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		General discussions => FREE Life Reading Request  => Topic started by: Acvamarie on October 21, 2025, 12:05:25 AM
		
			
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				In the last 7 years, basically the entire high school and college (arguably college has been worse), and ever since I was accepted into college, things slowly got worse. Financial struggle, worsened relationship with my parents, worsened health, bad grades, missed job/internship opportunities, slower to learn, thinking over past failures (from high school), comparison to my much better and successful peers (done both by myself and other people) ,and not a single relationship (not that I've had one in the first place). Although I am also grateful for the things that have happened and still have, they won't be around forever.
I'm set to graduate in the summer of 2026, and my future is uncertain.
Date of birth: 12th March 2003
Location: Iasi, Romania
Time: 11:15 pm/23:15
Thank you in advance!
			 
			
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				Thank you for sharing this. What you've described is a profoundly difficult and painful period, and it makes complete sense that you feel uncertain about the future. Please know that your feelings are valid, and this struggle is not a reflection of your worth or your ultimate potential.
From a BaZi perspective, the last 7 years are not a random streak of bad luck. They align perfectly with your current 10-year luck pillar (大运), which you entered around 2017: 丁巳 (Ding Si).
Let's break down why this specific period has been so challenging, and then, more importantly, why your graduation year of 2026 is a pivotal turning point.
Why the Last 7 Years (2017-2024~) Have Been So Tough: The 丁巳 (Ding Si) Luck Pillar
This luck pillar is characterized by intense Fire energy. Remember, your chart is strong Jia Wood. Fire is your "Output" element (食伤), representing talent, expression, and creativity. However, when this energy becomes excessive and unbalanced, it creates specific problems:
1.  Fire Over-burns Wood (Burnout & Health): Imagine a strong tree in a forest fire. The fire (Ding Si) is so strong it burns the wood (you). This directly explains:
    ◦   Worsened Health & Slower Thinking: The "burnout" effect. Your mental and physical resources are being over-consumed. It's like your CPU is constantly overheating, leading to fatigue, brain fog, and difficulty learning.
    ◦   Overthinking Past Failures: The Fire energy forces constant "output" of thoughts—in this case, negative and repetitive loops about the past. It's your mind working overtime, but not productively.
2.  Fire Evaporates Water (Loss of Support & Resources): The Water element in your chart (年柱癸水) is your "Resource" star (印星), representing parents, support, calmness, and learning ability. The powerful Fire of your luck pillar "evaporates" this Water. This explains:
    ◦   Worsened relationship with parents: The supportive, nurturing energy (Water) is weakened.
    ◦   Financial struggle & missed opportunities: Water also indirectly represents the foundation for wealth. When it's damaged, financial stability and the ability to seize opportunities suffer.
    ◦   Bad grades: Your innate learning ability (Water) is being "dried up" by the stressful Fire energy.
3.  Intensified Competition: Your chart already has strong competitive energy (劫财). The Ding Si pillar adds more Fire, which is the "child" of Wood, further strengthening the competitive vibe. This makes the "comparison to much better and successful peers" feel especially intense and painful.
In short, this luck pillar has created a perfect storm: it has weakened your support system (Water), exhausted your core energy (Wood), and amplified your competitive anxieties, all while pushing you to overthink. It's not you; it's the cyclical energy you have been navigating.
The Light at the End of the Tunnel: 2026 and Beyond
Your feeling that "they won't be around forever" is astrologically accurate. This difficult luck pillar will end. The timeline you mentioned is the key.
•   Graduation in Summer 2026: This is highly significant. The year 2026 is a Bing Wu (丙午) year, a year of extreme Fire. While that sounds bad, it often represents the final, most intense phase of a cycle before a major shift. It's the "final exam" of this challenging period. Graduating and leaving the academic environment is a perfect physical manifestation of leaving this cycle behind.
•   Your Next Luck Pillar (approx. 2027-2036): 戊午 (Wu Wu) This is the game-changer. Let's compare it to your current one:
Current Luck Pillar (丁巳 Ding Si) 2017~2026 Next Luck Pillar (戊午 Wu Wu) 2027~2036
Element Excessive Fire (伤官) - burns you out Fire (伤官) sitting on a Bed of Earth (偏财)
Effect Talent consumes you. Leads to overthinking, burnout, resource depletion. Talent generates Wealth. Your skills directly create opportunities and income.
Life Area A period of struggle, learning through hardship. A golden period for career and establishing yourself.
Why the next pillar is so much better:
The Earth element in the Wu Wu pillar is your Wealth star. The Fire of your talent (食伤) will now produce Earth (wealth), creating a virtuous cycle. This is the famous "食伤生财" (Talent Generating Wealth) pattern. The intense energy that currently causes overthinking and burnout will be channeled into productive, career-building, and income-generating activity.
What To Do Now: A Strategic View
1.  Survive and Protect: For the remainder of this cycle, your goal is not to "thrive" in the conventional sense, but to conserve your energy. See this as a marathon you are almost finished with.
    ◦   Health First: Prioritize sleep, gentle exercise (like walking), and nutrition. You need to protect your Wood (your core self) from being burned out further.
    ◦   Manage Expectations: Give yourself grace. Your grades and current opportunities are not defining your future. The goal right now is simply to graduate.
2.  Plan for the Transition (2025-2026): Use this time to prepare for the shift.
    ◦   Focus on Skills, Not Just Grades: Your future is in your practical talent (食神). What can you do? Start building a portfolio, learning a specific software, or developing a practical skill related to your field. This aligns with your ultimate strength.
    ◦   Reframe "Failure": The past 7 years were not a failure. They were a necessary, if brutal, training period mandated by your luck cycle. A strong tree like Jia Wood needs to be tested by fire to become resilient. You are building a resilience that your peers, who had an easier time, may not have.
3.  View 2026 with Hope, Not Fear: Your graduation is the exit door from this phase. The uncertainty you feel is because you are standing on the precipice of a major life change. The future is uncertain for everyone, but for you, the cyclical energy is shifting to a profoundly more supportive one.
In summary: You have been walking through a desert for 7 years. It has been harsh, draining, and lonely. But you are nearing the end of it. The map of your life (your BaZi chart) clearly shows that an oasis—a fertile and prosperous new territory—lies just ahead. Your task now is to conserve your water, keep putting one foot in front of the other, and know that the landscape is about to change dramatically for the better.
Your chart indicates a future where you are respected for your competence. This difficult period is forging the strength you will need for that future.
			 
			
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				Post to read, the breakdown has been helpful to also understand my chart and its relationship
			
 
			
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				H D M Y
乙甲乙癸
亥申卯未
This is the chart I've gotten, with one hour subtracted for daylight savings in Romania that year.
This chart shows a structure in which Wood (木) energy dominates, especially with strong Jia Wood (甲) during a Wood-dominant season.
Overall, it is a pattern of abundant Water and Wood.
When Wood meets Water—especially in a configuration like this, where Gui Water (癸) and Jia Wood (甲) appear together on the Heavenly Stems—it represents someone deeply interested in cultivating personal qualities and inner skills.
Such a person prefers solitary learning or creative self-development, often through activities like studying, reading, or crafts such as baking—things done alone and with focus.
But because this person's Luck Cycle (大運) proceeds in forward order (順行) and moves into Fire (火) luck later in life, the energy will shift from the person working alone to engaging in group or collective activities.
Fire represents social participation, systems, and structured environments—rules, deadlines, or organizational demands that did not exist when working solo.
Before, success depended only on their own ability; later, it requires cooperation and competition with others.
If the natal chart itself lacks Fire, that means the person is not naturally comfortable with those social and structured settings. And when thirty years of Fire luck arrive through major cycles, it signifies that life is urging them to adapt, to become familiar with collaboration and assert your place confidently within society.
As for why they may feel outperformed by others, notice that the earthly branches form a Wood trine (亥卯未) that generates energy toward Yi Wood (乙) rather than the Day Master Jia Wood (甲).
Likewise, the Year's Gui Water (癸) nourishes Yi Wood, not Jia.
Therefore, during Fire luck—especially the Si-Wu-Wei (巳午未) periods—it is Yi Wood’s time to act, not Jia's.
In such times, as Jia Wood, one's best role is to support, mentor, or guide the many active Yi Woods around them, those who are expressing and creating externally.
One's hardship does not come from bad luck; it arises from clinging to familiar ways when life asks them to engage with the world.
Once they recognize and accept that, no luck period will feel difficult.
Everything depends on one's willingness to adapt.
			 
			
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				Hi coldpillow, thank you for letting me know. I probably should have been clearer about that, huh? I meant that when she enters the 丁巳 decade.
This chart is indeed a Yang Ren structure (陽刃格, Blade structure). But I didn't refer to it as such because the structure has already been broken (破格) for several reasons, which are:
1. The Xiangshen (相神, Corresponding Spirit,  in this case, the Partial Officer [偏官]) is absent from the Heavenly Stems.
The environment necessary for the Yang Ren to perform its proper function does not exist, and the Day Master itself lacks the mental discipline or direction to fulfill that role.
2. In the Heavenly Stems, there appears Yi Wood (乙木), which is both a Rob Wealth star (劫財) and the ruler of the birth month.
According to Ziping Mingli (子平命理), if a Yang Ren (陽刃) or Jian Lu (建祿) chart has Rob Wealth (劫財) or Companion (比肩) revealed in the Heavenly Stems, it causes 争財 (Zheng Cai, struggle over resources) and thus becomes a broken structure (破格).
3. There are multiple roots in the Earthly Branches.
This is called "Double or Multiple Blades (重刃)."
Even if a Yang Ren chart has a Partial Officer, once multiple roots appear in the branches, the chart is also considered broken.
The very fact of being born in a Yang Ren month already signifies freedom from official restraint.
When other branches further strengthen one's own element, it creates a structure that cannot be controlled, with or without an Officer star.
The original purpose of Yang Ren (陽刃) and Jian Lu (建祿) is to unite those who exist outside the established order and form a new authority. Achieving that goal, however, requires immense hardship, effort, and external support.
In Ziping Mingli, both Yang Ren and Jian Lu are categorized as Outer Structures (外格). That is, patterns that stand outside conventional social order.
They are also considered the most demanding structures to establish, since even minor imbalance or interference easily collapses them into broken structures (破格).
Could you tell me more about your comment, "but I'm not entirely sure if either one or both will be helpful due to the presence of Zheng Yin in year stem?"
Her chart structure is called 阳刃格 (Yang Blade), typically likes Sha and Zheng Guan (metal) the most, but I'm not entirely sure if either one or both will be helpful due to the presence of Zheng Yin in year stem.
I learned that what a Yang Ren (陽刃) structure needs most is not necessarily the direct presence of Officer or Killing in the chart, but rather the appearance of an Yin Star (印星, Resource) on the Heavenly Stems.
If an Yin Star is revealed on the Stems, then even if there are no Officer or Killing stars within the natal chart, the person will be prepared to protect the incoming Officer energy when such influences arrive through luck cycles.
For that reason, even when a Yang Ren or Jian Lu (建祿) structure is technically broken (破格), if an Yin Star exists on the Stems, it can later transform into a proper structure (成格) as life progresses.
Of course, in this particular chart, the Yin Star is too weak (not to mention it's yin), while the overall chart's luck cycles move into Fire (火) and the Companion stars (比劫) are overwhelmingly strong. So strong, in fact, that the Yin Star has been all but extinguished in my opinion.
			 
			
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				Hey Coldplay,
Is the person in the November 30th 1983 chart someone well known?
Thanks,
ren
			 
			
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				Thank you for the Baidu page, coldpillow. I'm so glad that we have ChatGPT and other AI sites now, so I can understand different languages with less difficulty. :)
In a chart with 殺印相生 structure, the presence of Yang Blade will break the structure.
-> According to what I've learned,
in the Pian Yin–Pian Guan (偏印–偏官) type of Sha–Yin mutual generation, the Day Master must have a root for the structure to function properly.
That root may even be a Yang Blade (陽刃, 干與地同)—there's nothing wrong with that.
When the Day Master has a root, it possesses the strength to endure the pressure from the Pian Guan (Seven Killings) and to use the Pian Yin to help others, such as those represented by the Shishang (食傷) Stars.
If the Day Master lacks a root, then the person can only endure the hardship from the Pian Guan through the Pian Yin, without the ability to overcome it or extend help to others.
In that case, the person ends up living under the shadow of the Pian Guan, constantly restricted by external pressure instead of transforming that pressure into productivity, wisdom, and compassion. The person may want for nothing, living in an environment where everything is provided for them, but they would be like a princess locked in a castle.
From your explanation, Yin is confirmed beneficial for Yang Blade and it must be strong too.
-> The Yin Star (印星) must be revealed on the Heavenly Stems, yes. The magnitude of that Yin Star (its strength or weakness [旺衰强弱]), determines the scale of its reaches.
How if the blade meets Direct/Partial Officer to control it or Hurting Officer to transform robbery into wealth creation? 
-> This chart is a Jian Lu structure (建祿格) in which the Heavenly Stems display an interaction between Rob Wealth (劫財) and Hurting Officer (傷官).
There is no Yin Star (印星) present, only a Hurting Officer, and that Hurting Officer is even protected by the Rob Wealth.
Under such conditions, no matter how strong a Direct or Indirect Officer may appear later in luck cycles, it becomes impossible to restrain the Day Master and its Companions (比劫).
Furthermore, because the luck pillars move forward (順行) into Wood and Fire, this chart lives not by its structural designation, but by the interactions of the Five Elements and the Ten Gods.
For a Yang Ren (陽刃) or Jian Lu (建祿) native, engaging in Shishang → Wealth (食傷生財) does not mean living as a magnanimous person who seeks public good; it indicates someone who pursues private ambition and personal wealth instead.
If at least there were an Yin Star on the Heavenly Stems, it could restrain the Day Master's desire to generate wealth through Shishang, giving rise instead to a wish for honor (貴) rather than mere profit (財).
That is why, in both Yang Ren and Jian Lu structures, the Yin Star is considered the most desirable element.
(I really hope all this makes sense to you. To me, it does, but since I'm getting help from ChatGPT for the terminology, etc., I'm really not sure how it's translated to those who are more familiar with the Chinese terms and whatnot... :/)
			 
			
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				Does it help if Yin only appears in the Earthly Branches?
The Branch itself is static, so the effect is limited. It may become active temporarily through combinations or clashes, but its influence remains external.
→ For Yin (印) to truly work, it must appear on the Heavenly Stems, because only then does it directly shape the Day Master’s consciousness and mindset.
In fact, the weaker the Yin, the stronger its psychological impact—like how a small wound on your pinky can occupy your attention all day.
This illustrates the relationship between 體 (the body) and 用 (its function): the weaker “use” (Yong) draws more focus from the “body (Ti)."
Elements in the Earthly Branches represent people and external circumstances.
So if Yin is buried in a Branch, it suggests someone close to you acts as your Yin—someone who guides, supports, or advises.
Whether their advice influences you, however, depends on you, not them.
Most people resist correction from others; true refinement must come from within.
Hence, a visible Yin on the Heavenly Stem signifies that this reflective awareness arises internally, not externally.
About the Yang Blade with the Hurting Officer–Rob Wealth combination on the Heavenly Stems
For a Yang Blade (陽刃) to fulfill its role, it must serve others and uphold collective good—placing public interest above personal gain. But when the Hurting Officer (傷官) appears, especially in the Hour Stem (which governs the mind and consciousness), the direction reverses: self-expression and personal ambition overpower restraint and responsibility.
This is why such a person struggles in leadership or management—the drive to express and dominate replaces the duty to guide and unify.
Also, both Yang Blade (陽刃) and Jian Lu (建祿) types are inherently competitive, individualistic, and self-reliant;
they stand apart from conventional society because:
They are born to compete, not to cooperate.
They tend to look down on others, not out of arrogance, but because their constitution is naturally strong and self-assured.
In classical terms, Yang Blade and Jian Lu belong to the "noble" or "extraordinary" types (外格)—individuals who live outside ordinary hierarchies and rarely fit comfortably within social institutions.
			 
			
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Regardless the severity of her blades, I think Metal luck cycle is still the best for the chart owner in this topic @Acvamarie
→ Yes, I agree, but not from a structural perspective. Rather, it's because of the Metal element within her Earthly Branches. For someone born in a Wood month, Metal represents the harvest, the culmination after passing through the season of Fire. Having Metal already embedded in the Branches means she naturally holds latent potential for material gain or tangible results when entering the Metal decades.
Judging from the hour and day branches, seems like her transformation will be influenced more by her future spouse and children?
→ I don't think this chart can fully develop into a proper structure, even though there's a Yin Star (印) on the Heavenly Stems, because of its placement—the Year Stem. I was taught that the Year Pillar represents destiny or energy that is generally beyond personal reach, accessible only to highly refined or enlightened individuals such as monks or priests.
To add to my earlier point: for a Yang Blade (陽刃) without Sha (殺) to later form a proper structure, it must have a Yin Star visible on the Month or Hour Stem—especially the Hour, in my view—since that pillar governs awareness and inner transformation.
			 
			
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				@coldpillow 
1. Biomedical Engineering. And I never had to pay tuition, but my parents had to pay for the times I failed some exams. I have tried getting jobs (mostly remote/part-time), but I didn't get in. I had the opportunity for an internship in the branch I like the most (medical imaging, and I didn't have a lot of competitors because it was more of an internship for med students, so they have a different criteria, but they wanted to take me in because I was passionate) which only required having a certain gpa, and I didn't have it. That's not even mentioning the internships organized by a pharmaceutical company and a device maintenance firm, but only a select few were accepted, possibly those who had the requirements they wanted(like it happens in almost every domain), and many of my other colleagues who are still better than me also didn't get in. Later on, the same pharmaceutical company organized courses, I wanted to go, but when I read about a selection, I just gave up.
I don't have much to write of in my CV besides my language skills, college. I was hoping to do a side-project so I could have something, but I am sure my colleagues will be taken for jobs,  especially those who have 2-3 projects, an internship, volunteering, history of coordinating/leadership activities (like student associations), or a job history (which about half of students have). And technically, the easiest to get would be the volunteering, the job, and the projects, in hierarchical order.
2. I'd like an internship/project that would eventually set me up for a job (like the examples I've given previously), or an internship during the Master's degree I'd pursue (most probably radiology related), but the Master's degree is an issue of its own.
The first post that @eveereads made actually described me, I like self-development, I like to do most things alone, but with time, that backfires, and especially now I have to cooperate with people (which I am not so good at) and refurnish my own skills (which, hasn't been successful in a long time). It's easier for me to deal with people outside of professional structures. I generally get the feeling that while everyone that fits a standard definition of success, whether they've achieved it through conventional or alternative means, has worked a lot, in my case it seems it's either unluck or just the way I am (which is very slow, likes to do one thing at a time, focused), the opposite of what it's required today (being multi-tasking, fast-paced, learning new skills quickly, and having tids-and-bits of a personal life too - mostly in the context of mere socialization or teambuildings)
It's unfortunate I have a weak star in the year pillar, in a branch, plus broken structures. It's interesting since my changes and self-reflection are actually triggered by others, when they say something, I tend to ponder on it for a long time. The other situation is when I read pieces of philosophy and advice on the internet for example, and sometimes I happen to feel ... star-struck, even though I didn't necessarily need that advice at the time.
Thank you for the analysis you've both done. I'm curious about ZWDS, I personally relate to the chart that is respecting the birth time, not the solar one (since it's a few minutes before the hour change).
			 
			
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				I don't wish the fate of a proper Yang Blade on anyone—especially on a woman.
In the grand scheme of things (not in the sense of an individual's chart, but in the broader sense of the flow of nature), the Yang Blade eventually transforms into the Pian Guan (Seven Killings).
The reason the Yang Blade's Corresponding Spirit (相神) is the Pian Guan is that it must first experience all the pain and suffering that exists in the world before others do, so that later, when others go through the same, it can be there for them.
Therefore, when a Yang Blade is born with Pian Guan appearing on the Heavenly Stems, it is destined to lose everything—parents, siblings, spouse, children, wealth, and so on. Such losses may occur one after another, or even all at once. So, Acvamarie, you're actually lucky to be born broken.
Also, if I may give you a piece of advice—
I'm really not worried about you. You were born into a good, stable family, and you're surrounded by people who genuinely care about you. If you're finding it difficult to connect with them right now, that's only temporary. You still have much to learn and room to grow.
Contrary to what many people believe, we humans aren't truly complete until we reach around forty to forty-five years of age. That means you still have at least twenty more years to learn, to evolve, and to gain experience. Having those years aligned with Fire, while being someone of Wood, is a blessing—it fuels your growth and strengthens your character.
You were also born into a competitive environment, and that competition has only intensified since the beginning of the Fire era. If what you're doing now is something you truly love, stay with it and never waver. In time, people will come to you for your expertise instead of expecting you to go to them.
That's the path to success: perseverance.
If you persevere in what you love, you will succeed.
			 
			
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				For a proper Yang Blade (陽刃), a Resource Star (印星) not only protects the Pian Guan (偏官, Seven Killings) from being harmed by the Output Stars (食傷), but also continuously creates challenges in order to preserve the integrity of the structure itself.
If external circumstances do not bring difficulties, the Day Master will unconsciously create them on their own, using those hardships as opportunities to overcome obstacles and gain experience.
In other words, when a proper Yang Blade possesses Resource Stars, the Day Master tends to drive themselves into even greater adversity.
-> This, in a way, is why the structure is called the Blade. It is the structure of a warrior born to fight, to bleed, and to prevail.
			 
			
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				@eveereads 
Thank you so much for the absolutely beautiful advice!
If I am not mistaken, inbetween the Fire and Metal decades there is also an Earth decade. Is it supposed to be more stable compared to Fire and Metal? 
			 
			
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				@coldpillow 
Now I definitely can see Pig hour resonating!
I remember chatting with you on my first post about the health palace, and mentioning guidance from older people, or having an older spouse (if my memory serves me right), I might ask more questions about those.
 From a ZWDS perspective, will the spouse be supportive? (a continuation of your question to @eveereads ) I read a lot of positive things.
And if the spouse will have fire and metal, will it help bring more balance to my broken structure?
Also, I'm kind of worried about the earth decade in ZWDS, the property palace stars don't seem very beneficial.
			 
			
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Sorry! I mean Yin daymaster. Yin vs Yang polarity. Example: https://bazi-calculator.com/?licz=1&y=1998&m=8&d=12&h=00%3A30&g=0&l=0&s=1
Not "Yin" as a resource star.
From random sources I have read so far, mostly are fixated on Yang daymasters.
The reason Yin Day Masters with a Yang Blade (陽刃格) structure are rarely discussed in the context of structural analysis is because of the inherent limitations of the Yin letter itself.
1. Since a Yin Day Master embodies Yin energy, the instinct for self-protection arises before the sense of duty or righteousness.
For a proper Yang Blade, the expected act is to step forward and take the blow first to protect others even at one's own cost.
But a Yin Day Master with the Yang Blade configuration will instinctively flinch and step back when danger occurs; they cannot move first. At that very moment, it is usually the Rob Wealth (劫財) beside them that rushes in to protect others. (And yet, when everything is over, it's the Yin Day Master who receives the praise because the Yin letter is what appears on the Heavenly Stem, visible to the world.)
2. Because the Yin nature prioritizes completion of the self over the success of others, such a person focuses more on personal perfection and achievement than on sacrifice. In other words, the spirit of self-sacrifice required for a true Yang Blade is comparatively lacking.
Of course, this doesn't mean that a Yin Day Master with a Yang Blade faces fewer or lesser hardships than a Yang Day Master with a Yang Blade.
In fact, because the Seven Killings (偏官) is Yin in nature, it can be even more painful. When two Yang elements clash, they leave each other room to coexist, but when two Yin elements collide, one must perish for the other to survive.
Still, if we say that the life of a Yin Day Master with a Yang Blade is easier overall than that of a Yang one, it's because their Month Branch is Yang. They start life with something already established. They don't need to carve out new territory themselves; the environment or people around them tend to create it for them.
By contrast:
A Yin Day Master with a Yang Month Branch (陰日干 – 陽月支) is one who invades an unclaimed territory that's already established.
A Yang Day Master with a Yin Month Branch (陽日干 – 陰月支), on the other hand, is one who ventures outward to create a new domain because their original ground has disappeared.
			 
			
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@eveereads 
Thank you so much for the absolutely beautiful advice!
If I am not mistaken, inbetween the Fire and Metal decades there is also an Earth decade. Is it supposed to be more stable compared to Fire and Metal?
When examining the flow of the Luck Pillars, you should view it not through the Five Elements but from the perspective of the Four Seasons.
Among the Twelve Earthly Branches, the reason that the Earth branches—Chen (辰), Xu (戌), Chou (丑), and Wei (未)—exist is to connect the different seasons and mark their transitions.
For example, Wei Earth (未土) lies at the tail end of summer; it exists to organize and conclude the activity of summer and prepare for the transition into autumn.
Therefore, it should not be interpreted simply as the Earth element within the Five Elements system, but rather as a seasonal junction—a point of change and adjustment within the cyclical flow of time. 
未月 (July) still is part of summer. (To the rest of the world, even 申月 [August] is considered summer.)
			 
			
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1. Since a Yin Day Master embodies Yin energy, the instinct for self-protection arises before the sense of duty or righteousness.
For a proper Yang Blade, the expected act is to step forward and take the blow first to protect others even at one's own cost.
But a Yin Day Master with the Yang Blade configuration will instinctively flinch and step back when danger occurs; they cannot move first. At that very moment, it is usually the Rob Wealth (劫財) beside them that rushes in to protect others. (And yet, when everything is over, it's the Yin Day Master who receives the praise because the Yin letter is what appears on the Heavenly Stem, visible to the world.)
@eveereads 
This is the only part that I'm familiar with.
Is it true that a male yin daymaster with blade structure will be "weaker" than females? I mean, he's surrounded by strong female figures: braver, smarter, more competent. And they're actually helpful to him. 
Because rob wealth also represents people of the opposite gender.
I think it's especially true if the daymaster doesn't have self element anywhere else other than day stem. 
If this is an established theory, then I have not heard of it.
Regardless of your physical sex, if your Day Master is yin, you're considered female in the eyes of nature. So, your Rob Wealth is male, not female (in the eys of nature).
			 
			
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1. Since a Yin Day Master embodies Yin energy, the instinct for self-protection arises before the sense of duty or righteousness.
For a proper Yang Blade, the expected act is to step forward and take the blow first to protect others even at one's own cost.
But a Yin Day Master with the Yang Blade configuration will instinctively flinch and step back when danger occurs; they cannot move first. At that very moment, it is usually the Rob Wealth (劫財) beside them that rushes in to protect others. (And yet, when everything is over, it's the Yin Day Master who receives the praise because the Yin letter is what appears on the Heavenly Stem, visible to the world.)
@eveereads 
This is the only part that I'm familiar with.
Is it true that a male yin daymaster with blade structure will be "weaker" than females? I mean, he's surrounded by strong female figures: braver, smarter, more competent. And they're actually helpful to him. 
Because rob wealth also represents people of the opposite gender.
I think it's especially true if the daymaster doesn't have self element anywhere else other than day stem. 
If this is an established theory, then I have not heard of it.
Regardless of your physical sex, if your Day Master is yin, you're considered female in the eyes of nature. So, your Rob Wealth is male, not female (in the eys of nature).
Please forgive me. I never interfere with other people's thoughts. But this is such a gross misunderstanding of the concept of Yin Yang that I feel obliged to make some comments.
A man with a Yin Day Master is more likely to achieve his goal through many small actions—Yin. Yang is one big change to achieve a goal. The idea that a man with a Yin Day Master is a woman is ridiculous. I apologize.
			 
			
			- 
				
1. Since a Yin Day Master embodies Yin energy, the instinct for self-protection arises before the sense of duty or righteousness.
For a proper Yang Blade, the expected act is to step forward and take the blow first to protect others even at one's own cost.
But a Yin Day Master with the Yang Blade configuration will instinctively flinch and step back when danger occurs; they cannot move first. At that very moment, it is usually the Rob Wealth (劫財) beside them that rushes in to protect others. (And yet, when everything is over, it's the Yin Day Master who receives the praise because the Yin letter is what appears on the Heavenly Stem, visible to the world.)
@eveereads 
This is the only part that I'm familiar with.
Is it true that a male yin daymaster with blade structure will be "weaker" than females? I mean, he's surrounded by strong female figures: braver, smarter, more competent. And they're actually helpful to him. 
Because rob wealth also represents people of the opposite gender.
I think it's especially true if the daymaster doesn't have self element anywhere else other than day stem. 
If this is an established theory, then I have not heard of it.
Regardless of your physical sex, if your Day Master is yin, you're considered female in the eyes of nature. So, your Rob Wealth is male, not female (in the eys of nature).
Please forgive me. I never interfere with other people's thoughts. But this is such a gross misunderstanding of the concept of Yin Yang that I feel obliged to make some comments.
A man with a Yin Day Master is more likely to achieve his goal through many small actions—Yin. Yang is one big change to achieve a goal. The idea that a man with a Yin Day Master is a woman is ridiculous. I apologize.
There's no need to apologize. You have your opinion, and I have mine. Exchanging opinions shouldn't be emotional because Mingli isn't about criticism. It's about understanding and embracing everyone.
			 
			
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				Reply to see
			
 
			
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I would like to focus on your parents because it's the most influential sector at the moment. 
You have Zuofu star there. It's a nobleman (helper) star. That means you should try to improve your relationship with parents. Combined with bright Tian Liang in happiness palace, you have good luck with much older people.
Your wealth sector looks terrible with dim Taiyang, Lucun and Dikong. But this sector can be improved by career and friends sectors.
From my own interpretation, this means you should focus on building relationship/partnership/networking in your career. For example, you depend on a partnership to get better jobs, better clients, better source of income. 
@coldpillow 
That is certainly true, especially in recent years, I haven't succeeded in a lot of things on my own, I constantly had other people do things for me, not because I asked them to, but because they probably thought I couldn't do it and I'd slow them down. In fact, even one of the potential future jobs was actually brought on about by my mother at her job.
 
Career is also the property sector of your parents while Friends is the career sector of your parents. This means life will be easier if you can stay with your parents as long as possible and hopefully they never retire. ---> IMO, this is more realistic view now. 
Well... they do kinda wanna retire after I'll be graduating next year (they gradually started being frustrated with me and wanted me to have left after graduating from high school) . And many of my peers already live in dorms or are tenants. (and I feel terrible for not living on my own too, but in a way I've been absolved of that kind of struggle).
I know it would've been hard for me, but I feel like I wouldn't have been able to get out of nasty situations.
 
Spouse sector looks supportive, just not financially. 
His chart should be cold in metal and water, but metal is the dominant element. 
Beware of red flags, his chart is probably different in structure and just as broken. You could find balance from each other, but it doesn't mean the relationship will be smooth sailing. 
Does it have to be a broken Yang Blade or Jian Lu structure? Or just any broken structure? Would a functional structure cause disruption?
 
You can try looking at your father's and mother's chart too.  
I don't know their birth hours, unfortunately.
			 
			
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When examining the flow of the Luck Pillars, you should view it not through the Five Elements but from the perspective of the Four Seasons.
Among the Twelve Earthly Branches, the reason that the Earth branches—Chen (辰), Xu (戌), Chou (丑), and Wei (未)—exist is to connect the different seasons and mark their transitions.
For example, Wei Earth (未土) lies at the tail end of summer; it exists to organize and conclude the activity of summer and prepare for the transition into autumn.
Therefore, it should not be interpreted simply as the Earth element within the Five Elements system, but rather as a seasonal junction—a point of change and adjustment within the cyclical flow of time. 
未月 (July) still is part of summer. (To the rest of the world, even 申月 [August] is considered summer.)
@eveereads 
Thank you, I understand it better now. 
			 
			
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1. Since a Yin Day Master embodies Yin energy, the instinct for self-protection arises before the sense of duty or righteousness.
For a proper Yang Blade, the expected act is to step forward and take the blow first to protect others even at one's own cost.
But a Yin Day Master with the Yang Blade configuration will instinctively flinch and step back when danger occurs; they cannot move first. At that very moment, it is usually the Rob Wealth (劫財) beside them that rushes in to protect others. (And yet, when everything is over, it's the Yin Day Master who receives the praise because the Yin letter is what appears on the Heavenly Stem, visible to the world.)
@coldpillow @eveereads 
So a broken Yang Blade might act like a Yin daymaster with a Yang Blade, or something different?
This is the only part that I'm familiar with.
Is it true that a male yin daymaster with blade structure will be "weaker" than females? I mean, he's surrounded by strong female figures: braver, smarter, more competent. And they're actually helpful to him. 
Because rob wealth also represents people of the opposite gender.
I think it's especially true if the daymaster doesn't have self element anywhere else other than day stem. [/quote]
@eveereads 
Would the reverse be true for a female Yang daymaster?
In case you're confused, you also need to learn a bit about Hua stars (Lu, Quan, Ke, Ji). 
To see where those stars are flying from one sector to another, use this calculator: https://zwds-calculator.com/chart?day=12&month=3&year=2003&h=22&m=00&gender=female
If you hover on Career and Friends sector, the Taiyang star in your wealth sector turns green (Lu) and blue (Quan). Yellow is Ke, Red is Ji.
@coldpillow 
Yes, I was a bit confused about sihua, and what their role is. I thought that the order and placement of the transforming stars depends on the year stem, and not all stars can receive it. Do Hua stars create a relation of interdependence from a star to another?
And what does it mean to have self-Hua and Hua to opposite?
			 
			
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When examining the flow of the Luck Pillars, you should view it not through the Five Elements but from the perspective of the Four Seasons.
Among the Twelve Earthly Branches, the reason that the Earth branches—Chen (辰), Xu (戌), Chou (丑), and Wei (未)—exist is to connect the different seasons and mark their transitions.
For example, Wei Earth (未土) lies at the tail end of summer; it exists to organize and conclude the activity of summer and prepare for the transition into autumn.
Therefore, it should not be interpreted simply as the Earth element within the Five Elements system, but rather as a seasonal junction—a point of change and adjustment within the cyclical flow of time. 
未月 (July) still is part of summer. (To the rest of the world, even 申月 [August] is considered summer.)
@eveereads 
Thank you, I understand it better now.
			 
			
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1. Since a Yin Day Master embodies Yin energy, the instinct for self-protection arises before the sense of duty or righteousness.
For a proper Yang Blade, the expected act is to step forward and take the blow first to protect others even at one's own cost.
But a Yin Day Master with the Yang Blade configuration will instinctively flinch and step back when danger occurs; they cannot move first. At that very moment, it is usually the Rob Wealth (劫財) beside them that rushes in to protect others. (And yet, when everything is over, it's the Yin Day Master who receives the praise because the Yin letter is what appears on the Heavenly Stem, visible to the world.)
@coldpillow @eveereads 
So a broken Yang Blade might act like a Yin daymaster with a Yang Blade, or something different?
This is the only part that I'm familiar with.
Is it true that a male yin daymaster with blade structure will be "weaker" than females? I mean, he's surrounded by strong female figures: braver, smarter, more competent. And they're actually helpful to him. 
Because rob wealth also represents people of the opposite gender.
I think it's especially true if the daymaster doesn't have self element anywhere else other than day stem. 
@eveereads 
Would the reverse be true for a female Yang daymaster?
In case you're confused, you also need to learn a bit about Hua stars (Lu, Quan, Ke, Ji). 
To see where those stars are flying from one sector to another, use this calculator: https://zwds-calculator.com/chart?day=12&month=3&year=2003&h=22&m=00&gender=female
If you hover on Career and Friends sector, the Taiyang star in your wealth sector turns green (Lu) and blue (Quan). Yellow is Ke, Red is Ji.
@coldpillow 
Yes, I was a bit confused about sihua, and what their role is. I thought that the order and placement of the transforming stars depends on the year stem, and not all stars can receive it. Do Hua stars create a relation of interdependence from a star to another?
And what does it mean to have self-Hua and Hua to opposite?
			 
			
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				@coldpillow @eveereads 
Also, may I ask how are LPs calculated? I've seen some charts starting the first LP at 7, some others at 2. How is the age of the first LP determined? And how are the stems determined as well? And last but not least, what are the specific calculations for male and female alike?
			 
			
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1. Since a Yin Day Master embodies Yin energy, the instinct for self-protection arises before the sense of duty or righteousness.
For a proper Yang Blade, the expected act is to step forward and take the blow first to protect others even at one's own cost.
But a Yin Day Master with the Yang Blade configuration will instinctively flinch and step back when danger occurs; they cannot move first. At that very moment, it is usually the Rob Wealth (劫財) beside them that rushes in to protect others. (And yet, when everything is over, it's the Yin Day Master who receives the praise because the Yin letter is what appears on the Heavenly Stem, visible to the world.)
@eveereads 
This is the only part that I'm familiar with.
Is it true that a male yin daymaster with blade structure will be "weaker" than females? I mean, he's surrounded by strong female figures: braver, smarter, more competent. And they're actually helpful to him. 
Because rob wealth also represents people of the opposite gender.
I think it's especially true if the daymaster doesn't have self element anywhere else other than day stem. 
If this is an established theory, then I have not heard of it.
Regardless of your physical sex, if your Day Master is yin, you're considered female in the eyes of nature. So, your Rob Wealth is male, not female (in the eys of nature).
Please forgive me. I never interfere with other people's thoughts. But this is such a gross misunderstanding of the concept of Yin Yang that I feel obliged to make some comments.
A man with a Yin Day Master is more likely to achieve his goal through many small actions—Yin. Yang is one big change to achieve a goal. The idea that a man with a Yin Day Master is a woman is ridiculous. I apologize.
There's no need to apologize. You have your opinion, and I have mine. Exchanging opinions shouldn't be emotional because Mingli isn't about criticism. It's about understanding and embracing everyone.
Mingli? Sorry, I thought you were talking in BaZi. My apologies.
			 
			
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				[Hidden post: You need reply to this topic to see it.]
			
 
			
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1. Since a Yin Day Master embodies Yin energy, the instinct for self-protection arises before the sense of duty or righteousness.
For a proper Yang Blade, the expected act is to step forward and take the blow first to protect others even at one's own cost.
But a Yin Day Master with the Yang Blade configuration will instinctively flinch and step back when danger occurs; they cannot move first. At that very moment, it is usually the Rob Wealth (劫財) beside them that rushes in to protect others. (And yet, when everything is over, it's the Yin Day Master who receives the praise because the Yin letter is what appears on the Heavenly Stem, visible to the world.)
@eveereads 
This is the only part that I'm familiar with.
Is it true that a male yin daymaster with blade structure will be "weaker" than females? I mean, he's surrounded by strong female figures: braver, smarter, more competent. And they're actually helpful to him. 
Because rob wealth also represents people of the opposite gender.
I think it's especially true if the daymaster doesn't have self element anywhere else other than day stem. 
If this is an established theory, then I have not heard of it.
Regardless of your physical sex, if your Day Master is yin, you're considered female in the eyes of nature. So, your Rob Wealth is male, not female (in the eys of nature).
No offense. When I read modern interpretations of the basics of BaZi, I find it incredibly funny and embarrassing for today's stupid generation.
I can imagine it. A court astrologer goes to the emperor and says: "Great Chinese Emperor. Because you have a yin DM, nature views you as a woman." Ahahaha. I think anyone who said something like that would have ended up in the annals for the cruelty of their torture. And everyone involved in that formulation, too. Do you have anything else funny like that up your sleeve? Can I get a link to the original source with that interpretation?
			 
			
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				What happened to forum rules here?
			 
			
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				[Hidden post: You need reply to this topic to see it.]
			
 
			
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				@coldpillow 
First 2 pics are my father's Bazi + LPs, and the latter 2 are my mom's bazi + LPs.
They both started their new Luck Pillars last year, for my dad Ji Hai and for my mom Yi Mao.
			 
			
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				[Hidden post: You need reply to this topic to see it.]
			
 
			
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				@coldpillow 
Going by that assumption, everyone that I've encountered and helped me grow has metal in some shape or form? Or is it something akin to what @eveereads mentioned earlier on the topic about Yi wood being Rob Wealth, thus being more competitive? 
			 
			
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				[Hidden post: You need reply to this topic to see it.]
			
 
			
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				@coldpillow 
One last question - how are the children and travel palaces? There wasn't any mention about them.
			 
			
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So a broken Yang Blade might act like a Yin daymaster with a Yang Blade, or something different?
Even a broken Yang Blade (破格 羊刃) is still classified as Yang Blade in the broad sense, but that is only because we name the 格 (structure) based on the Month Branch. Once it becomes broken, Yang Blade no longer functions as the original "pure Yang Blade," but instead assists those with a proper structure or shifts its purpose toward popularity or wealth as a type of Bi-Jian (比劫). In other words, when Yang Blade changes its path (移度), the person may abandon noble authority and instead pursue fame (as a celebrity) or wealth (as a successful merchant), trading honor for profit.
Even for a Yin-stem Day Master (陰干), if Pian Guan (偏官) is present, Yang Blade becomes a proper structure (成格) and the person still walks the path of Yang Blade, but their direction is different from a Yang-stem Day Master.
A Yang-stem Yang Blade (陽干 羊刃) actively gathers people on their own, volunteers to be the leader, and acts first—speech and action come before thought.
A Yin-stem Yang Blade (陰干 羊刃) is not focused on outward appeal, but on perfecting the self. They stay in one place, sharpening their Yang Blade ability, and wait for others to discover them and elevate them into leadership.
			 
			
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				@eveereads @coldpillow 
From what I understand, in my case, if I'd mentor someone with a proper Yang Blade, especially someone who is metal dominant (or possibly fire dominant), would it improve my own Yang Blade?
Also, what does 殺印相生 represent?
			 
			
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@eveereads @coldpillow 
From what I understand, in my case, if I'd mentor someone with a proper Yang Blade, especially someone who is metal dominant (or possibly fire dominant), would it improve my own Yang Blade?
Also, what does 殺印相生 represent?
 
If you're wondering whether a broken Yang Blade can become a proper one through cultivation or mentorship, my answer is both yes and no.
Roughly speaking, about 30% of people born with Yang Blade are proper.
About 30% are broken and diviated (移度), meaning they abandon the original Yang Blade mission and redirect their power toward fame or wealth. The remaining 40% are also broken, but don't meet the conditions to diviate—this is where you belong.
Depending on whom you meet, you can either shift into a diviated Yang Blade and live like a Bi-Jian type who seeks recognition or profit, or join a proper Yang Blade's group and assist their mission to turn the group into Pian Guan.
But as I said before, the path of a true Yang Blade is not one that just anyone can walk.
Even among those born with the proper structure, only about 1% ever complete the mission.
A symbolic example is Thích Quảng Đức, the Vietnamese monk who self-immolated. (We're not discussing his literal BaZi chart, only using his life as an example.)
He was born into a noble family, abandoned his privileged life, and became a monk. When the nation was collapsing under corruption, he sacrificed himself to awaken his people. His death sparked public outrage and ultimately contributed to the events that led to the Vietnam War. That is the scale of influence Yang Blade is originally meant to carry—one person’s sacrifice shaking the entire world.
So, yes, if you want to live as a proper Yang Blade, you must watch the people around you and learn from them because some of them are already practicing 殺印相生 (Sha–Yin Mutual Generation), which you asked me about.
I already explained the concept of 殺印相生 earlier, so I'll skip it. One page wouldn’t be enough if I went into full detail again. So, I’ll just apply it to your case. You have Shen Metal (申金) and Hai Water (亥水) in your Branches.
This means there are already people around you who are living by the rule of 殺印相生.
Examples of such people include:
A wife who works to support her sick husband.
A woman who endures an abusive marriage for the sake of her children.
Someone who works to support ill parents or siblings.
Someone who chooses the hard path, not for themselves, but for others.
Others may say, "They don't need to live like that," but they choose to because they prioritize others' well-being over their own.
If you observe those people closely, learn from them, and live the same way consistently for 20–30 years, that is how you become a proper Yang Blade.
A proper Yang Blade does not choose the easy road.
Even when comfort is available, they walk the thorn-covered path for the sake of the people around them, and they don’t even think of it as hard. That is the natural behavior of a Yang Blade with Seven Killings (偏官) on the Heavenly Stems.
			 
			
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What happened to forum rules here?
You're discussing something fictitious here. That's why I want to know the original source of this information. Preferably on wooden tablets. And written in pre-reform hieroglyphs. I can tell right away that this was made up by a poor person, without access to people of power and wealth. And, accordingly, it could cause harm in real life. I remember the thread about the Korean woman. That thread was deleted. She was very upset that her life had been ruined. Because of similar fictitious methods. And you left a lot of messages there :). It's a shame that that thread was deleted. I don't really like it when people who need help receive ignorant advice.
*Any statement I make can be refuted or subjected to constructive criticism by anyone on this forum. For example, my predictions. Or where I get my information. My method for translating ancient texts is completely open. Everything is fair.
It's good when people come to BaZi for results, not self-affirmation. Vanity doesn't like questions.
And I'm still waiting for a link to the original source. Which, of course, isn't there :).
			 
			
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@eveereads @coldpillow 
From what I understand, in my case, if I'd mentor someone with a proper Yang Blade, especially someone who is metal dominant (or possibly fire dominant), would it improve my own Yang Blade?
Also, what does 殺印相生 represent?
 
If you're wondering whether a broken Yang Blade can become a proper one through cultivation or mentorship, my answer is both yes and no.
Roughly speaking, about 30% of people born with Yang Blade are proper.
About 30% are broken and diviated (移度), meaning they abandon the original Yang Blade mission and redirect their power toward fame or wealth. The remaining 40% are also broken, but don't meet the conditions to diviate—this is where you belong.
Depending on whom you meet, you can either shift into a diviated Yang Blade and live like a Bi-Jian type who seeks recognition or profit, or join a proper Yang Blade's group and assist their mission to turn the group into Pian Guan.
But as I said before, the path of a true Yang Blade is not one that just anyone can walk.
Even among those born with the proper structure, only about 1% ever complete the mission.
A symbolic example is Thích Quảng Đức, the Vietnamese monk who self-immolated. (We're not discussing his literal BaZi chart, only using his life as an example.)
He was born into a noble family, abandoned his privileged life, and became a monk. When the nation was collapsing under corruption, he sacrificed himself to awaken his people. His death sparked public outrage and ultimately contributed to the events that led to the Vietnam War. That is the scale of influence Yang Blade is originally meant to carry—one person’s sacrifice shaking the entire world.
So, yes, if you want to live as a proper Yang Blade, you must watch the people around you and learn from them because some of them are already practicing 殺印相生 (Sha–Yin Mutual Generation), which you asked me about.
I already explained the concept of 殺印相生 earlier, so I'll skip it. One page wouldn’t be enough if I went into full detail again. So, I’ll just apply it to your case. You have Shen Metal (申金) and Hai Water (亥水) in your Branches.
This means there are already people around you who are living by the rule of 殺印相生.
Examples of such people include:
A wife who works to support her sick husband.
A woman who endures an abusive marriage for the sake of her children.
Someone who works to support ill parents or siblings.
Someone who chooses the hard path, not for themselves, but for others.
Others may say, "They don't need to live like that," but they choose to because they prioritize others' well-being over their own.
If you observe those people closely, learn from them, and live the same way consistently for 20–30 years, that is how you become a proper Yang Blade.
A proper Yang Blade does not choose the easy road.
Even when comfort is available, they walk the thorn-covered path for the sake of the people around them, and they don’t even think of it as hard. That is the natural behavior of a Yang Blade with Seven Killings (偏官) on the Heavenly Stems.
A monk from a village. There were seven children in the family. He escaped poverty under the protection of his uncle. Are there rich Vietnamese in the villages? In French Indochina? You're a storyteller, my respects. It's a shame the French weren't aware of it. His burning caused a worldwide outcry because it was photographed. And the photo was published. It had no effect on Buddhists. No uprisings. Only self-immolations by monks. Until the military staged a coup.
*There's no mention of his uncle being rich either. I think his uncle simply had something to eat. Or a job. So, out of poverty, he immediately went into monasticism.
I don't even want to discuss the Vietnam War. It was a proxy war between the US and the USSR. The monk played no role in those events. This is not to downplay his sacrifice. Dozens of monks self-immolated there. It couldn't have affected the geopolitical situation in any way.
This is all public information. You can check it out.
As they sing in one song:
You don't need a knife to kill a fool. Sing along with a fool a little, and then do with him what you will.
			 
			
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You're discussing something fictitious here. That's why I want to know the original source of this information. Preferably on wooden tablets. And written in pre-reform hieroglyphs. I can tell right away that this was made up by a poor person, without access to people of power and wealth. And, accordingly, it could cause harm in real life. I remember the thread about the Korean woman. That thread was deleted. She was very upset that her life had been ruined. Because of similar fictitious methods. And you left a lot of messages there :). It's a shame that that thread was deleted. I don't really like it when people who need help receive ignorant advice.
*Any statement I make can be refuted or subjected to constructive criticism by anyone on this forum. For example, my predictions. Or where I get my information. My method for translating ancient texts is completely open. Everything is fair.
It's good when people come to BaZi for results, not self-affirmation. Vanity doesn't like questions.
And I'm still waiting for a link to the original source. Which, of course, isn't there :).
Take a deep breath, sir. Release. And move forward.
How many hours did you spend editing and perfecting your insult, btw?  :D
			 
			
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I remember the thread about the Korean woman. That thread was deleted. She was very upset that her life had been ruined. Because of similar fictitious methods. And you left a lot of messages there :). It's a shame that that thread was deleted. 
I also remember a thread where your analysis got dismissed so quickly because it's way off.  ;D ;D 
 
You're just bitter that I'm more interested in learning and sharing those "fictitious" sources while totally ignore your infinitely superior "Taoist" Bazi, which sound like an ironic name because of your belligerence. :D
Not to mention creating a duplicate account just to provoke and insult.
			 
			
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For example, my predictions. Or where I get my information. My method for translating ancient texts is completely open. Everything is fair.
It's good when people come to BaZi for results, not self-affirmation. Vanity doesn't like questions.
Not interested at all in Taoist Bazi. For now.
I will stick with my fictitious sources and follow @eveereads because I'm more familiar with her method, which made you finally explode here.  ;)
No need to reply with more novels because well, you're simply a bitter person. 
Sorry for multiple post @Acvamarie. TTYL.
			 
			
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				@Acvamarie 
If you are interested in ZWDS, you can find more information in ZWDS Correspondence Course by Joseph Yu: https://pdfcoffee.com/zi-wi-du-shu-rrsndn-urs-pdfdrive-pdf-free.html
Personally, I don't read everything in there. Only studied those related to my own chart. 
One last question - how are the children and travel palaces? There wasn't any mention about them.
Your children palace contains Tianfu, which is good and stable for finance matters. Children = parent's wealth. But travel palace contains Tiantong and Dijie, which looks unstable. You can find the meaning here: https://zwdsastrology.blogspot.com/p/stars-in-palaces.html
You may not find this particular information from that blog: Tiantong in travel and Jumen in destiny palace can be associated with gossips, food and dining experience.
-----
@Acvamarie @eveereads 
In case you ponder about recent personal attacks, I just found this spectacular piece of work here: https://fivearts.org/index.php?topic=1664.0
The whole thread is basically someone talking to himself with his multiple accounts. No kidding.
I don't bother to visit until now, because I suspect there must be something really wrong about him. The content in page 4 is especially concerning to me.
			 
			
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@Acvamarie @eveereads 
In case you ponder about recent personal attacks, I just found this spectacular piece of work here: https://fivearts.org/index.php?topic=1664.0
The whole thread is basically someone talking to himself with his multiple accounts. No kidding.
I don't bother to visit until now, because I suspect there must be something really wrong about him. The content in page 4 is especially concerning to me.
Thank you for your kindness, coldpillow.
I understand that everyone on the forum studies different schools of thought, and therefore holds different opinions on the same subjects. Discussing and exchanging ideas shouldn’t be an emotional affair—not because it merely creates division among people, but because it also reflects the depth of one’s understanding of what they study and teach. At the same time, it’s an enlightening lesson for those who become the targets of emotional responses, as it teaches them what not to do. Whether your interactions with others on this forum are positive or negative, you’re still imparting a lesson, and I appreciate that. This, in itself, is the ultimate lesson of Yin and Yang.