Choosing between two options
Two paths open up, and each has its reasons. From comparing endlessly, you wear yourself out without deciding. The problem is rarely a lack of arguments — it's that one option touches something you haven't yet named.
Start here
Put it in your own words — phrasing it clearly is already the first step.
Do my readingFree reading online. Your question stays on this device.
When pros and cons aren't enough
If the list of advantages balances out, the real question is often elsewhere: what am I afraid to lose? what does each option say about me? A figure drawn on “what makes this choice difficult?” often surfaces that blind spot.
Deciding isn't removing doubt: it's recognizing what matters most to you, now, and moving with it.
Reframing the choice
Rather than “which is right?”, ask “where do I want to go?” and “which one is more like me, where I am now?”. The figure doesn't name a winner: it illuminates the dynamic of each path, so yours becomes obvious.
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 for a two-path choice:
Draw a figure on your choice
Ask your dilemma and do a free reading, to see which one is more like you.
Frequently asked questions
- Will Daoa tell me which option to choose?
- No. It illuminates what makes the choice difficult and the dynamic of each path; the decision stays yours.
- What if the two options are truly equal?
- That's often a sign the real question is elsewhere (a fear, an unspoken desire). A good question turned toward you surfaces what tips the balance.
Other situations
- Stay or leaveHold on or turn the page — a job, a place, a relationship.
- Act or waitThe impulse is there — but is it the right moment to act?
- A career decisionA role, a project, a career turn — deciding without only calculating.
- Change directionA deep reorientation — when something is asking to change.
- Should I accept?An offer, a proposal, a request — accept, or not?
- Yes or no?When a choice comes down to yes or no — and how to settle it well.