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Introduction
When you’re learning tarot, the Queen of Cups asks you to practice something that goes beyond memorizing meanings. She asks you to practice sensitivity.
This Queen is the mature feminine expression of water. She is empathy, intuition, emotional depth, dream wisdom, spiritual perception, compassion and quiet understanding. She can sense what others feel before they say it. She listens beneath the words. She notices the tremble in the voice, the sadness behind the joke, the dream image that will not leave someone alone.
In readings, the Queen of Cups can show a deeply caring person, a healer, an artist, a medium, a dream interpreter, a therapist-like figure, a motherly presence, or the querent’s own need to trust their feelings and inner images. She often appears when someone is moving through emotional uncertainty and needs gentleness rather than pressure.
But this card also has an edge. The Queen of Cups can become overwhelmed by other people’s emotions. She can absorb too much, sacrifice herself too easily, romanticize pain, or retreat into fantasy when reality feels too harsh. Her gift is emotional depth. Her lesson is emotional boundaries.
That is what we’ll practice here.
For this exercise section, we’ll work with questions about intuition, emotional caretaking, dreams, sensitivity and the difference between compassion and self-abandonment.
Here’s how it works: you’ll receive a mock email from a fictional querent, written like the kind of message a professional reader might receive. Your job is to step into the role of the tarot reader and answer as if this were a real client.
You can always pull your own cards, use a different spread, or return to the email later for extra practice. For the structure of this course, we’ll first imagine that you draw the Queen of Cups on her own. Then we’ll revisit the same question with the Queen of Cups plus two additional cards.
After each exercise, you’ll find my sample answer hidden in a spoiler. These examples are here to show how one professional might turn the Queen of Cups into a reading that feels warm, intuitive and deeply human, without losing clarity.
Let’s begin.
Exercise 1
Fictional client email
Subject: I keep dreaming about water and my grandmother
Hi,
I’m Emily Dawson. My grandmother passed away almost two years ago, and lately I keep dreaming about her. The dreams are never scary. They feel quiet and emotional.
In the most recent dream, I was standing near a lake at night. The water was very still, and my grandmother was sitting on a small wooden dock. She did not say much, but she looked peaceful. I sat beside her, and I remember feeling like I was supposed to understand something, but when I woke up, I could not remember any message.
I’ve been missing her more lately, and I also feel like I’m at an emotional crossroads in my own life. I’m wondering if these dreams are just grief, or if there is something spiritual or intuitive happening.
Can the cards tell me what these dreams mean and what I should pay attention to?
Thank you,
Emily
🎯 Your Exercise
For this reading, imagine you draw the Queen of Cups.
Write your own answer first. The Queen of Cups is deeply connected to dreams, intuition, grief, spiritual sensitivity and the symbolic language of the unconscious. Your task is to give Emily a response that honors the emotional and spiritual quality of the dream without becoming vague or overly dramatic.
When you’re ready, open the spoiler below.
Hi Emily,
Thank you for sharing this dream with me. It has a very gentle feeling around it, and the card that comes forward for you, the Queen of Cups, fits the atmosphere of the dream beautifully.
The Queen of Cups is one of the most intuitive cards in the tarot. She often appears when dreams, emotions and inner knowing are speaking more clearly than ordinary logic. She does not shout her messages. She reveals them through images, feelings, memories and quiet moments that stay with us after we wake.
In your dream, the still lake feels important. Water in dreams often reflects the emotional world, and still water can show a deep feeling that has settled enough for you to look into it. Your grandmother sitting calmly beside that water suggests a peaceful presence connected to memory, love and emotional guidance. Whether you understand this as a spiritual visitation, a healing dream, or your own soul using her image to comfort you, the meaning is tender either way.
The Queen of Cups tells me that this dream is asking you to trust what you felt more than what you can logically prove. If you woke up with peace, softness or the sense that she was near, that feeling matters. The message may not have come as words because it may have been emotional rather than verbal. Sometimes the message is simply: “You are loved. You are accompanied. You can listen inwardly.”
Because you mention an emotional crossroads, I would also read this as a sign that your intuition already knows more than your conscious mind has fully admitted. Your grandmother’s presence may be pointing you back to your own inner wisdom. The Queen of Cups asks you to make quiet space for that wisdom: write the dreams down, sit with the feelings they leave behind, and notice what choices feel peaceful rather than forced.
This dream does not feel like something to fear. It feels like a soft lantern. Your grief may be part of it, yes, but grief and love often speak through the same doorway. The Queen of Cups says your heart is trying to guide you, and the dreams are one of the ways it is doing so.
Exercise 1.2
Now imagine you draw three cards for Emily:
Queen of Cups, Six of Cups, The Moon
Take a moment to feel how these cards work together. We have emotional intuition, memory and the dream world. How would you help Emily understand the dream without flattening it into a simple “yes” or “no”?
Hi Emily,
For your question, I drew the Queen of Cups, the Six of Cups and The Moon. Together, these cards create a very strong dream-and-memory reading. They suggest that your dreams are carrying emotional meaning, and that your grandmother’s image is connected to something deep in your inner world.
The Queen of Cups shows your sensitivity. She is the part of you that receives messages through feeling, image and atmosphere. In this position, she tells me that the dream deserves to be taken seriously, even if we do not force it into one rigid explanation. You may be especially open right now, and your emotional life may be speaking through symbols rather than direct thoughts.
The Six of Cups brings in the past, family memory, childhood, tenderness and loved ones who shaped us. This card often appears when an old emotional bond is still nourishing the present. Your grandmother’s presence in the dream fits this beautifully. It suggests that the connection you had with her still lives inside you, not as something frozen in the past, but as something that continues to offer comfort and wisdom.
Then The Moon deepens the mystery. This is the card of dreams, symbols, intuition and the hidden layers of the psyche. It tells me that the dream may not be meant to be decoded like a simple sentence. The Moon speaks in images because some truths are too emotional to arrive as plain instructions. A lake, a night sky, a grandmother on a dock: these are dream-language images, and they point toward grief, guidance, memory and the unknown path ahead.
Together, these cards say that the dream is meaningful, but its meaning may unfold over time. I would not reduce it to “your grandmother is literally telling you one specific thing,” and I would also not dismiss it as “just grief.” It sits somewhere more sacred and more human than that. It is your heart, your memory and your intuition gathering around an image of love.
If you are at a crossroads, pay attention to what brings emotional peace. The Queen of Cups asks you to trust your inner sense. The Six of Cups reminds you of the love and wisdom you carry from your past. The Moon asks you to walk slowly, because the full picture may still be forming.
I would suggest keeping a dream journal for the next few weeks. Write down not only what happens in the dreams, but also how you feel when you wake. Those feelings may become the thread that leads you toward your answer.
Exercise 2
From compassion to emotional boundaries
The Queen of Cups is often beautiful in readings because she shows love, empathy and emotional intelligence. She can listen with her whole soul. She can be the person others turn to when they need comfort, forgiveness or understanding.
But in real life, people with strong Queen of Cups energy can also become exhausted. They may absorb everyone’s feelings, forgive too quickly, take responsibility for pain that is not theirs, or confuse compassion with being endlessly available.
This is one of the most important lessons of the card: a loving heart still needs a shore.
That’s what we’ll explore in the next exercise.
Fictional client email
Subject: My friend leans on me constantly and I feel drained
Hi,
my name is Jessica Morgan. My best friend Alyssa has been going through a really hard time. Her relationship ended, her work has been stressful, and she says I’m the only person she can really talk to.
I love her, and I want to be there for her. But lately it feels like every conversation becomes about her pain. She texts me late at night, sends long voice notes while I’m working, and gets hurt if I don’t respond quickly. I’ve started feeling anxious when I see her name on my phone, and then I feel guilty because she needs support.
I’m scared that if I set boundaries, she’ll feel abandoned. But I also feel like I’m disappearing into her crisis.
Can the cards show me how to handle this with compassion?
Thank you,
Jessica
🎯 Your Exercise
For this reading, imagine you draw the Queen of Cups.
Think about how this Queen appears when someone is caring deeply, but slowly losing themselves in another person’s emotional storm. Your answer should honor Jessica’s compassion while showing her that boundaries can be loving too.
When you’re ready, open the spoiler below.
Hi Jessica,
Thank you for sharing this so honestly. The card that comes forward for you is the Queen of Cups, and it speaks directly to your role in this situation.
You have been showing up with a generous heart. You care about Alyssa, and you have clearly been trying to give her a safe place to land. The Queen of Cups sees that. She honors your empathy, your loyalty and the way you instinctively want to soften someone else’s pain.
But this Queen also asks an important question: who is holding you while you hold everyone else?
In this reading, the Queen of Cups suggests that your compassion is real, but your emotional boundaries need care. Feeling anxious when her name appears on your phone is a sign that your system is telling you something. It does not mean you are a bad friend. It means the current pattern is asking more from you than you can keep giving in a healthy way.
The loving answer is not to abandon Alyssa. The loving answer is to become honest about what you can offer. You might say something like, “I love you and I care about what you’re going through. I want to support you, but I’m also getting overwhelmed. I may not always be able to answer right away, and I think you deserve more support than one person can give.”
That kind of boundary may feel uncomfortable at first, especially if you are used to being endlessly available. But Queen of Cups energy becomes healthier when it has a container. Water without a container floods everything. Water with a container nourishes.
The card’s message is that your kindness matters, but your peace matters too. You can love your friend and still have a life, a body, a workday and a nervous system of your own. True compassion includes you.
Exercise 2.2
Now imagine you draw three cards for Jessica:
Queen of Cups, Ten of Wands, Two of Swords
Take a moment to feel how these cards speak together. We have compassion, overwhelm and avoidance of a difficult decision. How would you help Jessica understand that her guilt may be keeping her stuck?
Hi Jessica,
For your question, I drew the Queen of Cups, the Ten of Wands and the Two of Swords. Together, these cards show a caring person who has taken on too much and is now struggling to make the decision that would restore balance.
The Queen of Cups is your heart in this situation. You genuinely love Alyssa. You are sensitive to her pain, and you may be able to sense what she needs before she even says it. This is a beautiful gift, and it has probably made you a very comforting presence in her life.
The Ten of Wands shows the cost. This is emotional overburden. You are carrying more than your share, and the weight is beginning to affect you. It may feel like if you put even one piece down, everything will collapse. But the Ten of Wands asks you to notice that you are already struggling under the load. A friendship cannot stay healthy if one person becomes the emergency room for the other person’s entire emotional life.
Then the Two of Swords shows the hesitation. You know something needs to change, but you may be frozen between guilt and self-protection. One side says, “She needs me.” The other says, “I can’t keep doing this.” So you stay in the middle, answering, absorbing and quietly resenting the pressure.
Together, these cards say that your compassion needs a decision. Your guilt is trying to convince you that boundaries are cruelty, but the spread shows the opposite. Boundaries are the only way this friendship can remain loving instead of becoming heavy with exhaustion and resentment.
A gentle but clear conversation is needed. You can tell Alyssa that you care deeply, while also explaining that late-night crisis texts and constant emotional unloading are too much for one person to hold. You can suggest that she reach out to other friends, family, a support group or a counselor if that is accessible to her. You can offer what you truly can give, rather than promising availability that slowly harms you.
This spread is not asking you to close your heart. It is asking you to stop carrying more than your heart can hold. The Queen of Cups remains compassionate. The Ten of Wands says the burden must be reduced. The Two of Swords says the decision cannot be postponed forever.
You are allowed to love someone without becoming their only lifeboat.
Closing Thoughts
The Queen of Cups is one of the most tender and profound cards in the tarot. She teaches us that emotions have wisdom, that dreams can carry messages, that compassion is a real form of intelligence, and that the unseen world of feeling matters deeply.
In Emily’s reading, the Queen of Cups helped us honor dreams, grief and intuitive memory. In Jessica’s reading, she showed us that empathy becomes healthier when it has boundaries.
This is the true depth of the Queen of Cups. She is not only soft. She is wise. She knows that a heart can be open without being unprotected, and that emotional truth often arrives quietly before the mind can explain it.
You can return to these fictional emails whenever you like. Pull one card, three cards or a full spread from your own deck and see how your interpretation changes. Each practice round helps you understand how the Queen of Cups speaks through dreams, care, grief, intuition and emotional boundaries.
✨ Support & Continue Your Journey
If you enjoyed working through these Queen of Cups exercises and would like a personal tarot reading with this same level of warmth and intuitive depth, you can book one at www.empowering-tarot.com. Your own situation deserves guidance that listens beneath the surface and treats your heart with care.
If this free course has helped you, you can also support my work through the tip jar in the sidebar on desktop or at the bottom of the page on mobile. Every contribution helps keep resources like this available for the tarot community.
Thank you for practising with me today. May the Queen of Cups remind you that your feelings are not noise. Sometimes, they are the first language of truth.
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