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To master the secrets of the Five Elements’ cycles of life and death 🔥🌊🌬⛰🌱 is no trivial matter to disclose to the uninitiated. Astrology relies on the concept of "great limits," while the Zi Ping method of Bazi prioritizes the "major cycle." Fortunes are first mapped across the Twelve Palaces to determine their alignment with specific patterns and seasons. Wealth, official status, seals of authority, and the resource star must each be weighed for their relative significance.
The official star fears encountering the cycle of the seven killings, and the seven killings dread the arrival of the official star. A mix of officials and killings shortens life—thus, one must carefully discern whether to remove the official and retain the killing or vice versa. When retaining the official and removing the killing, avoid the killing; when retaining the killing and removing the official, avoid the official. Damage to officials or killings leads to early demise, with one's fate ultimately hinging on the wealth pattern.
Partial or full wealth in the day and hour pillars is most threatened when the heavenly stems carry the seven killings. The reappearance of the resource star foreshadows a short life, while mixed partial and full wealth spells disaster. Where wealth meets official status, prosperity is assured; lands of wealth and domains of officialdom are fonts of fortune. But beware if the day stem is weak, for excessive wealth breeds killings that hasten decline. A weak constitution amid abundant wealth, paired with a wealth cycle, is like plunging into an abyss with no escape. If officials remain unharmed and wealth unplundered, life stands firm as a mountain.
The first cycle meeting the seal of authority ensures glory if vibrant; the convergence of officialdom heralds promotion, but its extinction invites calamity. Should wealth threaten the seal, one risks falling from cliffs, drowning, or dying abroad. If the seal escapes wealth’s harm, death is evaded—each scenario demands meticulous scrutiny.
Wealth, officials, and seals aside, never underestimate the resource star’s secrets. A robust resource star surpasses wealth and officials but falters if maimed. Delicate distinctions are vital, especially when wealth and officials languish in decline. Avoid official stars during the injurious official’s cycle, lest penalties and misfortunes multiply. Conflicts with virtuous stars like the Moon Virtue or Day Nobility spell instant peril.
The Flying Heaven and Arching Salary patterns fear solidification and obstructive influences. The year of the Rat meeting the Jia Zi cycle, or the Ren Yin and Shen lands encountering Bing Shen, mirrors the interplay of Si and Bing in forecasting fortunes. The Mao palace dreads the Yi Wood’s arrival; the Si palace clashes with the unions of Wu, Geng, Bing, and Xin. The Wu Ding year meeting Wu Xu spells doom; the Chou and Wei years herald inevitable disaster—flight is advised. Shared officialdom and cycles, when overlapping with emoluments, invite punitive misfortunes. External conflicts with internal foes bring grave peril; internal strife with external threats is milder.
The Earthly Stems Wu and Ji span the four seasons, their mixed energies balancing ease and hardship. Fixed calculations govern their waxing and waning with the cycles. Only the direst years in ill-fated cycles are highlighted herein. This treatise, drawn from the Stone-Gold Jade Casket’s secrets, is now revealed to you.
This treatise underscores Bazi’s essence: the interplay of the Five Elements (e.g., 🔥 Fire begets Earth, 🌊 Water quenches Fire), the dynamic interactions of the Ten Gods (officials, killings, wealth, seals, etc.), and the decisive role of major cycles and annual flows in shaping destiny. Key themes include cyclical fortune (Twelve Palaces mapping), the dangers of mixed officials and killings, and the equilibrium of wealth, officials, seals, and resources. It emphasizes empirical analysis (“scrutinize each detail”) and reveals destiny as fluid—adjustable through pattern analysis (e.g., “remove officials, retain killings”).
In contemporary terms, these concepts translate into life strategy tools:
The treatise sparks a dialectic on fate and agency: elemental cycles reflect cosmic order (e.g., 🔥 Fire as dynamism), yet “fortune as the key” advocates wisdom (“meticulous scrutiny”) to alter trajectories. It critiques blind faith (“never underestimate the resource star”) and champions rationality—paralleling modern “data-driven living”: acknowledging constraints (social flux) while using empiricism (action reviews) to transcend limits, embodying the harmony philosophy of “Heaven and humanity as one.”
To master the secrets of the Five Elements’ cycles of life and death 🔥🌊🌬⛰🌱 is no trivial matter to disclose to the uninitiated. Astrology relies on the concept of "great limits," while the Zi Ping method of Bazi prioritizes the "major cycle." Fortunes are first mapped across the Twelve Palaces to determine their alignment with specific patterns and seasons. Wealth, official status, seals of authority, and the resource star must each be weighed for their relative significance.
The official star fears encountering the cycle of the seven killings, and the seven killings dread the arrival of the official star. A mix of officials and killings shortens life—thus, one must carefully discern whether to remove the official and retain the killing or vice versa. When retaining the official and removing the killing, avoid the killing; when retaining the killing and removing the official, avoid the official. Damage to officials or killings leads to early demise, with one's fate ultimately hinging on the wealth pattern.
Partial or full wealth in the day and hour pillars is most threatened when the heavenly stems carry the seven killings. The reappearance of the resource star foreshadows a short life, while mixed partial and full wealth spells disaster. Where wealth meets official status, prosperity is assured; lands of wealth and domains of officialdom are fonts of fortune. But beware if the day stem is weak, for excessive wealth breeds killings that hasten decline. A weak constitution amid abundant wealth, paired with a wealth cycle, is like plunging into an abyss with no escape. If officials remain unharmed and wealth unplundered, life stands firm as a mountain.
The first cycle meeting the seal of authority ensures glory if vibrant; the convergence of officialdom heralds promotion, but its extinction invites calamity. Should wealth threaten the seal, one risks falling from cliffs, drowning, or dying abroad. If the seal escapes wealth’s harm, death is evaded—each scenario demands meticulous scrutiny.
Wealth, officials, and seals aside, never underestimate the resource star’s secrets. A robust resource star surpasses wealth and officials but falters if maimed. Delicate distinctions are vital, especially when wealth and officials languish in decline. Avoid official stars during the injurious official’s cycle, lest penalties and misfortunes multiply. Conflicts with virtuous stars like the Moon Virtue or Day Nobility spell instant peril.
The Flying Heaven and Arching Salary patterns fear solidification and obstructive influences. The year of the Rat meeting the Jia Zi cycle, or the Ren Yin and Shen lands encountering Bing Shen, mirrors the interplay of Si and Bing in forecasting fortunes. The Mao palace dreads the Yi Wood’s arrival; the Si palace clashes with the unions of Wu, Geng, Bing, and Xin. The Wu Ding year meeting Wu Xu spells doom; the Chou and Wei years herald inevitable disaster—flight is advised. Shared officialdom and cycles, when overlapping with emoluments, invite punitive misfortunes. External conflicts with internal foes bring grave peril; internal strife with external threats is milder.
The Earthly Stems Wu and Ji span the four seasons, their mixed energies balancing ease and hardship. Fixed calculations govern their waxing and waning with the cycles. Only the direst years in ill-fated cycles are highlighted herein. This treatise, drawn from the Stone-Gold Jade Casket’s secrets, is now revealed to you.
This treatise underscores Bazi’s essence: the interplay of the Five Elements (e.g., 🔥 Fire begets Earth, 🌊 Water quenches Fire), the dynamic interactions of the Ten Gods (officials, killings, wealth, seals, etc.), and the decisive role of major cycles and annual flows in shaping destiny. Key themes include cyclical fortune (Twelve Palaces mapping), the dangers of mixed officials and killings, and the equilibrium of wealth, officials, seals, and resources. It emphasizes empirical analysis (“scrutinize each detail”) and reveals destiny as fluid—adjustable through pattern analysis (e.g., “remove officials, retain killings”).
In contemporary terms, these concepts translate into life strategy tools:
The treatise sparks a dialectic on fate and agency: elemental cycles reflect cosmic order (e.g., 🔥 Fire as dynamism), yet “fortune as the key” advocates wisdom (“meticulous scrutiny”) to alter trajectories. It critiques blind faith (“never underestimate the resource star”) and champions rationality—paralleling modern “data-driven living”: acknowledging constraints (social flux) while using empiricism (action reviews) to transcend limits, embodying the harmony philosophy of “Heaven and humanity as one.”