(Another example of how a pair of cards isn’t limited to just one common phrase.)

Eight of Cups – Ace of Cups
1 quit cooperating
2 doesn’t love (you) anymore

Eight of Cups – Ace of Cups
1 quit – Eight of Cups
cooperating – Ace of Cups
and
2 doesn’t anymore – Eight of Cups
love you – Ace of Cups

Eight of Cups is the end of one thing and the beginning of another, which the conjoined new and full moons express well. So watch Eight of Cups show up for ‘quit.’ And watch this card show up for ‘doesn’t anymore,’ often with an involved word in between, as it does here. The pilgrim abandons one road for another because the mountain makes the road he was on the long way to Jerusalem where he is headed because he is a pilgrim going there.

Ace of Cups means cooperating because it features a flow of water, and cooperating is going with the flow, isn’t it?

Ace of Cups also says ‘love you‘ because it diagrams the concept that a person is imbued with the love of God (represented by the dove, Holy Spirit, with the wafer of the communion ceremony in its beak, diving into a person (the top fountain with the five flows (the person’s five senses). (I think this allegory may appear in the book Interior Castles from the 1500s written by one of the saints.)

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