Clarity Mode

Yes or No Wheel

Spin a clean yes, no, or maybe wheel when you need a fast answer without overthinking.

3 options
YesYesNoNoMaybeMaybe
Clarity Mode

About the Yes or No

The Yes or No Wheel is the simplest way to break a stalemate in your own head. When you keep flip-flopping over a small choice, spinning gives you a single, clear result to react to (Yes, No, or the occasional Maybe) so you can stop looping and move on. It is not magic and it does not read the future; it is a fair coin with a friendlier face.

What makes it useful is the pause between the spin and the landing. In that half-second, you often notice which answer you were quietly hoping for. That gut flinch is the real signal, the wheel just gives it something to push against. Use the result, or use your reaction to the result; either way you leave with a decision instead of a debate.

Keep the default Yes / No / Maybe for pure either-or calls, or drop the Maybe when you want a hard binary with no escape hatch. It is free, needs no sign-up, and works the same on your phone at a restaurant table as it does on a laptop at your desk.

How to use the Yes or No Wheel

  1. Phrase your question so a single answer settles it, for example, 'Should I text them back tonight?' rather than an open-ended 'What should I do?'
  2. Decide whether you want a clean binary or a wildcard: keep all three slices for Yes, No, and Maybe, or remove Maybe for a firm yes-or-no.
  3. Give the wheel a spin and let it come to a full stop on its own, no nudging.
  4. Read the result out loud and notice your first reaction to it in that split second.
  5. If you feel relief, go with the wheel; if you feel resistance, you just learned your real answer, follow that instead.
  6. Spin again only for a genuinely new question, not to overturn a result you simply did not like.

Ways to use the Yes or No

Settling a takeout craving

You and a friend keep saying 'I don't mind, you pick.' One spin decides whether tonight is a yes to pizza, and you stop circling the same three options.

Breaking a work micro-decision

Should you send the email now or sit on it? For a low-stakes call that has stalled all afternoon, a quick Yes or No spin frees you to get back to real work.

Nudging yourself off the fence

You have weighed the pros and cons of a small purchase to death. The spin forces a result, and your gut reaction to it usually reveals what you actually wanted.

Keeping a game moving

During a board game or a lull at a party, use it to resolve a friendly 'should we do it or not' dare without a long debate.

Teaching kids to decide

Turn an endless 'ice cream or not?' negotiation into a fair spin. The visible, random result feels neutral, so there is no arguing with the wheel.

Journaling prompt starter

Ask a reflective yes-or-no question about a habit or plan, spin, and write about how the answer lands. The point is your response, not the wheel.

Tips for better spins

  • Only spin for choices small enough that you would genuinely accept a coin flip, save the big life calls for real reflection.
  • Watch the moment of relief or dread when it lands; that feeling is more honest than the wheel itself.
  • Drop the Maybe slice when a wishy-washy answer would just send you back to overthinking.
  • Commit before you spin: agree with yourself that you will act on the result so the spin actually means something.
  • One question, one spin, re-spinning until you get the answer you wanted defeats the entire purpose.

Next spins

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Yes or No Wheel truly random?

Yes. Each spin is independent and unbiased, so every slice has the same chance of landing on top. There is no memory of past spins and no hidden weighting.

What is the point of the Maybe slice?

Maybe is there for questions that honestly are not ready for a hard answer, it is a nudge to gather more information rather than a cop-out. If you want a firm decision, remove it and spin with just Yes and No.

Should I really make decisions based on a spin?

Use it for low-stakes calls where any answer is fine, or as a tie-breaker when you are truly stuck. The most useful part is often your gut reaction to the result, which tells you what you actually wanted.

Can I re-spin if I don't like the answer?

You can, but if you find yourself re-spinning for the same question, you already have your answer, you just did not like it. For a new, different question, a fresh spin is fair game.

Do I need to sign up or install anything?

No. The Yes or No Wheel runs free in your browser with no account, download, or setup. Open it, spin, and go.

Does it work on my phone?

Yes. It works on phones, tablets, and computers, so you can settle a quick 'yes or no' anywhere, at a restaurant, in a meeting, or on the couch.

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