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

Introduction: This Week's Focus is Not on Impulse, but on "Control"

To be honest, I increasingly feel that fortune is very much like the weather. You can force yourself to wear short sleeves and run your sales during a cold front, but it will come at a high cost. This week's biweekly navigation has reached a very strategic rhythm, with the energy of the life palace particularly strong, meaning "how you choose is how you live." There is a lot of external noise, but what truly determines the outcome is your decision-making sequence, resource allocation, and whether you are willing to spend time on critical issues.

Using the reference of 戊寅 (Wu Yin), I translate it into plain language as "You have to chew on tough bones, but do it methodically." 戊 (Wu) represents earth, implying responsibility, structure, and consolidation; 寅 (Yin) represents wood, bringing momentum, initiation, and action. This week is suitable for doing two things: stabilizing your foundation and then choosing a path to push forward. Trying to do too much will lead to failure, and I can relate to this.

Also, a reminder: astrological articles may contain errors; the content is for reference only, so don't treat it as the only answer.

Overall Rhythm for This Week: Stabilize the Foundation First, Then Seize a Breakthrough

The rhythm of these seven days feels like playing a strategy game.

  • Early Week: Focus on assessment and calibration: It’s suitable for organizing progress, clearing social debts, correcting cooperation terms, and settling overdue administrative or payment issues.
  • Midweek: "Opportunistic chances" may arise: They may seem appealing but often come with conditions. If your foundation is stable, this is an accelerator; if your foundation is chaotic, this is a trap.
  • Late Week: More suitable for finalizing and implementing: Sign off on what has been discussed, schedule it, and write it into SOPs to truly turn it into your achievements.

In fact, many may not realize that when fortune is flowing smoothly, the most feared mistake is thinking you are strong and using your fortune to patch up holes, only to find that there is not much left in the end.

Red and Black List Years: Who Can Gain Points This Week and Who Should Be Cautious

I use the "last digit of the birth year" as an easy reference for navigation, which can serve as a life strategy guide. If your birth year ends in the same digit, the sensations are usually more pronounced.

Red List: Suitable for Taking Initiative, Negotiating Terms, and Pushing Through

  • Last Digit 0, 4: Resource integration strength increases, suitable for discussing cooperation and reclaiming your rightful authority. Honestly, don’t play the good guy this week; what you need is equality.
  • Last Digit 2, 8: Likely to encounter benefactors or key information, suitable for signing up, proposing, submitting, or interviewing. I can relate to this; when information flows, things can suddenly speed up.
  • Last Digit 6: Work rhythm shows improvement, suitable for process transformation, tool introduction, and increasing efficiency. The more concrete your actions, the quicker the returns.

Black List: First Hold Steady, Then Focus on One Thing

  • Last Digit 1, 7: Emotions and interpersonal friction are more frequent, and it’s easy to reverse situations with just one statement. This week, practice "putting emotions aside to handle later."
  • Last Digit 3, 9: High likelihood of impulsive spending and commitments, especially when seeing time-limited offers or others profiting, you may feel tempted. Please, don’t let anxiety be your decision-making engine.
  • Last Digit 5: Physical and mental energy can fluctuate greatly; over-scheduling can lead to burnout. Allowing buffer time is not laziness; it’s strategy.

This Week's Dos & Don'ts: Follow These Guidelines to Be More in Control

Dos: Apply Fortune to "Structure"

  1. Write down the three most important tasks on a list Only keep three; everything else is a side dish. This week, the worst thing is "wanting to win at everything."

  2. Schedule a key conversation midweek Cooperation, salary negotiations, division of labor, and boundaries are all valid topics. The key is to communicate clearly and avoid assumptions.

  3. Advance using the Wu Yin method: Set rules first, then accelerate For example, confirm delivery standards, timelines, and payment points before discussing vision and expansion. The more practical you are, the less you’ll lose.

  4. Conduct a small decluttering session, starting with "information" Cancel half of unnecessary group notifications, and reduce scrolling through short videos. When the life palace energy is strong, attention is money.

  5. Write down your "backup plans" This week has considerable variables; having backup plans makes it less likely for you to be led astray. Backup plans do not equal pessimism; they signify maturity.

Don'ts: These Behaviors Will Directly Cost You Points

  1. Don’t use overtime to prove yourself Honestly, this week, overtime can easily become a patch job; after patching, it’s still a hole. If you must work overtime, only do so in areas that yield replicable results.

  2. Don’t make commitments in the heat of emotion Things you agree to when you’re emotional are often what you most want to retract when you’re clear-headed.

  3. Don’t rush to sign contracts or verbal agreements Especially midweek when encountering seemingly great opportunities; if terms, responsibilities, and exit mechanisms are not clearly stated, it will lead to trouble later.

  4. Don’t treat social favors as investments This week, the return on social favors is unstable and may fall flat. You can be kind, but don’t gamble your resources on others' goodwill.

Seven-Day Mini Strategy: Just One Action Each Day is Enough

  • Day 1: Take stock of accounts and to-dos, clearing the longest overdue item.
  • Day 2: Narrow this week’s goals down to three and write a list of things not to do.
  • Day 3: Engage in a key conversation, discussing both terms and boundaries.
  • Day 4: Optimize processes, finding a tool or template to replace repetitive tasks.
  • Day 5: Write down the "delivery standards" for cooperation or projects.
  • Day 6: Schedule rest and recharge; don’t push through; pushing through will lead to mistakes.
  • Day 7: Review and adjust; add only one lever for next week, don’t go all out.

Action Suggestions: To Be More Accurate, Refer Back to Your Life Chart Details

This week’s keyword is "Stabilize what you can control, don’t chase what you can’t control." During a period of strong life palace energy, the most feared mistake is giving up control to emotions, others' expectations, or momentary temptations.

If you want to correlate the red and black lists to your own life palace configuration, yearly and monthly influences, and actual challenges, it’s recommended to use tools to pull up your chart for a more grounded understanding. A gentle reminder, for chart checking and analysis, you can visit here: https://aiziwei.online/analysis.html