Look first to the bottom, where the grounds gather at the base. There lies the snake — not striking, not reared up, but coiled and half-bedded in shadow. In the language of the cup this rarely speaks of an enemy outside you. More often it speaks of a tension you have not yet fully named: an unease in this work, a quiet question you have been politely ignoring. The snake at the base asks not for fear, but for honesty.
Now lift your eyes to the middle. There stands the key, upright and clear, in the brightest part of the cup. Where the snake whispers, the key answers. A key never appears without a lock; it tells you that right now a door can be opened — a decision, a conversation, a step that until now seemed sealed.
The beauty is that both signs share the same cup. The hidden tension and its solution are not divided from each other — the key was forged for precisely this door. When you look the snake in the eye instead of reading past it, your hand finds the key almost on its own.
The cup pushes you toward nothing. It is a mirror, not a verdict. It only says: the thing you will not look at near the base is holding the key in the middle. Name the quiet thing — and the gate stands open.