抽到的一頁
The cracks can still be mended
Not everything that's broken needs to be thrown away
Some connections don't have to stay broken — it's just that no one has been willing to say clearly where it hurts.
- Mend
- Speak clearly
- Face it gently
抽到的一頁
Not everything that's broken needs to be thrown away
Some connections don't have to stay broken — it's just that no one has been willing to say clearly where it hurts.
reading
You've opened to a bowl mended with gold thread. The cracks are still visible, but they're no longer only proof of damage — they've become the trace of something seen and tended to. This page doesn't ask you to pretend you weren't hurt. It asks: is there still honest space here to mend?
If your question involves misunderstandings, silence, or words said too sharply, the book has opened to "mend first." Not every silence signals an ending — some silences just mean neither person knows how to say the first sentence without it feeling like a blade. You don't have to take responsibility for everything, but you can start by saying clearly where it truly hurt.
You're afraid that opening your mouth will make you look like you care too much, and afraid that even after mending, you'll still be disappointed. So instead you stand at a distance, pretending you no longer need any of it. But hurt that goes unspoken rarely disappears. It tends to harden into something sharper by the next time you get close.
Begin with one sentence that doesn't accuse: after that day, I've been carrying something heavy. Don't rush to declare who was right or wrong — let both the facts and the feelings have a place. Whether it can be mended is something only two people can decide together. But your willingness to bring the crack into the light is already a way of freeing yourself from the loop of guessing.
This draw is for entertainment and self-reflection only. It is not a divination guarantee or psychological diagnosis.