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Where Korean saju meets psychology — read patterns, not destiny.
Saju × Psychology
Wonjin-sal and Attachment Style: Are You Really Incompatible?
Is wonjin-sal really an incompatible match? Where myeongni's wonjin and attachment style trace the same relationship pattern — and the part you can change.
Is There a Narcissist Birth Chart? Reading the Dark Triad Through Saju
Is there a saju structure that overlaps with narcissistic traits? Where the Dark Triad meets myeongni — the line between a tendency and a verdict.
Can Good Compatibility Be Explained by Patterns?
Break down the feeling of clicking with someone and you find stacked patterns of harmony and friction. ARO reads compatibility as a map, not a verdict.
Your Personality by the Five Elements — Not MBTI
Are you fire or water? MBTI is a four-axis self-report; the five elements read your birth date as a distribution — and balance matters more than any one.
Why the Avoidant Pulls Away: Reading Distance Through Saju
Avoidant attachment — crowded by closeness, creating space. Where it meets strong self-territory and thin expression — and why distance was never fixed.
Why the Anxious Cling: Reading Closeness Through Saju
Anxious attachment — tracking whether the other pulls away, leaning in harder. Where it meets a chart of thick relational drive and thin self-boundary.
Saju × Statistics
Saju Basics
Does Dohwa-sal Really Make You Popular?
They say Dohwa-sal (Peach Blossom) makes you popular — and prone to wandering. Two sides of the charm star, and how to turn its pull into a strength.
Cheoneul-gwiin: Does the Luckiest Star Bring Help on Its Own?
Cheoneul-gwiin (Heavenly Noble) is counted the most auspicious spirit star. People and chances attach at hard moments — luck read as tendency, not fate.
Is Baekho-sal Really a Star to Fear?
Baekho-sal (White Tiger) carries old fears like "you'll see blood." ARO reads it as drive condensed to a point — direction and restraint decide the outcome.
Gwaegang-sal: Does a "Strong Fate" Mean a Hard Life?
Gwaegang-sal (Kui Gang) scares people with talk of a heavy fate. ARO reads it as a strong day pillar — will and charisma that split big wins from big setbacks.
Yangin-sal: The Two Faces of Blade-Edge Decisiveness
Yangin-sal (Yang Blade) is called the star that carries a blade. ARO reads it as blade-edge decisiveness — drive handled well, collision when control slips.
Hwagae-sal: The Chart of People Who Like Being Alone
Hwagae-sal (Canopy) goes deep in solitary fields — art, scholarship, contemplative work. ARO reads the aloneness as the condition for immersion.
Gwimun-gwansal: Is Sensitivity a Weakness or Intuition?
Gwimun-gwansal (Ghost Gate) is a seat of sharp senses and deep insight — intuition that catches what others miss, with fatigue as its flip side.
Nakjeong-gwansal: A Star That Invites Mistakes?
Nakjeong-gwansal (Pitfall) asks for one extra check against slips and contract mishaps. Not a trap from fate — a spot where verifying cuts losses.
What Are the 12 Life Stages? Saju's Cycle of Rise and Fall
Geollok, Jewang, Jangsaeng — the 12 stages are phases the day master passes through, read as rising and ebbing force, not a ranking of fortune.
What Is Sinsal? The 9 Stars ARO Reads
Dohwa-sal, Wonjin-sal, Cheoneul-gwiin — is sinsal a verdict of fortune? A guide to the nine name-tags on a chart, read as tendencies, not destiny.
What Are the Ten Gods? Reading Yourself Through Saju's Sipsin
Sipsin — the Ten Gods — are ten relational codes for reading a saju chart: how each character relates to the self. What the five groups point to.
Harmony and Clash: The Six Ways Saju Characters Meet
Saju characters never sit alone — they pull or collide. Samhap and yukhap pull; chung, hyeong, hae, pa rub. Why harmony isn't simply good and clash isn't bad.
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