Loading...
In a female's Bazi (Eight Characters), the proper officer (正官) or seven killings (七杀) represent the husband. Ideally, there should be only one officer or killing star. If there are too many officer or killing stars (especially without control or transformation), they may suppress the husband's fortune.
If the officer stars are scattered throughout the chart without restraint (full of officer stars), it is considered unfavorable. However, if the seven killings dominate the chart but are controlled and transformed, it may instead bring blessings.
Excessive hurting officer (伤官) is generally inauspicious. If combined with a hurting officer luck cycle, it may lead to conflicts with the husband. If the hurting officer is restrained (e.g., suppressed by the seal star), the individual may face personal hardships.
Traditionally, women with a strong hurting officer are believed to harm their children or conflict with their husbands. Too many officer stars may damage the husband's status, leading to a difficult life for the individual.
If the hurting officer coincides with the peach blossom煞 (e.g., in the peach blossom positions of Zi, Wu, Mao, or You), ancient texts suggest a tendency toward promiscuity or infertility. However, if paired with the heavenly nobleman (天乙贵人), glory god (荣神), or if the peach blossom falls into an empty or desolate position, it may instead bring wealth and chastity.
If the peach blossom煞 is accompanied by the salary horse star (禄马星) (e.g., the travel horse) or the Xianchi peach blossom (咸池桃花) meets the travel horse, it often indicates excessive desires, disrupting family harmony and harming the husband.
Those with Chen (辰) but no Xu (戌) in their chart may face loneliness in old age. Those with many Xu but no Chen may toil in youth but improve in middle age, neither conflicting with their husbands nor harming their children, though they may have a flirtatious nature. If both Chen and Xu are present, it may lead to family ruin due to promiscuity, harm to the husband and children, or even a short-lived or disabled life.
"Rolling Peach Blossoms" is essentially a game of desire and order:
| Keyword | Modern Equivalent |
|---|---|
| Officer/Killing Stars | Social norms/spouse's influence |
| Controlled Hurting Officer | Channeling creativity into professional skills |
| Xianchi + Travel Horse | Fast romance/cross-cultural marriage potential |
| Chen-Xu Clash | Root of family-career conflicts |
Related Concepts:
Modern Research:
🌸 Key Note: Ancient terms like "prostitute fate" contain feudal biases. Modern interpretations should focus on emotional patterns, not moral judgments—those with hurting officer + peach blossoms should avoid impulsive decisions, not accept fate passively.
In a female's Bazi (Eight Characters), the proper officer (正官) or seven killings (七杀) represent the husband. Ideally, there should be only one officer or killing star. If there are too many officer or killing stars (especially without control or transformation), they may suppress the husband's fortune.
If the officer stars are scattered throughout the chart without restraint (full of officer stars), it is considered unfavorable. However, if the seven killings dominate the chart but are controlled and transformed, it may instead bring blessings.
Excessive hurting officer (伤官) is generally inauspicious. If combined with a hurting officer luck cycle, it may lead to conflicts with the husband. If the hurting officer is restrained (e.g., suppressed by the seal star), the individual may face personal hardships.
Traditionally, women with a strong hurting officer are believed to harm their children or conflict with their husbands. Too many officer stars may damage the husband's status, leading to a difficult life for the individual.
If the hurting officer coincides with the peach blossom煞 (e.g., in the peach blossom positions of Zi, Wu, Mao, or You), ancient texts suggest a tendency toward promiscuity or infertility. However, if paired with the heavenly nobleman (天乙贵人), glory god (荣神), or if the peach blossom falls into an empty or desolate position, it may instead bring wealth and chastity.
If the peach blossom煞 is accompanied by the salary horse star (禄马星) (e.g., the travel horse) or the Xianchi peach blossom (咸池桃花) meets the travel horse, it often indicates excessive desires, disrupting family harmony and harming the husband.
Those with Chen (辰) but no Xu (戌) in their chart may face loneliness in old age. Those with many Xu but no Chen may toil in youth but improve in middle age, neither conflicting with their husbands nor harming their children, though they may have a flirtatious nature. If both Chen and Xu are present, it may lead to family ruin due to promiscuity, harm to the husband and children, or even a short-lived or disabled life.
"Rolling Peach Blossoms" is essentially a game of desire and order:
| Keyword | Modern Equivalent |
|---|---|
| Officer/Killing Stars | Social norms/spouse's influence |
| Controlled Hurting Officer | Channeling creativity into professional skills |
| Xianchi + Travel Horse | Fast romance/cross-cultural marriage potential |
| Chen-Xu Clash | Root of family-career conflicts |
Related Concepts:
Modern Research:
🌸 Key Note: Ancient terms like "prostitute fate" contain feudal biases. Modern interpretations should focus on emotional patterns, not moral judgments—those with hurting officer + peach blossoms should avoid impulsive decisions, not accept fate passively.