Career, love, moving, timing
Big Decision Reading
Cosmica's Big Decision Reading is built for one serious question. You describe the decision in your own words, and Aether reads the situation through Western astrology, Chinese BaZi, and the I Ching. The point is not to hand your agency to a prediction engine. The point is to reflect the deeper pattern back to you so the next step feels less noisy and more honest.
What this reading is best for
- Choosing between two paths when both have real costs.
- Understanding whether the timing supports action, patience, or preparation.
- Turning a vague anxious question into a clearer decision frame.
What you get
- A summary of the real question underneath your stated question.
- Astrological timing and natal themes that may be activated by the choice.
- BaZi notes on pressure, resource, output, and the kind of effort the path asks for.
- An I Ching-style decision image with practical reflection prompts.
For decisions that deserve more than a pros-and-cons list
Some choices are not hard because you lack information. They are hard because they touch identity, timing, loyalty, fear, desire, and the future self you are trying to become. This reading treats your question as a living crossroads and looks for the pattern behind the pressure.
A reading that keeps your agency intact
Aether does not replace judgment, legal advice, financial advice, or therapy. It gives you a symbolic map: what each path strengthens, what it may cost, what timing suggests, and what kind of honesty the decision is asking from you. The final choice remains yours.
Related Cosmica pages
Questions
What kind of question should I ask?
Ask one specific decision question. Career moves, relationship choices, relocation, creative commitments, and timing questions work well.
Can I ask about money, health, or legal matters?
You can ask reflective questions, but Cosmica is not medical, legal, or financial advice. Use professionals for high-stakes decisions in those areas.
How detailed should my question be?
More context helps. A few sentences about the options, the stakes, and what feels confusing will produce a more useful reading.