Should I Take the Leap?
Every leap looks reckless from the edge and obvious in hindsight. The oracle won't promise you'll land — it asks whether you're avoiding the leap out of wisdom, or out of fear wearing wisdom's clothes.
Get your verdict →Questions to ask yourself
- Is the fear about the risk itself, or about what failing would say about you?
- What's the real cost of staying exactly where you are for five more years?
- Can you survive the worst realistic outcome — not the catastrophic fantasy, the realistic one?
- Are you waiting for certainty, or for permission?
- If you knew you couldn't fail, would there be any question at all?
The signs you already decided
The leap you keep researching but never take, the dream you've downgraded to a hobby, the 'someday' that's been the same distance away for years — the wanting that won't go quiet is information.
What people get wrong
People wait to feel ready. Readiness is mostly a myth; the confidence you're waiting for usually lives on the other side of the leap, not this one.
Ask the oracle about your situation →FAQ
How do I know if I should take a big risk?
Weigh the realistic downside against the cost of never trying. If you can survive the worst likely outcome and you'll regret not trying, that's usually your answer.
What if I take the leap and fail?
Then you'll know instead of wonder — and most 'failures' are tuition, not verdicts. The unlived version of your life is the only guaranteed loss.