Weekly Navigation Strategy: Destiny Palace Rhythm and Red-Black List Years

Introduction: This Week's Focus is Not Luck, but Rhythm

To be honest, many people think fortune is simply about being "good or bad"; I, on the other hand, care more about whether the "rhythm is right". This week follows a strategic route, with the energy of the Destiny Palace leaning towards regaining control, reducing emotional fluctuations, and increasing decision-making precision. You will find that things are not impossible; rather, they are interrupted by sources of disturbance or slowed down by unnecessary face-saving.

The directional reference falls on the flavor of "Jia Xu" (甲戌), akin to driving stakes deep and establishing rules. Jia represents initiation and intention, while Xu symbolizes guarding and boundaries. The key to this week's fortune lies in the sense of boundaries: collect what should be collected, cut what should be cut, and negotiate conditions when necessary.

I also want to make it clear that astrology has its blind spots and errors, and the content is for reference only; however, if you are willing to treat it as a "reminder for action," it usually resonates more.

Overall Rhythm This Week: Tight at the Start, Loose at the End, Set Rules Before Adding More

I feel strongly about this because many people, when busy, tend to rely on willpower to push through, only to feel exhausted and start questioning life by the third day. This week is more about "designing first, then executing".

  • Early in the week is suitable for setting rules, establishing schedules, and reorganizing scattered projects.
  • Midweek may see temporary insertions, social invitations, or someone suddenly asking for your opinion. You can help, but set boundaries.
  • Late in the week is suitable for harvesting, including putting agreed conditions in writing and organizing the results into deliverable versions.

If you have been hesitating about changing jobs, collaboration models, or daily routines, this week is not suitable for making decisions based solely on feelings; it is better to test the truth with a "trial run for seven days".

Red-Black List Years: Who Thrives, Who Should Be Cautious

Actually, many may not know that "years" are very practical because they reflect your preset reaction patterns for the week. This week, we look at fortune through the lens of stability, precision, and decisiveness.

Red List: Years Where It's Easier to Regain Control

  • 1994, 1982, 1970: Decision-making feels better, especially in negotiating conditions and resource allocation, making it easier to get what you want.
  • 2006, 2018: Suitable for institutionalizing and systematizing, turning things that originally relied on people into processes supported by systems.

The common point of the Red List is "daring to speak clearly". The clearer you are, the less others will dare to fool you.

Black List: Years Prone to Disturbance and Emotional Drift

  • 1991, 1979, 1967: There is significant social pressure; a common scenario is that you clearly do not want to agree, yet you verbally say yes.
  • 2003, 2015: There is a tendency to skip confirmations in the rush to get things done, leading to higher rework costs later.

The Black List is not about bad luck; it simply reminds you "not to use kindness in places without boundaries".

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

This week, you need to implement "strategy"; just looking at fortune is not enough; you need to take action.

Dos: Things You Must Do

  1. Create a "Boundary List" Write down three things you will no longer accept this week, such as last-minute changes in requirements, overtime meetings, or verbal commitments without records. This list will save you.
  2. Make All Collaborations "Traceable" Leave messages in writing, summarize meetings, and note version numbers for deliveries. Honestly, the most valuable thing this week is the chain of evidence.
  3. Divide Time into Two Segments: Deep Work Period and Response Period Use deep work for high-value tasks and concentrate on responses; otherwise, you will be fragmented by messages.
  4. Conduct a "Resource Inventory" List out your connections, tools, budget, and available time before deciding whether to invest in new projects.
  5. Organize Results Over the Weekend Instead of Forcing New Tasks Compile this week's outputs into a document or presentation, even if it's just for yourself; it will make next week smoother.

Don’ts: Less is More This Week

  1. Don’t Make Commitments at Emotional Highs It’s easy to make beautiful promises, only to regret it later. When you want to agree, first say, "I’ll confirm later".
  2. Don’t Communicate with "I think it should" Change it to "What I need, what the deliverable is, what the deadline is". The strategic week is most afraid of ambiguity.
  3. Avoid Three High-Risk Situations: Gossip, Drunken Gatherings, and Last-Minute Firefighting What you think is socializing may actually pull you into someone else's chaos.
  4. Don’t Spend Money to Soothe Anxiety This week, there is a tendency to impulsively buy tools, courses, or a bunch of seemingly transformative things. Use existing resources for seven days first.

Action Suggestion: A One-Sentence Philosophy for This Week

I feel strongly about this; the philosophy for this week is: "Speak clearly, maintain boundaries, and leave behind results."

When you can accomplish these three things, even if fortune is not perfect, you will not lose control; instead, you will stand firm amidst the chaos.

If you want to relate your own destiny chart to see which star in your Destiny Palace is pushing you and which palace is holding you back during this bi-weekly navigation, you can go to this tool page for further analysis and self-calibration. A gentle reminder: astrology still has errors, so please prioritize real-world decision-making: https://aiziwei.online/analysis.html