Who Thinks of You
Someone is thinking of you right now - you can feel it. Focus on the sensation, select the time, and reveal who fills their min. Embeddable domain-locked widget, mobile-responsive.

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The question is specific: is this person thinking about you right now? Not in the future, not what they feel about you in general - right now, in this moment. The oracle works with that precise question. It isn't a rational process. It's a focusing tool - it takes the question, applies a structured symbolic draw, and returns an answer that you can either confirm or complicate with what you already sense. The answer matters less than the moment of recognition when you read it.
How it works
Name the person. Hold the question for ten seconds - actually hold it, don't skim past. Click to draw. The oracle returns a primary answer (yes, no, or neutral), plus a symbolic amplification that gives the quality of any presence detected: preoccupied, warm, distant, unresolved. The draw is single-card, focused, fast.
Understanding your result
A 'yes' with warmth suggests active positive thought - they're thinking of you with good feeling. A 'yes' with preoccupation suggests they're thinking of you but circling something unresolved. 'Neutral' means the connection is quiet right now, not absent. 'No' isn't a statement about how they feel about you - it's a read on the present moment only. Moments change quickly.
Frequently asked questions
How accurate is this?
The oracle is a focusing and reflection tool, not a telepathic instrument. Some people find it resonates consistently with what they later discover; others use it purely as a ritual prompt. We make no accuracy claims.
Can I use this for multiple people?
Yes - but do separate draws. Holding two people in mind at once diffuses the focus. One question, one person, one draw.
What if I get 'no' for someone I know was just texting me?
The draw is a snapshot of a moment, not a sustained reading. Moments change - and occasionally a 'no' reflects the fact that their surface attention was on the conversation, while their deeper focus was elsewhere.
Is this for entertainment?
Yes - entertainment and self-reflection. We make no claims about access to other people's inner states.
