Biweekly Navigation: Weekly Fortune Strategy - Red and Black List Years and 7 Days Dos & Don’ts

Introduction: This Week, Winning is About Rhythm, Not Just Grit

To be honest, many people think of "fortune" as a ball that bounces up and down; when luck is good, it soars, and when luck is bad, it falls. I can relate to this because what often causes a downfall is not the big waves but rather the misalignment of rhythm.

This week follows the tone of "biweekly navigation," switching between two paths: one is a steady forward route, and the other is a sidetrack easily influenced by external forces. The life palace serves as a guiding medicine, focusing on "how I make decisions" and "where I spend my energy." The direction provided by 丁卯 (Ding Mao) is clear, leaning towards "activating the situation" rather than "rigidly adhering to rules." The more you are willing to think and make arrangements, the more you can regain control.

The article may contain inaccuracies and is for reference only; treating it as a rhythm reminder card would be more useful.


Overall Rhythm This Week: Three-Stage Progression

1|Early Week: Restlessness is Not Your Problem, It's Too Many Signals

Actually, many may not know that when fortune is stuck, the most common illusion is "Am I not working hard enough?" The early part of this week resembles a tide of information, with a flood of messages, invitations, and miscellaneous tasks knocking at your door. The energy of the life palace can easily lead you to shoulder responsibilities, resulting in increased chaos.

The strategy during this time is to "prioritize yourself in the schedule." You should place yourself at the forefront instead of waiting for others to finish their tasks before it’s your turn; otherwise, you will be dragged along throughout the week.

2|Midweek: Suitable for Negotiating Conditions, Changing Rules, and Modifying Processes

By midweek, the flavor of 丁卯 (Ding Mao) becomes more apparent, the situation begins to loosen, and people are more willing to talk. To be honest, this period is very suitable for clarifying previously unclear boundaries, including collaboration roles, delivery standards, and responsibility distribution within families.

If you have been dragging a matter for a long time, midweek is a golden window to turn it into an "executable version." Don’t aim for perfection at once; focus on what can be initiated.

3|Late Week: Outcome Acceptance and Emotional Reflection

Around the weekend, it’s easy to feel "I’ve done a lot but feel unseen" or suddenly want to speak heavily. I can relate to this because when the energy of the life palace rises, people tend to want to prove themselves, but proving can be exhausting.

Late in the week, it’s more suitable to do two things: first, consolidate your efforts, and second, turn outcomes into visible records. With records, you won’t need to use emotions to seek justice.


Red and Black List Years This Week: Who is More Fortunate and Who Should Be Cautious

Here, we use the "last digit of birth year" to create a practical rhythm grouping as a reference for arranging your action intensity.

Red List: Last Digits 1, 3, 6, 8

  • Last Digits 1, 3: This week is suitable for taking the initiative; the longer you delay, the easier it is to be overshadowed by others' rhythms.
  • Last Digits 6, 8: Likely to encounter resource returns or benefactors stepping in; the key is to be bold in speaking up and proposing conditions.

Black List: Last Digits 0, 2, 5, 7, 9

  • Last Digits 0, 2: Emotional fatigue is relatively high, and a common situation is "realizing the direction is wrong only after finishing a round of tasks."
  • Last Digits 5, 7: Likely to get stuck in communication costs, with misunderstandings and repeated confirmations increasing.
  • Last Digit 9: Likely to want to rush into something, but rushing too fast will leave unresolved issues.

The last digit 4, which is not on the red or black list, is considered neutral and stable, focusing on "consistent output" will yield better results.


Dos & Don’ts: Specific Actions for the Next Seven Days

Dos: Actions That Will Earn Points This Week

  1. Write down "three things for this week"; everything else counts as bonus questions To be honest, many breakdowns come from treating bonus questions as must-do tasks. Three things are enough; what can be implemented counts.

  2. Arrange a "condition update" conversation midweek This includes collaboration, relationships, and family matters. You should discuss standards and boundaries, not emotions and right or wrong.

  3. Break important decisions into two steps The first step is to conduct a small-scale trial, and the second step is to expand. The advantage of 丁卯 (Ding Mao) is flexibility, not taking a gamble.

  4. Establish visible outcomes A one-page presentation, a work record, or a checklist will do. The more visible you are, the less you need to explain.

  5. Dedicate 20 minutes each day to your life palace: only do your own organizing Clearing your desk, messages, and emotions are all valid. When the life palace stabilizes, you won’t be easily shaken by external forces throughout the week.

Don’ts: Actions to Avoid This Week

  1. Don’t pressure yourself with "I should" The trap this week is using moral obligation to force action, which leads to internal conflict later on.

  2. Don’t agree to too many verbal commitments at once Especially in the early week, with too much information, you can easily agree and then realize the costs are too high.

  3. Don’t treat communication as persuasion What you want is consensus, not victory. Those who want to win will end up more exhausted the more they talk.

  4. Don’t use impulsive spending or binge eating/sleeping as stress relief This is particularly common during emotional reflection late in the week. You can relax, but don’t exchange regret for immediate pleasure.


Action Suggestions: A Simple Arrangement for "Biweekly Navigation"

If you can only remember one strategy this week, I would choose this phrase:

You don’t need to work harder; you need to pace yourself better.

  • Early Week: Simplify, cut unnecessary replies and social interactions.
  • Midweek: Discuss conditions, change processes, and break difficult issues into manageable versions.
  • Late Week: Collect outcomes, keep records, and let your efforts be seen.

If you want to see your life chart's rhythm points more accurately or want to correlate the state of your "life palace" to specific life topics, you can use this tool for analysis and comparison. A gentle reminder, tool interpretations should still be adjusted according to your personal situation: https://aiziwei.online/analysis.html