Biweekly Navigation: This Week's Fortune Strategy - Red and Black List Years and Dos Don’ts

Introduction: This Week's Rhythm is Not a Sprint, It's About "Positioning"

To be honest, the fortune this week resembles changing lanes in a city. It’s not about how hard you press the accelerator, but whether you can spot the gaps early and hold the steering wheel steady. Viewing from the perspective of the命宮 (Ming Gong), this week particularly emphasizes the three words "control power": how to arrange your schedule, how to allocate resources, and how to manage emotions will determine your limits for the next two weeks.

The direction of 壬寅 (Ren Yin) is also very clear: the Tiger resembles the early spring thunder, urging you to move, but it doesn’t guarantee that your movements will be graceful. What you need is strategy, not just passion.

Reminder: There may be discrepancies in fortune readings; treat them as references and self-calibration tools.


Overall Fortune Rhythm This Week: Tight at the Front, Loose at the Back, Difficult First, Smooth Later

The energy this week is like "clearing away the noise before getting to the main topic".

  • From the beginning to the middle of the week: It’s easy to be interrupted by last-minute tasks, bombarded with messages, or swayed by others' emotions. I can relate to this because the more you try to handle everything at once, the more likely you are to mess up important matters.
  • After the middle of the week: The rhythm starts to return to your control, suitable for negotiating terms, making decisions, and rearranging priorities.
  • Weekend: Suitable for consolidating efforts, finalizing agreements that have already been discussed, and rejecting what needs to be rejected.

In short, this week is not for "striving hard" but for "establishing a framework". Once the framework is set, the next two weeks will naturally flow.


Red and Black List Years: Who is Riding the Wind, Who Needs to Be Cautious

Actually, many people may not know that the most practical aspect of biweekly navigation is that you don’t have to calculate daily until you’re dizzy; just knowing whether you are on the red list or black list can help you adjust your strategy.

Red List Years: Suitable for Taking Initiative and Seizing Resources

  • Years of the Tiger, Horse, Dog: There is luck in "pulling people together, organizing teams, and pushing forward". If you want to negotiate collaborations, secure budgets, or gain exposure, the success rate is high.
  • Years of the Dragon, Monkey: Clear-headed, with heightened sensitivity to the market and people's sentiments. Suitable for making strategic presentations, proposals, and repositioning.

Red list advice: You can attack, but don’t be greedy. Lock in your achievements on deliverable and measurable projects.

Black List Years: Suitable for Following Rules and Reducing Confrontations

  • Years of the Snake, Pig: It’s easy to encounter situations where "the other party says one thing and does another", or you may agree to too much out of momentary weakness, leading to exhaustion later.
  • Years of the Ox, Goat: Physically and mentally prone to being stuck, decisions may be influenced by emotions. The more anxious you are, the more chaotic it becomes, and the more chaotic, the more you want to force it.

Black list advice: This week’s victory is not about winning but minimizing losses. Lowering risks means you’ve already won half the battle.


This Week's Dos & Don’ts: Take Back Control

The following are "immediately usable" versions, not esoteric.

Dos: Things You Must Do

  1. Split your schedule into two lines: Output Line and Response Line The output line should only include tasks that yield results, such as proposals, deliveries, and negotiations. The response line should include replying to messages, meetings, and miscellaneous tasks. Don’t mix the two lines.

  2. Set a time for "no feelings" discussions Choose a time each day to only do quantifiable tasks: how many pages completed, how many emails sent, how many items organized. When emotions run high, quantification can be a lifesaver.

  3. Layer your relationships: Collaborate, Interact, Keep Distance This week is particularly suitable for doing this. You don’t have to fall out, but you need to know who is there to accelerate and who is there to drain.

  4. Leave a 24-hour cooling-off period for important decisions It’s not procrastination; it’s to avoid making wrong choices when you’re exhausted or overly stimulated.

Don’ts: Things to Do Less This Week

  1. Don’t use overtime to cover strategic gaps To be honest, overtime often just prolongs chaos. If the direction is wrong, staying up late will only make it worse.

  2. Don’t discuss money or collaborations at emotional peaks You may think you’re very assertive, but the other party only sees you as unstable. Negotiations should be conducted with a calm demeanor.

  3. Don’t treat "I can" as a commitment This week, it’s easy to verbally agree first and later realize the cost is too high. Change it to "I will get back to you with a specific time tomorrow".

  4. Don’t try to handle everyone’s expectations at once You are not a customer service center. If you schedule yourself, others will respect your rhythm.


Seven-Day Strategy: Use a Phrase as Your Navigation Motto

  • For those who want to rush: Use "framework first" to push forward. Set specifications first, then deadlines, and finally discuss bonuses.
  • For those who want to hold back: Use "reduce items" to maintain stability. Cut unnecessary meetings, postpone non-urgent commitments, and lower social costs.

This week’s true fortune is not about meeting noble people but about being willing to spend time on worthy people and matters.

If you want to align your destiny chart rhythm more accurately, you can also use this tool for quick calibration and comparison. A gentle reminder: the results should still be based on your own feelings and real choices: https://aiziwei.online/analysis.html