Biweekly Navigation Weekly Fortune Strategy: Red and Black List Years and Seven Days to Control the Rhythm

Introduction: This Week's Rhythm is Like a "Tight Then Loose" Schedule

To be honest, this week's fortune feels less like a storm and more like a packed schedule. You might think you're racing against time, but in reality, you're "redistributing control." From the perspective of your life palace, these seven days resemble a small-scale strategic drill: collect what needs to be collected, let go of what needs to be let go, and don't use emotions as the steering wheel.

I resonate with this because many people aren't lacking in ability, but rather their rhythm is dictated by external factors. If we describe this week with the flavor of "辛巳 (Xin Si)", it feels like fire burning on metal, forcing you to burn away unnecessary branches and leave the core that can fight.

The article may contain errors, and the content is for reference only; however, you can treat it as a seven-day action list to calibrate yourself.

Core Analysis: The Key to Biweekly Navigation Lies in "Switching and Trade-offs"

Biweekly navigation doesn't mean you have to tough it out for two weeks, but rather reminds you: this week, first align the bow of the ship, so next week you can have a beautiful sailing route.

The energy of the life palace is particularly prone to two states during this time:

  • Wanting to Control Everything: Wanting to do everything yourself, resulting in more exhaustion and potential conflicts with others.
  • Suddenly Wanting to Slack Off: Feeling that effort is futile, leading to procrastination, ultimately becoming an anxious ATM.

In fact, many may not know that this week, the most valuable thing is not "doing more," but rather "doing in the right order." Breaking things down into three layers will clarify a lot:

  1. Tactical Tasks That Must Be Completed This Week: Related to money, contracts, deliveries, and assessments.
  2. Layouts That Need to Be Positioned This Week: Related to networking, exposure, proposals, and negotiations.
  3. Noise That Can Be Delayed: Sudden interests, ineffective socializing, and discussions that only consume energy.

Red and Black List Years: Who to Be Cautious of This Week

I habitually use "years" for quick stratification, so you don't have to view fortune too mystically.

Red List: Things Go Smoothly, the More You Organize, the Smoother It Gets

  • 2000, 1988, 1976, 1964 (Year of the Dragon)
    • This week is suitable for wrapping up old cases; the more you finish, the more sense of achievement you’ll feel.
  • 2004, 1992, 1980, 1968 (Year of the Monkey)
    • Interpersonal and cooperative luck is relatively strong, suitable for negotiating terms, acquiring resources, and striving for better division of labor.
  • 2008, 1996, 1984, 1972 (Year of the Rat)
    • Clear-headed, suitable for studying, taking exams, writing plans, and organizing data, with a feedback of "the more you do, the easier it gets."

Black List: Prone to Impulsiveness or Being Dragged Down, Remember to Clearly Write Down Risks

  • 2001, 1989, 1977, 1965 (Year of the Snake)
    • Easily too hasty, especially regarding money and commitments; speaking too quickly can make it hard to retract.
  • 1999, 1987, 1975, 1963 (Year of the Rabbit)
    • Emotions and sleep can easily affect judgment; don’t mistake fatigue for "no way out in life."
  • 1995, 1983, 1971, 1959 (Year of the Pig)
    • Prone to taking on too much out of goodwill, ultimately becoming the one putting out fires while others just watch.

The red list does not guarantee a smooth journey, and the black list does not mean bad luck is destined. The difference lies in whether you can use strategy to minimize risks.

This Week's Dos & Don'ts: Seven-Day Control List

Dos: Actions That Will Yield Immediate Results This Week

  1. Write Down "Three Things for This Week" in a Visible Place

    • To be honest, writing it down is a form of declaration. Just three things; if you exceed that, you’ll start to avoid it.
  2. Handle Deadlines First, Then Emotional Issues

    • Emotional issues can pretend to be urgent; what truly matters are deliveries and commitments.
  3. Define Your Desired Collaboration in One Sentence

    • Like "I need someone who can deliver on time" or "I accept two rounds of revisions; beyond that, there will be additional charges." This week, when discussing collaborations, vagueness will lead to losses.
  4. Set Aside 30 Minutes Each Day Without Distractions

    • You’ll find that much of your anxiety is caused by fragmented messages.
  5. Turn "Just Look Once at the Flow of Money" into "Understand It"

    • Keeping accounts is not a virtue; it’s a strategy. This week is very suitable for organizing subscriptions, installments, insurance, and fixed expenses.

Don'ts: Actions That Can Easily Spiral Out of Control This Week

  1. Don't Reply to Messages or Post When You're Angry

    • You think you’re making a statement, but others only see you losing control. Especially in black list years, please hold back on this.
  2. Don't Promise "I Should Be Able To" Commitments

    • This phrase sounds polite, but in reality, it’s a hidden trap. Clarifying conditions is more useful than pretending to be nice.
  3. Don't Use Comparisons as Motivation

    • This week, the urge to compare will be particularly strong; the more you scroll, the more restless you become, leading to typical self-consumption.
  4. Don't Change Too Many Rules at Once

    • Wanting to improve is normal, but this week is suitable for minor adjustments, not for overturning everything. Overturning is often just a desire to escape.

Action Suggestions: Treat This Week as a "Calibration Week"

This week, real fortune change does not come from seeking some miraculous turning point, but from your willingness to make three calibrations:

  • Calibrate Boundaries: Which matters are not your responsibility.
  • Calibrate Rhythm: Place the most challenging tasks in the time slots when your spirit is at its best.
  • Calibrate Commitments: Every promise should come with conditions and deadlines.

I resonate with this because much of the so-called good fortune in the life chart only begins to happen after you place yourself in the right position.

If you want to apply the "Red and Black List" back to the details of your life chart, or want to see which main lines to grasp in biweekly navigation, you can use this tool for self-reference. A gentle reminder: don’t treat any interpretation as the only answer:

https://aiziwei.online/analysis.html