. Three cards is the right number for most questions — enough to build a narrative, few enough to keep focus. For weightier questions, the readings on this hub use 5 or 7 cards. For binary "should I" questions, often only one or two cards plus a clarifier.
The AI reads each card in the position it falls in. The same card means different things in "what blocks me" than in "what is possible". This positional reading is what separates a real interpretation from card-by-card description. After the spread, the AI reads the combination — which suits dominate, which Majors appear, what the overall arc is. You receive a coherent reading, not a list of card meanings.
How to formulate a question that gets a useful answer
- Avoid yes/no for layered questions: "Will I be happy with him?" forces a flat answer. "What does this relationship bring me, what does it cost me?" produces a real reading. Save yes/no for the Yes/No Tarot — for binary, time-pressed decisions only.
- Ask about yourself, not the other person: "What is he thinking?" gives projections. "What do I project onto him, what do I actually know?" gives clarity. The tarot is most accurate when it reads the asker. Other people are visible only as they appear in your inner landscape.
- Specify the time-frame: "Will I find love?" is unanswerable. "What is the love situation for me in the next six months?" is answerable. Tarot does not predict open futures, but it reads current dynamics — and dynamics have a horizon.
- Take the question you are avoiding: if you have a question and a politer version of it, choose the harder one. The reading will be more uncomfortable and more useful. Tarot rewards directness more than any other esoteric system.