You Were Born With a Blueprint. It's More Precise Than Any Personality Test.
MBTI gives you 16 types. This gives you 500,000 — and tells you how you make money.
MBTI sorts seven billion people into 16 types.
Sixteen.
You fill out a questionnaire, get four letters, and slot yourself into one of the boxes. Tomorrow, different mood, slightly different phrasing — you might get a different result.
This system uses your birth time — year, month, day, hour — and produces over 500,000 possible combinations. No questionnaire. The data was set the moment you were born, and it doesn’t change.
MBTI tells you “what type you are.” This system tells you “how you make money.”
The Five Phases Are Not Physical Elements
Let’s clear a misconception first.
Metal, Wood, Water, Fire, Earth — these don’t refer to metal ore, trees, rivers, flames, or dirt. They’re five modes of energy operation. Five ways of doing things.
Wood — growing upward, expanding, extending outward.
Fire — erupting, radiating, illuminating the surroundings.
Earth — accumulating, bearing weight, holding things in place.
Metal — cutting, refining, stripping away the unnecessary.
Water — flowing, permeating, connecting everything.
This isn’t metaphor. It’s operating logic. Every element in your chart is one of these five modes. The generative and restrictive relationships between them — who fuels whom, who restrains whom — determine the dynamics of your entire system.
Day Master: Your Core Code
Your chart has eight characters. One of them represents you — the Heavenly Stem of the day you were born. It’s called the Day Master.
There are ten Heavenly Stems. Ten energy archetypes:
Jiǎ 甲 · Wood · Giant Tree
Grows upward, steady expansion, doesn’t bend easily
Yǐ 乙 · Wood · Vine
Soft, wrapping, highly adaptive — grows toward resources
Bǐng 丙 · Fire · Sun
Illuminates everything at scale, doesn’t sweat the blind spots
Dīng 丁 · Fire · Candle
Focused illumination, precise but narrow range
Wù 戊 · Earth · Mountain
Massive, immovable, carries others — slow but stable
Jǐ 己 · Earth · Farmland
Nourishes everything, flexible, needs cultivation
Gēng 庚 · Metal · Blade
Sharp, decisive, cuts without hesitation
Xīn 辛 · Metal · Jewel
Refined, perceptive, soft outside but hard inside
Rén 壬 · Water · Ocean
Overwhelming force, contains everything, hard to control
Guǐ 癸 · Water · Dew
Permeating, nourishing, quiet but omnipresent
Both are Wood, but Jiǎ Wood is a giant tree — grows upward, doesn’t bend, steady expansion. Yǐ Wood is a vine — grows toward wherever the resources are, soft but extremely resilient. Same element, completely different strategies.
This is why, within the same industry, some people make money through steady expansion while others make money through flexible adaptation. It’s not about who works harder. It’s about structural difference.
Your Material Determines Your Money Path
P1 established: this system studies where your money comes from.
Now we can be more specific: your Day Master determines the underlying logic of how you make money.
Not “what industry you’re suited for” — that’s oversimplification. It’s “what type of resource generation your system is naturally built for.”
Wood Day Masters make money through growth — expanding, developing, making something bigger. Metal Day Masters through refinement — cutting the excess, extracting what’s most valuable. Water Day Masters through circulation — connecting different resources, making things flow.
This isn’t horoscope-level “you should be a teacher.” This is reading the structural layer: what mode of converting resources into returns your energy system is naturally built for.
How the Ancients Observed These Materials
In the Heavenly Stems chapter of the Dītiān Suǐ, each stem has an archetype description. Not metaphor — behavioral observation.
Jiǎ Wood: “Jiǎ Wood reaches toward heaven; it needs Fire to initiate its growth.” A giant tree grows skyward. But it needs Fire — sunlight — to activate growth. This tells you: the Jiǎ Wood Day Master’s system needs “exposure” to function — a stage, visibility.
Guǐ Water: “Guǐ Water is the weakest, yet it reaches the Celestial Ford.” Dew appears to be the weakest, but it’s everywhere. This tells you: the Guǐ Water Day Master’s system doesn’t run on force. It runs on permeation — slowly seeping into every crack.
The ancients weren’t observing “what personality you have.” They were observing “how your energy operates.” Personality is surface. Operating mode is infrastructure. The same person’s personality might shift with the environment, but their operating mode doesn’t.
That’s why MBTI changes, but your Day Master doesn’t.
Look Up Your Day Master
All you need is your birth year, month, day, and time (the more precise, the better).
Use any BaZi chart calculator and find your “Day Pillar Heavenly Stem” — that’s your Day Master.
Once you find it, come back and check the table above. You’ll notice: your most successful decisions usually followed your energy mode. And your hardest moments were usually when you were working against it.
But There’s a Problem
Knowing your material is only the first step.
Every material has a gap. The ancients called it “illness” (病). Your system is naturally missing something, or has too much of something.
But the ancients discovered something counterintuitive: that gap isn’t your bug. It might be the most valuable thing in your entire system.
The next article is about that.
Glossary
Five Phases (五行, wǔxíng) — five modes of energy operation. Not physical substances — dynamics.
Heavenly Stems (天干, tiāngān) — ten energy archetypes. Each phase splits into Yin and Yang, producing ten.
Day Master (日主, rìzhǔ) — the Heavenly Stem of your birth day. Your chart’s core code, representing you.
Generation & Restraint (生克, shēngkè) — the dynamic relationships between the Five Phases. Wood generates Fire, Fire generates Earth, Earth generates Metal, Metal generates Water, Water generates Wood. Restraint works in the opposite direction.
Sources
Dītiān Suǐ (《滴天髓》), Heavenly Stems chapter, Jīng Tú, annotated by Rèn Tiěqiáo, Qīng Dynasty
Zǐpíng Zhēnquán (《子平真詮》), On Heavenly Stems, Shěn Xiàozhān, Qīng Dynasty


