What Should You Ask in a Saju Consultation? Five Questions Worth Bringing
Half the depth of a consultation comes from the questions you bring. Sit down thinking "let's see if they get it right" and it becomes a test; arrive with questions prepared and it becomes a conversation. Saju isn't a fixed fate but a reference that mirrors you back — so the better your questions, the more you carry home.
Which questions are worth preparing?
Questions about your own grain outlast prediction-hunting ones like "when does the money come in."
- What pattern keeps surfacing across my eight characters? — Catch the pattern first, and the rest of the reading falls into place around it.
- Where do I draw strength, and where do I get drained? — The balance of strong and weak is read against your Day Master.
- How does my chart mirror the thing I'm actually struggling with right now? — Bring one real concern and the reading turns concrete.
- Where am I in my ten-year Luck Pillar cycle right now? — You're asking about the tendency of a flow, not demanding a verdict on timing.
- What from today's reading could I check against my everyday life? — Asking for something testable is itself an act of self-reflection.
Why ask about my grain instead of outcomes?
Because pinning down dates isn't the language of Saju. What a chart drawn from the Ten-Thousand-Year calendar shows is tendency. And if the answers coming back are designed to frighten you, you're allowed to keep your distance — just as with the "your Saju is bad" line. A good reader isn't someone who hands you answers; they're closer to an interpreter who helps you find your own.
Based on deterministic perpetual-calendar calculations and established Saju concepts — a reference for self-reflection, not a fixed fate.