Direct Wealth Pattern Characteristics and Luck Cycle Selection
Direct Wealth pattern — steadily accumulating wealth step by step
The Direct Wealth pattern is a pattern where the month branch is the Direct Wealth star. Direct Wealth represents stable income, salary, savings — unlike Indirect Wealth's 'unexpected windfall,' Direct Wealth is 'hard-earned money.' People with the Direct Wealth pattern excel at accumulation rather than risk-taking, making them the 'steady investors' among patterns. This article explains the core characteristics and key luck cycle points of the Direct Wealth pattern.
The Direct Wealth pattern's advantage is stability and endurance — making money through accumulation rather than luck. Its weakness is lack of explosive power — getting rich overnight is difficult. Luck cycles favor Eating God/Hurting Officer generating Wealth and Wealth cycles themselves; they abhor Companion/Rob Wealth seizing Wealth.
1. Luck Cycle Logic for the Direct Wealth Pattern
Three Analysis Dimensions
Career & Wealth
Love & Relationship
Personality
Health
Classical Support
Practical Key Points
- During Eating God/Hurting Officer cycles, upgrade your skills : Output generating Wealth = ability improvement brings income growth. During Output cycles, learn and enhance professional skills; income will grow accordingly.
- Control spending during Companion/Rob Wealth cycles : Companion/Rob Wealth seizing Wealth doesn't necessarily mean you 'lose money' — it can also manifest as 'increased expenditure' — such as buying a house, getting married, having children, and other large expenses. During Companion/Rob Wealth cycles, manage spending reasonably.
Common Follow-ups
Q: Are people with the Direct Wealth pattern suited for entrepreneurship?
A:
More suited for 'steady, step-by-step' entrepreneurship — such as opening a physical store, doing trade, and other businesses with stable cash flow. Less suited for internet-style entrepreneurship that burns cash for growth. People with the Direct Wealth pattern naturally have lower risk appetite; overly aggressive entrepreneurial approaches will cause unnecessary stress on both finances and psychology.