The Wood element (木, mù) is the first phase of the Wu Xing cycle — the phase of birth, growth, expansion and breakthrough. At the body level it governs the liver / gallbladder pair, and the condition of these organs determines not only digestion but also emotional stability, flexibility in decision-making, the state of the blood vessels, muscles and vision.
In this article we will examine how the Wood element in a BaZi chart relates to the real health of the liver and gallbladder, which chart signals indicate heightened risk, and what to do for prevention. If you are a Day Master Jia 甲 or Yi 乙, or if your chart has a strong excess or deficiency of Wood, this material is directly relevant to you.
1 The Liver Meridian in Traditional Chinese Medicine
The Liver meridian (足厥陰肝經, zú jué yīn gān jīng) is a "channel" that runs along the inner side of the leg from the big toe, rising up to the liver and on to the diaphragm, chest, eyes and crown of the head. Its paired Gallbladder meridian (足少陽膽經) runs along the lateral side of the body — from the head through the temple, shoulder and side of the torso to the 4th toe.
The functions of the liver in TCM are far broader than in Western physiology:
- It stores blood (藏血, cáng xuè) — the liver regulates the volume of blood according to activity. By day it releases blood into the muscles, by night it returns it to "storage."
- It governs the "free flow of Qi" (主疏泄, zhǔ shū xiè) — this is a key function. If Qi stagnates in the liver, the work of the whole body is disrupted: digestion, emotions, cycles.
- It governs the sinews (主筋, zhǔ jīn) — the flexibility and strength of ligaments and muscular sheaths.
- It "opens into the eyes" (開竅於目) — the condition of the eyes and vision is an indicator of the liver.
- It "manifests in the nails" (其華在爪) — the condition of the nails reflects the state of the liver blood.
The gallbladder, as the paired organ, is responsible for "making decisions" (主決斷, zhǔ jué duàn). A weak gallbladder means indecisiveness, fear of action, "standing still."
2 The Link Between Wood and Emotions: Anger and Frustration
In TCM each element corresponds to a "root emotion" that, first, is born in the corresponding organ and, second, harms that same organ in excess. For Wood this is anger (怒, nù) and its shades — frustration, irritation, resentment, aggression.
The connection works in both directions:
- A weak liver → anger and irritability. When the liver cannot keep up with detox and fails to "spread the Qi," a person becomes explosive, touchy, impatient.
- Suppressed anger → a blow to the liver. If for years you "hold it in," neither expressing nor resolving anger, it literally settles in the liver, turning into physical pathology.
This explains why a psychosomatic approach to the liver works no worse than diet. In practice there are cases where hepatitis and biliary disorders are treated unsuccessfully for years, and after sound anger-focused psychotherapy the lab values improve.
At the BaZi chart level this is visible as follows: if a person has strong Wood + strong Metal (which "chops" Wood), they live in a chronic inner war. Wood wants to grow and expand, Metal constantly "prunes" it (restrictions, discipline, authorities). Suppressed anger is a guarantee of liver problems by the age of 40–50.
3 Weak Wood = Weak Liver
When the Wood element occupies less than 5–7% of the chart, or the Day Master is weak Wood without support, we speak of "empty" Wood. This is a typical "deficient" pattern.
The clinical picture of weak Wood
- Chronic fatigue, especially in the mornings;
- Low blood pressure;
- Poor tolerance of alcohol and fatty food;
- Slow recovery after colds and other infections;
- Thin, brittle, ridged nails;
- Dry eyes, floating "spots," progressive nearsightedness;
- Frequent ligament sprains, muscle weakness;
- Emotional apathy, lack of "drive," sluggish plans;
- In women — scanty menstruation, a late cycle, a tendency to anemia.
Chart indicators
- Day Master Jia or Yi with very weak roots (no 寅, 卯, 辰, 未 in the branches);
- Absence or a single instance of Wood against strong Metal or a large amount of Earth;
- Birth in the autumn-winter season (when Wood "sleeps") without reinforcement.
4 Strong Wood = Hypertension, Anger, Migraines
The opposite situation: 40% or more Wood in the chart, or a Day Master of sturdy Wood with triple support. This is "fiery" Wood: it grows rapidly, but it also "burns out."
The clinical picture of strong Wood
- Hypertension — especially with throbbing headaches in the temples;
- Migraines — the classic "liver" headache with nausea and light intolerance;
- Insomnia from 1–3 a.m. — waking precisely at the liver hours, after which it is hard to fall back asleep;
- Tendinitis, pinched nerves, problems with the shoulders and neck;
- Epigastric pain on a nervous basis — Wood "strikes" Earth;
- PMS, endometriosis, fibroids in women — Liver Qi stagnation manifests in the reproductive system;
- Irritability, outbursts of anger, impatience with others;
- Teeth-grinding in sleep (bruxism) — a classic sign.
5 Chart Signs: Wood Attacked by Metal
The most dangerous situation for the liver is when the chart has Wood but a "chopping" Metal stands beside it. This creates a chronic conflict that sooner or later manifests as real pathology.
Specific configurations
- 甲 Jia + 庚 Geng adjacent — yang Metal directly chops yang Wood. If this pair stands on the month or hour pillar, expect a lifelong risk of liver surgery.
- 乙 Yi + 辛 Xin — yin Metal "trims" yin Wood. More often manifests as subtle neurotic liver disorders, hepatitis of viral etiology.
- 寅 Tiger in the chart + 申 Monkey in Da Yun or the annual pillar — a Wood-Metal chong (clash), a risk of acute events: hepatitis, surgery, head trauma.
- 卯 Rabbit + 酉 Rooster — a similar chong, more often producing subtle disorders, migraines, insomnia.
If such configurations exist in the birth chart, a person usually carries an elevated risk for life. If they arrive only in Da Yun or in the annual pillar, the risk rises during these periods and falls when the pillar changes.
6 Sinews, Nails, Eyes — the Organs of Wood
Beyond the liver itself, the Wood element governs several "outpost" zones of the body that TCM regards as indicators of the liver's condition.
Sinews and ligaments
All muscular sheaths, ligaments and joint capsules are the "domain of Wood." If the liver is in order, the ligaments are elastic and strong and the muscles are well toned. If the liver suffers, expect frequent sprains, tendinitis, "tennis elbow," shoulder periarthritis, knee problems.
In a chart where Wood is weak or under attack, we often see people with chronic shoulder or spinal discomfort who "cure" one area only for the pain to migrate to another.
Nails
The condition of the nails is a "mirror of the liver blood." Signs of a problem:
- Thin, soft, brittle nails — a deficiency of liver blood;
- Longitudinal ridging — Liver Qi stagnation;
- Transverse grooves (Beau's lines) — an acute "blow" to the liver; there was serious stress or illness;
- A yellow tint — bile stagnation;
- White spots (leukonychia) — a zinc deficiency, often accompanying a weak liver.
Eyes
"The liver opens into the eyes." The condition of the eyes reflects everything happening with the liver:
- Dry, tiring eyes — a deficiency of liver blood;
- Red eyes, conjunctivitis — Liver Fire, an excess of Wood;
- "Floaters," clouding — Liver Qi stagnation, a risk of cataracts;
- Progressive nearsightedness in youth — a deficiency of liver blood;
- Yellowing of the sclera — bile stagnation (hepatobiliary problems).
7 Prevention: Colors, Food, Routine
If your chart has risk factors for Wood, prevention is daily hygiene, not one-off courses of treatment. The main principles:
Sleep schedule
The most important thing. From 23:00 to 03:00 are the hours of the gallbladder and liver. If you are awake at this time, the organs cannot carry out regeneration. This is the most common and most destructive factor of liver damage in the modern world, far more dangerous than alcohol.
Ideally, lights out no later than 22:30. Total darkness in the bedroom. No screens for at least an hour before bed.
Nutrition
- Minimize alcohol, especially spirits;
- Limit fried and smoked foods, margarine and trans fats;
- In the morning on an empty stomach — a glass of warm water with lemon (stimulates bile);
- Greens with every meal: spinach, parsley, arugula, cilantro;
- Green vegetables: broccoli, asparagus, artichoke;
- Bitter herbs: dandelion, milk thistle, artichoke, chicory;
- Regular meals, without prolonged fasting (the liver dislikes "swings").
Color, direction, activities
- Color: green — in clothing, interiors, surroundings;
- Direction: east (the direction of Wood). It is helpful to work facing east and to sleep with the head pointing east (for weak Wood);
- Activity: walks in the forest, yoga, qigong, gentle swimming. Avoid overtraining;
- Working with emotions: learn to express anger constructively. Physical release (boxing, running) for acute outbursts, psychotherapy for chronic ones.
8 Herbs and Foods for Wood
Chinese and folk herbal medicine knows many remedies for supporting the liver. Here are the most accessible and well-studied:
The classic TCM recipe for Liver Qi stagnation with irritability is the formula Xiao Yao San (逍遙散, "Free and Easy Wanderer Powder"). It is one of the most popular formulas in China for "managerial" syndrome: stress, frustration, insomnia, PMS, mild depression.
Clarify the risks from your chart
Calculate your BaZi and find out whether Wood is your risk zone. The full reading includes an organ-by-organ breakdown, an annual forecast and prevention recommendations.
Calculate chart →9 Da Yun: Years of Heightened Risk for the Liver
Da Yun (大運, "the great luck pillars") are 10-year cycles that color life with a particular element. For the liver, two groups of cycles are critical:
Cycles of "excess Wood"
If you already have strong Wood and Da Yun brings even more Wood (for example, Jia-Yin 甲寅 or Yi-Mao 乙卯), this is a period of liver overheating. A risk of hypertension, migraines, episodes of anger, endometriosis in women.
The combination of Wood + Fire is especially dangerous: for example, the cycle Ding-Mao 丁卯 with strong Wood in the chart. Wood feeds Fire, and blood pressure soars.
Cycles of "a blow to Wood"
If you have a Wood Day Master and a Da Yun arrives with strong Metal (Geng-Shen 庚申 or Xin-You 辛酉), this is a direct attack on the liver. It is especially dangerous if the chart already contains an "axe" — Geng or Xin.
During such a 10-year period you should:
- Have liver function tests once a year (ALT, AST, GGT, bilirubin);
- Have a liver and gallbladder ultrasound every 1–2 years;
- Completely eliminate or sharply reduce alcohol;
- Avoid hepatotoxic medications without urgent need;
- Increase "expressed anger" — psychotherapy, sport, emotional expression.
Annual risks within Da Yun
Within a 10-year pillar there are individual dangerous years. These are years in which the annual pillar creates a chong (clash) with the liver branches of the chart, or brings additional Metal to already-attacked Wood.
For example, if your chart contains 寅 (Tiger), then Monkey years (申) are potentially dangerous for the liver. If it contains 卯 (Rabbit), then Rooster years (酉) bring a chong, a risk of acute liver events.
10 Specific Diagnoses by Configuration
Below are typical "chart scenarios" and the diagnoses associated with them from practice. This is not a verdict but a set of statistical patterns.
Scenario 1: Weak Wood without support
Day Master Jia or Yi in an autumn month (申 Monkey, 酉 Rooster), without roots in the branches.
- Chronic hepatosis (fatty infiltration of the liver);
- Biliary dyskinesia;
- Chronic fatigue, "burnout" syndrome;
- Anemia, a tendency to low blood pressure;
- Hypothyroidism (via weak blood and Jing).
Scenario 2: Strong Wood in excess
Day Master Jia or Yi in the spring season, 3+ Wood signs in the chart.
- Essential hypertension stage 1–2;
- Migraines, especially the classic ones with aura;
- Endometriosis, uterine fibroids in women;
- PMS with irritability;
- Bruxism, trismus of the masticatory muscles.
Scenario 3: Wood attacked by Metal
Wood is present, but Geng or Xin stands beside it, or there is a Tiger-Monkey / Rabbit-Rooster chong.
- Gallstone disease, cholecystitis;
- Chronic viral hepatitis (B, C);
- Surgery on the liver or gallbladder;
- Head injuries (the temporal area);
- Severe migraines with hospitalizations.
Scenario 4: Wood consumed by Fire
Strong Fire in the chart "burns" the Wood (especially Bing with Jia).
- Hyperactivity of the nervous system;
- Hypertensive crises;
- Depletion of the liver progressing to cirrhosis (if alcohol is also present);
- Strong agitation, insomnia;
- Infertility through overheating of the reproductive system.
Scenario 5: Wood + an excess of Water
Too much Water "drowns" the Wood (Wood rots in water).
- Chronic edema, especially in the liver area;
- Depressive states, apathy;
- Low blood pressure, a tendency to hypotension;
- Chronic fatigue with a "foggy mind";
- Gallbladder dysfunction with hypotonia.
The liver is the "general" who plans the offensive in your life. When the general is ill, the army is lost and the strategy falls apart. By supporting Wood in your chart — through sleep, routine, emotions and diet — you invest not only in an organ but in the ability to build and carry out your plans.
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