Should I ask for a raise?
“Should I ask for a raise?” is rarely about a single number. This reading looks at direction and timing rather than exact amounts — what your work is really worth right now, what’s shifting underneath the surface, and where your leverage actually sits.
A three-card spread for this question
When you open this reading, the three cards are written for “Should I ask for a raise?” directly — not a generic layout. They read:
- What your work is truly worth right now
- How the workplace sees and values you
- Where the money moves if you ask
How to read it
Read the three as direction, not arithmetic: the first names where your worth actually stands, the second what is moving underneath, the third where your leverage lies. The cards speak to timing and position, not a figure — the number is yours to negotiate once you can see the ground clearly.
Use this as a way to reflect and read direction, not a verdict to hand your life to. The final decision is always yours.
Questions about this reading
How many cards does the “Should I ask for a raise?” reading use?
Three. They read what your work is truly worth right now, how the workplace sees and values you, where the money moves if you ask — written for this question, not generic positions.
Will the cards tell me an exact amount?
No. A career reading reads direction, worth, and timing — not a figure. It helps you see your position clearly so the number stays something you decide and negotiate.