- 16% of singles are turning to Tarot to guide their love life¹
- 30% of Gen Z and millennials check a match’s star sign before the first date²
- Mentions of “Do you have a pet?” are up 7.6% in India this year³
- Nearly 20% of internationally surveyed singles reported they are creating vision boards to manifest everything from Golden Retriever love (44%) to Black Cat energy (23%)²
A Pet-Led Tarot Reading: What’s Really Going On With Your Human’s Love Life?
If your pet could talk (and knew their way around a Tarot deck), here’s what they’d want to know:- Is my human ready to cuddle — or still emotionally chasing squirrels?
- Who’s the next person bringing treats into our life, and will I like them?
- What’s blocking my human from finding “the one”? Can I help (besides being cute, obviously)?
- Will their next relationship include me on the adventures — or am I headed back to doggy daycare?
- What red flags should I bark at if someone new shows up?
Q&A with Tinder’s Relationship Expert – Dr. Chandni Tugnait
Q: Is “good with pets” the new love language? A: Absolutely. How someone treats their pet shows how they love — empathy, patience, emotional presence. Today, “dog dad energy” or “cat mom vibes” might just be the new love language. How someone treats their pet is a powerful window into how they give (and receive) love. Patience, attention, and emotional attunement with pets usually translate into romantic relationships too. Being “good with pets” isn’t just a cute bonus anymore — it’s a real signal of empathy, responsibility, and emotional availability. Pets require presence and compassion, the same emotional toolkit needed for healthy love. Q: Can attachment styles show up in how we treat our pets? A: Totally. Anxious daters? Overpack the treat bag. Avoidants? Routine but distant. Secure? Calm, loving, and present. Q: Can pets help spot emotionally available matches? A: If someone lights up talking about their pet, shares their quirks in their bio, or plans pet-friendly dates — it’s a clue they’re emotionally tuned in. Pets need consistency and empathy, just like real relationships. Plus, if they care about your pet’s boundaries, chances are they’ll respect yours too — and that’s your person. Q: Should “pet co-parenting potential” be a thing? A: 100%. If someone respects your bond with your pet, that’s a huge indicator of emotional alignment. Pet co-parenting isn’t just about splitting walks — it’s about shared values like patience, flexibility, and showing up. Signs someone’s ready? They ask thoughtful questions about your pet, embrace pet responsibilities without flinching, and respect your bond instead of competing with it. If walking your dog sounds exhausting to them, maybe co-parenting isn’t an option. Q: Can pets reveal dating blind spots? A: Oh yes. If someone only likes your pet when they’re behaving, ask yourself — do they only like the easy version of you? Pets don’t perform. Watching how someone reacts to your pet’s hyper energy, fear, or stubbornness shows whether they’re really there for the messy, real moments — not just the highlight reel. If someone only likes your pet when they’re calm, it might be a mirror for how they handle the real you. Q: Is “must love pets” more than a cute line? A: It’s code for: respect my love language, my rituals, and my emotional rhythm. “Must love pets” sounds cute, but it really points to shared emotional rhythms — loyalty, affection, patience, and care. If someone doesn’t get why your bond with your pet matters, they may not fully get how you love either. In today’s world, “must love pets” often translates to: respect my heart, my pace, and my peace. Final Message (straight from your pet via Jeevika’s Tarot deck): “Trust your gut. Watch who brings peace — and who makes me bark. You deserve the kind of love that takes both of us on the walk.”The articles, news features, interviews, quotes, and media content displayed on this page are the property of their respective publishers and media houses. All such materials have been sourced from publicly available online platforms where our name, views, or contributions have been referenced, quoted, or featured.
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