Man, I have to tell you about the last three months. I got seriously stuck in a rut. You know that place? Where you’re technically recovering from whatever emotional disaster hit last year, but you’ve built your walls so high you can’t actually see over them? I was running a tight ship: work, gym, home, repeat. No drama, which I thought was great, but also zero movement, which was absolutely terrible.
I realized I wasn’t just safe; I was static. I had closed the door so hard on the last bad dating experience that I’d accidentally locked myself out of everything good, too. My friends kept trying to drag me out, but I always had an excuse: too tired, too much work, my socks didn’t match—you name it.
The Catalyst: Pulling the Page of Cups
I was doing a quick three-card spread just to check the emotional weather—past, present, future. The Page of Cups showed up as the future advice. Now, I’m not mystical, but I use these cards as high-level visual cues to push myself out of predictable habits. The immediate feeling I got? This wasn’t about a grand, established love coming in. It was about a silly, unexpected, slightly innocent start—the kind you usually blow off because it doesn’t fit your checklist. It was screaming: “Dude, stop overthinking everything and just say yes.”
The interpretation hit me hard: Be open to a new emotional messenger, a spontaneous offer, a creative approach to connection. My default state was resistance. This card was telling me to switch the ‘Reject’ button to ‘Accept,’ even if the offer felt goofy or too small-time.

I wrote down the main instruction on a sticky note: “Receive the Offer. Don’t Judge the Package.”
Executing the “Openness” Protocol
This wasn’t some airy-fairy visualization practice. This required brutal, actionable changes to my routine. I forced myself to track every opportunity I usually killed before it even breathed. I decided to treat the next thirty days as an experiment in radical acceptance.
The biggest hurdle was my own cynicism. Every time an opportunity arose, I heard my old voice instantly tearing it down: Too casual. Too far away. Not my usual type. I had to actively argue with that voice, replacing the rejection with a commitment to the process. I developed a specific set of rules for myself:
- Rule 1: Stop Filtering Invitations. If a friend invited me to an event I wouldn’t normally attend (a poetry reading, a specific sports bar, a corporate networking thing), I immediately RSVP’d before I could talk myself out of it.
- Rule 2: Drop the Agenda. When meeting new people, I had to shut down the internal interview process. I wasn’t allowed to analyze potential partners; I was only allowed to engage in conversation.
- Rule 3: Be the Page (Clumsy and Genuine). Pages are often awkward. I stopped worrying about saying the perfect thing or looking perfectly put together. I decided to be genuinely curious, even if it meant being a bit clumsy in conversation.
The Detailed Action Log
The first week was painful. My friend, Sarah, invited me to a massive neighborhood block party, which is usually my version of torture. Too many strangers, too much loud music. But I had committed. I put on the clothes I’d usually save for a ‘proper’ date and walked straight into the chaos.
I spent the first hour feeling ridiculous, glued to my phone. Then I remembered the sticky note. I put my phone away and decided to stand near the food table (because snacks are reliable). That’s where I ran into a guy attempting to light a huge, oversized tiki torch and failing miserably. It was a whole mess.
Instead of laughing internally and walking away—my usual move—I offered help. He was clearly flustered. We spent five solid minutes trying to get this thing to ignite, talking about nothing important—just how humid it was and how terrible cheap lighter fluid is. It was a genuinely low-stakes, silly interaction, exactly like the energy of the Page of Cups.
He was not the kind of person I would have matched with on an app. He was talking about his job restoring vintage arcade cabinets—super niche, totally outside my world. If I had filtered him based on my checklist, I would have walked past. But because I was operating under the ‘Receive the Offer’ protocol, I actually heard what he was saying, not just what he represented.
I let him ask me out for coffee the following week. No deep analysis. No questioning the long-term feasibility. I just said, “Yeah, sounds good.”
The Result and the Takeaway
It’s only been six weeks since that block party, and we’re still meeting up. Is this the “One”? I have no idea, and that’s the point. The Page of Cups wasn’t promising a wedding; it was promising an opportunity to start learning something new about connection.
By forcing myself to stop judging the vehicle the emotional message arrived in, I managed to break the cycle of self-imposed isolation. I had assumed new beginnings had to be epic and perfectly packaged. The truth is, sometimes they show up looking a little awkward, trying to light a damp tiki torch, and you just have to be brave enough to grab the matchbox and help them out.
The practice proved that handling the Page of Cups love advice isn’t about waiting for destiny to knock; it’s about physically changing your environment and your immediate responses so that when the tiny, shy opportunity appears, you actually see it and accept it instead of swatting it away like an annoying fly.
