Tarot · Spread — Broken Heart · 7 positions
Breathe deep. Ask clearly.
Ask your question, or let the cards send you a message. The spread holds whatever you bring.
Seven cards after the break
When a relationship cracks, the most painful part is rarely the what — it is the why. This seven-card spread gives you exactly that: an honest view of what you contributed, what the other person contributed, what outside influences did to your connection — and whether the relationship can still be saved, and whether it is worth saving. This is not a comfort reading. It is a clarity reading. If you are in the first wave of a fight or a breakup, give yourself two days to breathe first — then pull it.
What the spread surfaces
The broken-heart spread arranges a conflict into its honest components. The first two cards show each side's contribution: your part in the conflict, the other person's part. The next two cards give advice — for you, and for the other side. The fifth card brings in what does not actually sit between the two of you: history, environment, outside pressure. The last two cards are the most honest and the most important: can the relationship be saved — and if it can, is it worth it? An honest tarot reading separates those two questions, because "can be saved" and "should be saved" can have completely different answers.
When this spread is most useful
The broken-heart spread fits when:
- you had a major fight and want to understand what really happened
- a breakup just occurred and you need clarity before you react
- you are in a long relationship that has been hard for months
- you are processing an affair, a betrayal, or an open wound
- you are asking whether to try again — or whether it is time to walk
How to actually read the seven cards
Read the spread in three stages. Stage 1: the two contribution cards, side by side, honestly. Resist the urge to soften your own — the deck is neutral, you are not. Stage 2: the two advice cards, but do not read the advice for the other person as a directive to deliver. It is information for you, not for them. Stage 3 is the last three cards. The "other influences" card often shows the most important truth: that not everything came from the two of you. Read the two rescue cards separately: first whether it is possible, then whether it is meaningful. If both are clear, you have your answer. If only one is, you know where your work for the coming weeks lives.
Broken heart spread — frequently asked questions
- Should I pull this spread right after a fight?
- Better two days later. Right after a fight you will read every card as confirmation of your anger or grief. With a little distance you read the cards more honestly.
- What if "can be saved" is positive but "worth saving" is not?
- Then the deck is showing you the most important truth of this spread: some relationships are repairable without the repair adding up to a good life for you. Keep those two questions separate.
- Do I read the cards differently if the other person left me?
- Slightly. The "advice for them" card becomes information for your own peace — not material for a final message. Send them nothing of what is in the deck.
- Can I pull this spread multiple times for the same conflict?
- Only if something concrete has changed. Pulling three times in a week because you did not like the first answer is not the deck sorting things — it is you re-sorting yourself.