Guides
Bazi Guides
Ten Gods, Five Elements, Sixty Jiazi, and Star Gods reference guides.
616 guides
Tarot Guides
Structured tarot spread guides for love, career, and daily clarity.
103 guides
I Ching Guides
64 hexagrams, core principles, and divination methods.
64 guides
Feng Shui Guides
Site selection, orientation, and form versus compass methods.
90 guides
- Resource (Yin) Transforming Killing vs. Output (Shi Shang) Controlling Killing: Borrowing Power vs. Relying on Yourself — Two Completely Different Paths
Yin-Hua-Sha turns the enemy into an ally through transformation (borrowing external help). Shi-Shang-Zhi-Sha subdues the threat through direct control (relying on yourself). Weak DM + strong Killing? Use Yin to transform. Strong DM + weak Killing? Use Output to control. Pick the wrong path and more effort means more pain.
- The Wealth-Officer-Resource Mutual Generation Destiny: Wealth Pattern Meets Officer, Matched with Resource — The Gold Standard for High Salary and Solid Position
Wealth pattern meeting Officer needs Resource — without Resource, pressure damages the body and disaster follows. This article explains the four conditions of Cai-Guan-Yin mutual generation charts, the optimal configuration for Wealth-pattern-meets-Officer, and remedies for 'having Cai Guan but missing Resource.'
- Wealth-Officer-Resource Revealed on Heavenly Stems: Nobility Shown Above, Wealth Hidden Below — The Optimal Configuration of the Three Treasures
Heavenly Stems drive action and represent prestige — Wealth, Officer, and Resource revealed on the Stems mean public social status, power, and reputation. This article explains revelation priority (Officer and Resource want revelation; Wealth prefers concealment), how to tell genuine from fake revelation, and remedies for rootless revelation.
- 'Wealth First Then Resource Brings Blessing; Resource First Then Wealth Brings Humiliation' — What It Actually Means
This thousand-year-old saying reveals how the sequence of Wealth and Resource in a chart fundamentally shapes the life trajectory. A deep breakdown of the strength-weakness principles behind it.
- Abundant (Wang) Is Not the Same as Strong (Qiang): Weak (Shuai) Is Not the Same as Fragile (Ruo)
Abundance and strength are two different concepts — abundance is quantity, strength is quality. Someone can be abundant (Resource/Companion everywhere) but fragile (none of it rooted). Here's the precise distinction.
- Balanced Day Master: How to Pick the Yongshen When There's No Obvious Tilt
Balanced isn't mediocre — it's the most flexible state a Day Master can have. Four types of balance and how the luck cycles turn a balanced DM into a strong or weak operator.
- Can a Weak Day Master Really Not Carry Wealth and Officer?
'A weak body can't carry Wealth and Officer' is one of the most widespread Bazi sayings — but how weak is too weak? And can Seal protection make it possible? Here's the full clarification.
- Can Si Fire Ever Be a Strong Root for Geng Metal? The Longevity Paradox
Geng Metal's longevity stage is in Si — but Si's main qi is Fire, which controls Metal. When can a controlling branch become a supporting root? Here are the two conditions.
- Can't Pin Down the Yongshen? Three Backup Plans When Wangshuai Fails
Sometimes even the 5-step method leaves the yongshen unclear. Don't force it — here are three reliable backup approaches for when Wangshuai can't deliver a definitive answer.
- Extremely Weak Day Master Meets a Support Year — Why It's Dangerous, Not Helpful
When a tai-ruo DM gets a support cycle, it's not rescue — it's provocation. The 'offending the strong' principle explains why help years are the most dangerous for the extremely weak.