Digging Into the Five of Pentacles: It’s Always Colder Than You Think
Okay, so let’s talk about the Five of Pentacles (5P) when it pops up in a love reading, specifically when you are asking, “How are they feeling about me?” Because, honestly, for the longest time, I thought this card was just a mess. You read the books, and they tell you ‘poverty’ or ‘illness.’ Great. Is my client’s ex feeling poor? No. That makes no sense. I had to really hammer out the practical reality of this card in romance.
I didn’t just read the textbooks, I started a serious tracking project. I needed to see 5P in action, over and over, correlated directly with confirmed relationship status or outcome. I’m talking about logging dozens of readings where 5P came up as the core emotional state. I pulled the card in specific contexts, maybe three positions: How they see themselves, how they see the relationship, and their core feeling right now. I cross-referenced the interpretation with the seeker’s feedback, often having to circle back weeks later to see what actually played out.
My initial hypothesis was that 5P meant simple loneliness or exclusion. But that’s too soft. Loneliness is 9 of Swords sometimes, or 4 of Swords. This felt sharper. Colder. I realized quickly that the key visual—those two figures hobbling past the warm, stained-glass window of the church—is everything. They aren’t just sad; they are exposed, injured, and they feel permanently locked out of the solution.
The Real Practice: Distinguishing Rejection from Abandonment
My biggest breakthrough came when I started cleanly separating the feelings of active rejection (I tried, I failed) from passive abandonment (I was left here, and they are gone). Here is what I noted down after months of tracking:

- Rejection (Active Exclusion): If the seeker was still in contact, or if the split was very recent, 5P often showed up because the person felt actively rejected. They believed they weren’t good enough to enter the ‘church’ (the commitment, the secure relationship). They see their faults—their lack of money, their perceived flaws, their ‘sickness’—as the very thing keeping them shivering outside. They are feeling the cold wind of being unwanted. They are judging themselves harshly, assuming the partner saw them as damaged goods and therefore walked away.
- Abandonment (Passive Isolation): This interpretation hits hardest in low-contact or ghosting situations. If the person has truly been left alone, the card signifies raw, visceral abandonment. They don’t just feel unwanted; they feel forgotten and actively exposed. It’s the feeling that the other person looked at their state (their needs, their injuries) and decided those issues were too much baggage, so they simply left them out in the snow to deal with it alone. They are shivering because the person who should have offered shelter vanished.
The difference, I figured out, is the source of the injury. In rejection, the injury is internalized (“I am flawed, so I don’t deserve it”). In abandonment, the injury is externalized (“They saw me hurting and chose not to help”). In both cases, the feeling is the same core emotion: acute exposure and a profound lack of security.
The Reading That Nailed It
I know this system works because of one particular reading I did a while back. A woman asked about her boyfriend who had just gone radio silent after a major fight. We got the Five of Pentacles immediately for his current feelings. I said, “He is feeling utterly abandoned, like he’s out in the cold and you won’t even see him.” She fought me on it. “No, he’s rich! He’s fine! He’s just angry and rejecting me!”
I insisted the energy was abandonment, not anger. I kept telling her, “He feels like you left him with all his problems and walked away.” She finally spilled the details. During the fight, she had told him he needed to “figure out his own mess” regarding his professional failures and had refused to discuss it further, hanging up on him. She thought she was setting a boundary; he interpreted her actions as total withdrawal of support when he was at his lowest point.
He wasn’t feeling rejected because she didn’t want him; he felt abandoned because when he was metaphorically lying injured on the side of the road, she drove past. That’s the real sting of the Five of Pentacles in love. It’s not about the money; it’s about the feeling that when you needed rescue, the person who should have been your warmth saw you shivering and chose to keep walking.
So, yeah, when 5P shows up, don’t waste time on finances unless you’re reading for a bank account. You need to zero in on vulnerability and perceived neglect. That’s what I learned, and that’s what I stick to. It’s always about that chilling sense of being left outside.
