
// signals
Key themes and recurring subjects
The Golden Ass is a 2nd-century Latin novel by Apuleius that contains the classical myth of Cupid and Psyche, one of the earliest recorded Western love stories involving divine-human union and trials of faith and transformation. In the Psycheverse: The show uses The Golden Ass as source material for deep readings of the Cupid and Psyche myth, treating it as a spiritual curriculum about betrayal, initiation, and the soul's journey toward divine reunion. Psyche's trials become a template for understanding transformation and trust across multiple episodes.
The Fool is the first card of the major arcana, traditionally numbered 0 or 22, depicting a figure at the beginning of a journey often shown stepping off a cliff—symbolizing innocence, spontaneity, potential, and the willingness to embrace the unknown. In the Psycheverse: Psyche treats The Fool as the archetypal starting point for understanding tarot's narrative arc, emphasizing its role as the protagonist of the Fool's Journey through all 22 major arcana. The card appears as a recurring lens for exploring themes of faith, risk-taking, and spiritual initiation, with particular attention to its dynamic relationship with other major arcana figures like The Devil.
The Lovers is the sixth major arcana card in tarot, traditionally depicting two figures in a state of union or choice, symbolizing love, desire, alignment, and decision-making at a crossroads. In the Psycheverse: The Lovers appears as both a card of romantic and spiritual union, but Psyche emphasizes its deeper function—the integration of internal divine masculine and feminine polarities and the pursuit of authentic alignment with oneself. The card's relationship to The Devil card becomes a recurring inquiry, exploring how desire, choice, and self-love operate as forces of transformation rather than mere external romance.