Setting Up the Inquiry: That Slick Initial Pitch
You know how it goes. Someone comes riding into your life, whether it’s a job offer, a new partnership, or even just the start of something potentially romantic, and they are just too smooth. They promise the moon and they are so damn charming you almost believe it. I ran into this exact wall recently, dealing with a potential collaboration that smelled incredible on the surface but felt like it was coated in cheap glitter.
I needed clarity, fast. I’ve been burned enough times to know that if it sounds like a fairy tale, it’s probably a trap set by someone who just likes talking big. So, I grabbed my deck. The question I decided to drill into the universe was simple: Should I trust this initial, highly-emotional, “we’ll change the world” offer?
I decided to keep the spread simple. I wanted to map the energy surrounding this potential deal using a three-card layout: 1) What is the overt situation? 2) What is the hidden intention or motivation of the offerer? 3) What is the likely short-term outcome if I proceed now?
The Draw and The Gut Punch
I shuffled those cards until my hands hurt, really focusing on the feeling of unease I had about the whole thing. I cut the deck. I pulled the three cards, turning them over slow. The first card (Situation) was the Six of Pentacles, which showed me the current dynamic: someone is giving, and someone is receiving. A clear imbalance, but not necessarily negative—just a transaction happening.

But then I flipped the second card. The one that was supposed to reveal the deep-down, hidden motive. And there he was: the Knight of Cups. My heart sank, seriously. My immediate, gut reaction when I see this guy is suspicion, not romance. I recorded that feeling instantly in my journal.
On paper, the Knight of Cups is great. He brings proposals, invitations, emotional maturity, creativity, and idealism. He’s the sweet-talker, the poet, the guy who shows up with flowers and a grand plan. But I have always interpreted this card with caution, especially when asking about intentions in a business or high-stakes scenario. He often represents someone who is emotionally invested in the idea of the thing, but completely unprepared for the grunt work or the actual reality of delivering on the promise.
I wrote down all the keywords I associate with the shadow side of this Knight:
- Fairy Tale Syndrome (All show, no structure)
- Immaturity/Lack of Follow-Through
- Daydreamer/Too Emotional
- Slick Salesman/Superficial Charm
Why I Don’t Trust The Knight of Cups’ Intentions
Why am I so harsh on this particular Knight? Because I lived through his empty promises years ago, and I documented every minute of that disaster. I wouldn’t have this level of deep skepticism if I hadn’t walked directly into the fire once before.
Years back, I was looking to jump industries, excited and naive. This guy, let’s call him ‘Mark’, appeared. He was the perfect Knight of Cups—charming, passionate about his project, painted a future so bright you needed sunglasses. He convinced me to move my entire setup, liquidate some assets, and invest my time into his ‘revolutionary’ concept. I remember the emails: full of flowery language, big visions, zero concrete details. I was so dazzled by his energy, I ignored all the red flags.
I pushed everything aside, told my old boss I was out, and drove halfway across the country ready to start this new life. I walked into the office on day one, and it was clear: there was no infrastructure, no budget, and Mark was fundamentally disorganized. He hadn’t secured the funding he promised, the ‘team’ consisted of three other equally confused people, and the whole thing ran purely on Mark’s emotional enthusiasm and cheap coffee.
It collapsed in three months. I was left high and dry, scrambling to find freelance work just to pay rent, feeling like an absolute idiot. Mark didn’t mean to deceive me; he truly believed his own hype. He was the perfect, well-intentioned, but utterly unreliable Knight of Cups.
The Outcome and The Action Taken
Seeing that Knight staring back at me in the ‘Intention’ position for this new opportunity triggered that old, painful memory. The reading wasn’t saying the deal was inherently bad; it was saying the person bringing the offer was acting from a place of emotional desire or immaturity, not solid planning. I knew I couldn’t trust the initial shiny pitch.
The third card I drew (Outcome if I proceed now) was the Five of Swords—which is definitely not a good look. It screams conflict, loss, and walking away feeling defeated, even if you technically “win” something small. That solidified it.
So, I didn’t say no right away. I changed my approach. I stopped engaging with the emotional language and started demanding specifics. I moved the conversation immediately from “vibe checks” to hard numbers: “Show me the budget allocation,” “Provide the detailed timeline for phase two,” “What are the contractual outs?”
When you confront a daydreamer (the shadow Knight) with cold reality, they usually retreat. Sure enough, the smooth-talking messenger started dodging calls and emails. Within two weeks of me applying actual pressure for concrete details, the entire collaboration offer quietly fizzled out. They couldn’t deliver the structure to back up the charm.
The lesson I recorded in my log is clear: When the Knight of Cups rides in, admire his shiny armor, but always demand to see his financial ledger. Never trust the initial offer; trust the documentation.
