If you've opened your BaZi chart and you see eight characters split across four pillars, the first question a real master asks isn't "what good stars do I have" or "when will I get rich." The first question is always the same: is my Day Master strong or weak? It's the fork in the road after which the rest of the chart reads either one way, or in exactly the opposite direction.

The Day Master is you yourself. In BaZi terms it's the 日主 (rì zhǔ — "master of the day"), the top character (heavenly stem) of the day pillar. All the other seven characters of the chart are described relative to it: who feeds it, who controls it, whom it controls, and who it gives energy to. Without understanding the strength of the 日主, any reading turns into reading tea leaves.

日主
Day Master
RÌ ZHǓ · "MASTER OF THE DAY" · THIS IS YOU

1Why the Strength of the 日主 Determines EVERYTHING in the Chart

Picture a BaZi chart as an organization where the 日主 (rì zhǔ — "master of the day") is the director. Everything happening around it only makes sense in relation to how robust the director is. A strong director can handle a big company, a heavy workload, aggressive competitors, and enormous cash flows. A weak director will break under the same load — for them, the same situation is a threat, not an opportunity.

In BaZi, "wealth" is the element the Day Master controls (財, cái — "wealth"). But to control means to spend energy. To hold great wealth you need a strong 日主. For a weak DM, great wealth in the chart isn't a gift but an unbearable burden: the person sees the money but can't hold onto it, or strains themselves to the point of illness chasing it. The very same set of characters means diametrically opposite things depending on the strength of the master.

"First establish the strength of the master of the day, and only then judge their destiny" — a classic principle of the Ziping school

This is exactly why a seasoned practitioner doesn't rush to conclusions. Two charts may have nearly identical "ten gods" and identical stars — but if one 日主 is strong and the other weak, the advice will be opposite. What heals one kills the other.

2What Strengthens the 日主: Allies, Resource and Season

Three big forces reinforce the Day Master. Remember them as the "director's support team."

Support of the same element: 比肩 and 劫財

These are characters of the same element as the Day Master itself. 比肩 (bǐ jiān — "equal shoulder") — same element and same polarity (friends, siblings, direct support). 劫財 (jié cái — "robber of wealth") — same element but opposite polarity (rivals who nonetheless strengthen you). Both "add weight" to the master: others just like them stand alongside. It's as if the director had many kindred spirits and partners of the same breed.

Nourishment: 印 (resource)

印 (yìn — "seal," resource) is the element that gives birth to the Day Master in the production cycle of the five elements. Water produces Wood, Wood produces Fire, and so on. Resource is the mother, education, support, knowledge, protection. It doesn't add "more of you," but it feeds you, giving strength from within. A strong resource is a safety margin.

Season of birth: 得令 ("holding the command of the month")

The single most powerful factor for strength is the month of birth — more precisely, the month branch. If the Day Master's element matches the season (for example, a Wood DM born in spring), it's said to 得令 (dé lìng — "hold the command of the month"). It's like being born into your own season: everything around works in your favor. The month branch weighs more in a strength analysis than any other character in the chart — by the Joey Yap school canon it accounts for up to 40% of the entire strength assessment.

💡 The key: the season (得令) is the heaviest factor. You can have plenty of allies and resource, but if the DM is born in a "foreign" season that drains it, it can still end up weak. And conversely — a DM born in its own season is often strong even with minimal support.

3What Weakens the 日主: Control, Output and Spending

Three forces work against the director — the "loads and drains."

Control: 官杀 (power over you)

官杀 (guān shā) are the two stars of control: 正官 (zhèng guān — "direct authority") and 七殺 (qī shā — "Seven Killings," aggressive authority). This is the element that controls the Day Master (for example, Metal chops Wood). Control is the boss, pressure, rules, discipline, illness, and enemies. It directly "presses down" on the master and weakens it.

Output of energy: 食傷 (self-expression)

食傷 (shí shāng) is 食神 (shí shén — "god of food") and 傷官 (shāng guān — "the one wounding the officer"). This is the element the Day Master itself produces. Creativity, speech, children, projects — everything you put out into the world. But producing drains you: every word and every deed spends the master's strength. A strong DM flourishes from this; a weak one burns out.

Spending on wealth: 財 (what you control)

財 (cái — "wealth") is the element the Day Master controls. Money, property, a wife (for a man), pleasures. To control wealth you have to spend strength. Great wealth with a weak master is a direct road to exhaustion.

FactorEffect on the 日主Area of life
比肩 / 劫財↑ Strengthens (allies)Friends, partners, rivals
印 (resource)↑ Strengthens (nourishes)Mother, knowledge, protection
得令 (season)↑↑ Strongly strengthensThe base "charge" from birth
官杀 (control)↓ Weakens (presses)Authority, discipline, enemies
食傷 (output)↓ Weakens (drains)Creativity, children, undertakings
財 (wealth)↓ Weakens (spends)Money, property, wife

4The Five Factors for Assessing 日主 Strength

So how do you weigh all of this in practice? The classical school uses five criteria. It's not a rigid formula but a weighing system — the master assesses each and assembles the picture.

🌱
得令 — Season
Dé lìng. Whether the DM's element matches the season of the birth month. The heaviest factor, ~40% of the weight.
🌳
得地 — Roots
Dé dì — "to gain ground." Whether the DM has roots in the earthly branches (hidden stems of the same element).
💪
得勢 — Majority
Dé shì — "to gain force." The numerical advantage: how many allies and resource the chart has against the weakening elements.
📌
Position
Where the supporting characters stand — next to the DM they're stronger than on a distant pillar.
🔍
藏干 — Hidden stems
Cáng gān — "hidden stems." Inside each earthly branch hide 1–3 stems, and they genuinely affect strength.

得地 (dé dì) — roots in the branches

The heavenly stems are "what's visible," and the earthly branches are "what you stand on." If the Day Master's element is present in the hidden stems of the earthly branches, the DM is said to have roots (得地, dé dì — "to gain ground"). A tree with roots will withstand a storm; a trunk without roots is toppled by the first wind. This is critical: even a seemingly lone stem can actually be strong if it's deeply rooted.

藏干 (cáng gān) — hidden stems

This is a topic beginners often skip, then are surprised by their mistakes. Each of the twelve earthly branches contains within itself 藏干 (cáng gān — "hidden heavenly stems") — from one to three. For example, the branch 寅 (yín — Tiger) hides Wood, Fire, and a bit of Earth within it. If you assess strength only from the visible stems, you'll miss half the chart. The hidden stems are the "underwater part of the iceberg."

⚠️ A common beginner's mistake: counting DM strength only from the four visible stems and ignoring the hidden 藏干 stems. A chart that looks "weak" on top may in fact be strong thanks to powerful roots in the branches. Always unpack the branches.

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5A Strong 日主: A Strategy for Life

Let's say the calculation showed that your Day Master is strong. What does that mean for life? Many people rejoice: "I'm strong, so everything's great!" But that's a misconception. A strong DM isn't a sentence to happiness — it's a surplus of energy that has to go somewhere.

A strong master needs "opponents" — outlets for the energy. These are precisely the elements that drain a weak DM but fulfill a strong one:

  • 食傷 (shí shāng — self-expression): creativity, undertakings, projects. A strong DM shines through them.
  • 財 (cái — wealth): a strong master easily holds money and property; great wealth is "within their power."
  • 官杀 (guān shā — authority): discipline, position, responsibility. A strong DM benefits from "pressure" — it gives them facets, like a cut gem.

And what harms a strong DM is more of the same element and more resource. It doesn't need more allies and doesn't need more "nourishment": it's already overflowing. An extra 比肩 or 印 for a strong master is overeating.

"Strength without an outlet is a weight. A tree that only grows but never bears fruit will sooner or later rot."

A strong DM with no energy outlets is a person of enormous potential who "stews in their own juices": stubbornness, stagnation, conflicts, an inability to fulfill themselves. The strong need work, a load, a goal — otherwise the energy turns against them.

6A Weak 日主: A Strategy for Life

If the calculation showed a weak Day Master — don't be upset. A weak DM doesn't mean "a loser." It means the master needs support, and when it gets that, it flourishes.

A weak DM needs 印 (yìn — resource) and 比 (allies):

  • 印 (yìn — resource): education, mentors, knowledge, family support. This is the main medicine for a weak master — it feeds it from within.
  • 比肩 / 劫財 (allies): a team, partners, friends. The weak shouldn't go it alone — they need kindred spirits who "add weight."

And the weakening elements — 財, 官杀, 食傷 — are dangerous for a weak master. Great wealth (財) will drain it: the person will chase money and strain themselves. Strong authority (官杀) will break it with pressure. Excessive self-expression (食傷) will burn it out.

📌 Remember the paradox: for a weak DM, money in the chart is not a gift but a test. First it needs to "build muscle" through resource and allies, and only then does wealth become a blessing rather than a burden.

The life strategy of a weak DM is support and accumulation: study, surround yourself with a strong team, don't dive into big risks alone, build up resource. Many outstanding scholars, advisers, and "powers behind the throne" are precisely weak DMs with a powerful resource.

7A Balanced 日主 (中和) — Rare and a Blessing

Between strong and weak there's a golden mean — 中和 (zhōng hé — "central harmony"). This is a chart where the forces of support and weakening are roughly equal, and the Day Master sits in equilibrium.

中和
Central harmony
ZHŌNG HÉ · EQUILIBRIUM OF DM STRENGTH

Such charts are highly prized: a balanced master is flexible. They can hold wealth, withstand authority, and still not become drained. Favorable decades bring them benefit, while unfavorable ones don't do catastrophic harm — they have a "shock absorber."

But absolute equilibrium is quite rare. In practice there's almost always a slight tilt to one side, and it's exactly that tilt which determines which element the chart "asks for" as its medicine.

8Extreme Cases: 從格 ("Following")

There are charts that break the usual logic. When the Day Master is so weak that it has no roots, no resource, and no allies, supporting it is pointless. In such a situation wisdom says: don't resist what's stronger than you. The DM "capitulates" and follows the dominant element. This is 從格 (cóng gé — "the following structure").

The paradox is that for such a chart the "medicine" is the exact opposite of the usual. If the DM fully follows wealth (從財, cóng cái — "following wealth"), then it needs even more wealth, while adding allies and resource destroys the structure and brings misfortune. Here everything is reversed.

⚠️ Be careful with 從格: the following structures are "advanced aerobatics," and they're easy to confuse with an ordinary weak DM. An error in identification (is it following, or just weakness) flips ALL the recommendations to the opposite. This is the case where it's better to trust a precise calculation.

There are mirror cases too: 從旺 / 從強 (cóng wàng / cóng qiáng — "following the excess/strength"), when the DM is so strong and homogeneous that it needs even more of its own element. Such charts often belong to people with a very powerful, concentrated destiny — but also a very vulnerable one, if a decade "strikes" at their dominant element.

9How DM Strength Determines the 用神 ("Useful God")

This is what it was all for. The main practical result of a strength analysis is determining the 用神 (yòng shén — "useful god," or "the element that is used"). This is the element the chart needs for balance. It's the key to choosing a profession, color, direction, and favorable years.

DM typeWhat it needs (用神)What to avoid
Strong 日主食傷, 財, 官杀 (energy outlet)印, 比劫 (excess reinforcement)
Weak 日主印, 比劫 (support)財, 官杀, 食傷 (drain)
中和 (balance)Fine-tuning by the tiltSharp tilts in any direction
從財 (following wealth)財 and what gives birth to it印, 比劫 (destroy the structure)

The logic is simple and elegant: the 用神 is always aimed at returning the chart to balance. Give support to the weak, an outlet to the strong. And the whole of life is then read through the lens of whether the years and decades bring this useful element or, on the contrary, strike at it.

"Find the useful god — and you'll find the key to your entire destiny."

10A Practical Algorithm for Self-Assessing DM Strength

Let's gather it all into a step-by-step algorithm. It won't replace a precise calculation, but it will give you intuition.

  1. Find your Day Master. The top character of the day pillar is you. Determine its element (Wood / Fire / Earth / Metal / Water) and polarity (Yang / Yin).
  2. Check the season (得令). Look at the month branch. Does its season match the DM's element or nourish it? If yes — a big plus to strength. If it controls or drains it — a big minus.
  3. Look for roots (得地). Unpack the earthly branches and find the hidden stems. Is the DM's element or its resource among them? Roots mean stability.
  4. Count the majority (得勢). How many allies (比劫) and how much resource (印) does the chart have against the weakening elements (財, 官杀, 食傷)? What's in the majority?
  5. Account for position. Support next to the day pillar weighs more than support on the distant year pillar.
  6. Draw the conclusion. If support and a "home" season prevail — the DM is strong, it needs an outlet (用神 = 食傷/財/官). If weakening and a "foreign" season prevail — the DM is weak, it needs a footing (用神 = 印/比劫).
💡 The practitioner's golden rule: the month branch is king. If you're torn between "strong" and "weak," go back to the season of birth. It tips the balance in most contested cases.

And remember: determining DM strength is a skill honed over years. Borderline cases (right on the strong/weak edge, or the question of "following or not") require experience and often a master's eye. But the fork itself — "strong or weak" — is the fulcrum from which all chart reading begins. Master it, and BaZi stops being a set of mysterious characters and becomes a clear map of your destiny.

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