Is It True That 2025–2027 Are Three Fire Years in a Row?
It's true — but it's a fact about the calendar's construction, not something to fear. In 2025, the Eulsa year, the Earthly Branch Sa (巳) is Fire; in 2026, the Byeongo year, both the Heavenly Stem Byeong (丙) and the branch O (午) are Fire; in 2027, the Jeongmi year, the stem Jeong (丁) is Fire. The stem-branch pair assigned to each year comes from the Sixty Gapja cycling in a fixed order — a calendar anyone can verify on the Ten-Thousand-Year calendar.
What happens when Fire years run three in a row?
Declaring that outright isn't Saju's job. In traditional Five Elements theory, Fire reads as the energy of expression, spread, and heat — the way light and warmth radiate outward. These three years are less a forecast than a mirror for asking, "what do I want to bring out into the open?" Besides, the picture isn't even pure flame: the Eulsa year's stem Eul (乙) is Wood, and the Jeongmi year's branch Mi (未) is Earth — so much for "three solid years of fire."
Why does the same Byeongo year read differently for different people?
The stem-branch pair is the same for everyone, but the chart it meets is not. There are charts where Fire fills a gap and lets them breathe, and charts where it's already overflowing and needs draining. A year's energy, like today's fortune or the Iljin and your Day Pillar, only shows its grain when read against your own characters. Rather than hunting for a three-year prophecy, start by checking what place Fire holds in your own chart. And all of this is a reference for self-reflection — not a fixed fate.
Based on deterministic perpetual-calendar calculations and established Saju concepts — a reference for self-reflection, not a fixed fate.