Petal Oracle
Loves me, loves me not - let the petals reveal the truth. Embeddable domain-locked widget, mobile-responsive.

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She loves me. She loves me not. The petal oracle is one of the oldest divination methods in the world - so old that it barely counts as divination anymore, just as a gesture. But strip away the children's-game patina and you have something real: a ritual of surrender. You hold a question, you let randomness answer, and you notice what you feel when the last petal falls. The feeling is the answer. The petal just occasions it.
How it works
Hold your question - a real one about a real person, or a situation you need a yes or no on. Choose your flower and begin pulling petals with a click. The oracle runs the count, alternating love/love not with each petal, and reveals the final answer when the flower is bare. Some flowers have more petals than others. The count is authentic to the blossom you choose.
Understanding your result
The result is binary: loves me, or loves me not. But the moment you see it, you know whether it's right - not because petals are oracular, but because your gut responds instantly to good or bad news. If you feel relief at the answer, that's data. If you feel the urge to go again, that's also data. The oracle isn't in the petal - it's in how your body responds to the last one.
Frequently asked questions
Is this actually a form of divination?
Technically it's cleromancy - divination by lot - which is one of the oldest categories. Whether you believe it works literally or not, it functions as a focusing ritual. The answer matters less than how you feel about the answer.
Can I use this for non-romantic questions?
Yes. 'Will this work out?' 'Should I go?' Any question that has a yes/no shape and something real at stake works fine.
What if I want to go again?
You can. But notice the impulse - if you're pulling petals until you get the answer you want, you already know the answer.
Which flowers are included?
Daisy, sunflower, cosmos, chamomile, and a few others - each with an accurate petal count for that variety. The result is sensitive to the choice of flower.