Why Some Things Aren't Explained
Not everything that comes up in MOODS needs an explanation.
Some questions don’t have an answer that can be handed to you without ruining the point of the experience. When you ask “what does this really mean,” you’re often asking someone else to decide for you.
That’s where MOODS stops.
The system reflects patterns and pressure. It doesn't translate them into conclusions, resolve ambiguity on your behalf, or tell you which interpretation to believe. That's intentional.
MOODS won’t tell you the “real meaning” of a response. It will give you material. You decide what it means and what you do next. If you can’t decide, step away and come back later.
If you want an interpretation, you have to make it yourself.
If you want advice, you should get it from a human you trust.
If you want certainty, this is not the tool for you.
Related Documentation
If you’re trying to understand where MOODS stops, how interpretation works, and how to use the tool without outsourcing meaning, these pages clarify the boundaries:
- Using MOODS Without Handing Over Your Power: responsibility and discernment
- What MOODS Is (And What It’s Not): scope and intent
- When MOODS Is Not the Right Tool: limits of use
- The Trap of Endless Reflection: when reflection stops being useful