Tarot for deciding, not predicting
Tarot is associated with prediction. But you can draw a figure for an entirely different reason: not to know what will happen, but to see clearly on a choice. That's the whole Daoa approach.
From omen to decision
Asking “what will happen?” places the answer outside you, in a future supposedly written. Asking “how do I approach this choice?” puts you back at the center. The same drawn figure then illuminates your situation instead of claiming to predict it.
That shift — from omen to decision — changes the nature of the reading: it becomes a tool for clarity, not an announcement.
How it works, concretely
You phrase the decision on your mind, draw a Yi Jing figure, and tie it to your situation. Daoa's AI helps read the figure; it never decides. You often leave with a concrete next step.
That's exactly what we explore, situation by situation, in the Decide section.
The Daoa difference
- Tarot, fortune telling, oracles
- try to predict what will happen — a future set in advance.
- Daoa
- predicts nothing. The Yi Jing is a mirror here: it illuminates your present situation to clarify your decision.
The answer — and the choice — stay yours. The AI helps read the figure; it never decides.
Figures useful for a decision:
Draw a figure to decide
Ask your choice and do a free reading — to decide, not to predict.
Frequently asked questions
- Can you really use a reading to decide?
- Yes. The drawn figure doesn't need to predict to be useful: it opens an angle on your situation and what makes the choice difficult. The decision stays yours.
- How is this different from fortune telling?
- Fortune telling claims to say the future. Here, nothing is predicted: a present decision is clarified. The reading is a mirror, not an announcement.