Oracle Magick Supply

The Wheel of Fortune Oracle

A yes or no spread for the tarot, drawn from a 1955 classic. The Wheel is hidden among eight cards; wherever it lands is your answer, and the rest of the spread tells you why.

A word before you draw: tarot is a mirror, not a yes or no machine, and even Mary Greer who resurfaced this spread keeps it at arm's length. Read our post on why before you take any single answer as final.

Keep it to one thing. A question like "should I take job A or job B" is really two questions; ask them separately.

How this spread works

The Wheel of Fortune is lifted out of the deck and set aside as the oracle. The remaining cards are shuffled on your question, seven are drawn, and those seven are mixed back in with the Wheel. The eight cards are dealt two to a corner: top left is yes, top right is soon, bottom left is delay, bottom right is no.

Wherever the Wheel falls is the answer. Yes means a clear, favorable path. Soon means yes is coming, so do not force it. Delay means obstacles to clear first. No means conditions right now block it, and the same wish may turn yes once circumstances shift.

The spread comes from Irys Vorel in the February 1955 issue of Fate Magazine, resurfaced by tarot scholar Mary K. Greer as a forgotten classic. It is included here as a piece of history; tarot is more honest as a mirror than as a verdict machine.

For a reading that opens the question up instead of closing it down, book a session at oraclemagicksupply.com.