Minor Arcana — Cups (Igbo) · Akwụkwọ Four
Four of Cups
Mmiri · Emotions, Relationships, Feelings
Ọmụma nke Four of Cups
A young person sits cross-legged beneath a tree, arms folded, contemplating three cups arranged before them on the ground. A fourth cup is offered by a mysterious hand emerging from a cloud, but the figure appears not to notice or care.
Four of Cups Nkọwa n'ụzọ
✦ Ndoro General
The Four of Cups represents contemplation, apathy, reevaluation, and discontent. A figure sits beneath a tree with arms crossed, ignoring a cup offered by a divine hand while three cups sit before them. You may be so focused on what you lack that you fail to see the opportunities being offered.
♥ Akwụkwọ & Nkwado
In love, the Four of Cups indicates boredom, taking a partner for granted, or being so focused on past relationships that you miss present opportunities.
☆ Ọrụ & Ezigbo
For career, this card suggests professional dissatisfaction, feeling uninspired at work, or ignoring opportunities because they do not match your expectations.
✚ Ahu & Mma
In health, the Four of Cups warns of apathy toward wellness, ignoring helpful advice, or emotional stagnation affecting physical energy.
Four of Cups Nkọwa n'ọnwụ
✦ Ndoro General
The Four of Cups reversed suggests new awareness, acceptance, and seeing opportunities you previously overlooked. You are emerging from a period of discontent with fresh perspective.
♥ Akwụkwọ & Nkwado
Reversed in love, this card indicates renewed interest in romance, recognizing a partner's value, or opening up to unexpected connections.
☆ Ọrụ & Ezigbo
In career reversed, the Four of Cups suggests accepting a new opportunity, overcoming professional apathy, or finding renewed motivation.
✚ Ahu & Mma
For health reversed, this card indicates renewed interest in wellness and acceptance of help or resources previously ignored.
Nkọwa nke Four of Cups
The three cups on the ground represent past blessings or achievements that have become familiar. The offered fourth cup represents a new opportunity being divinely presented. The closed body language of the figure represents emotional withdrawal and the tendency to focus on dissatisfaction rather than possibility.
Nkọwa ndoro dị n'ime Four of Cups
“Look up. An opportunity or blessing is being offered that you may be too focused on your own discontent to see. Gratitude for what you have opens the door to receiving what you need.”
Hụ Four of Cups n'ime ọrụ
Pụ Four of Cups n'ime ndoro tarot interactive ndoro anyị na hụrụ ndoro nke ọ bụla n'ime ya n'oge ọ bụla n'ime ndoro gị.