The wheel always turns. The trick is knowing whether to hold on or to hang.
What you might notice
When this pair lands, one might notice an old habit of forcing motion or forcing stillness loosening. The Wheel can name the larger cycle one is inside — neither personal failure nor personal merit, just the turn of the season. The Hanged Man can suggest that some chapters of a cycle are best met by suspending one's habitual response. Together they tend to invite a slow look at the rhythm one is in, and the posture that rhythm is actually requesting.
Questions to sit with
- What larger cycle is currently turning around me?
- Is this season asking me to ride or to hang?
- Where am I trying to push the wheel rather than read it?
- What habitual response is being asked to be suspended?
When this pairing tends to surface
Tends to surface during major external shifts that one cannot control — economic cycles, seasonal weather, others' decisions, collective events. Also during periods when an internal cycle is turning that one cannot rush. Treat it as a prompt for posture rather than action.
Continue
· Read each card on its own ·
· Companion practices ·

