When you go to a bookstore and check out the self-help section, there are plenty of material that could help you find your motivation in life. However, there are many and seemingly contradicting advice. Some book would tell you to say “yes” to everything while another book might tell you to scrutinize every single thing. Which advice do you think is right?
The answer is all of them and none of them.
You see, context matters a lot. One method might work for others while the same method might not work for you. Sometimes, it doesn’t even matter what you do. When you are at the wrong place, you could do everything right and you would still fail. Being at the right place and doing the right thing doesn’t guarantee success either; you also have to find the right time.
In Qi Men Dun Jia, each of the components in a chart represent different aspects. The Deities, Stars, Doors and Stems represent the Universe, Heaven, Earth and Man luck respectively. This translates to divine influence, timing, activity and people. When everything positive aligns, then there will be no obstacles in what you set to do.
A perfect chart, however, is hard to come by. It will always be a mixed bag of good and bad. Fortunately, this is where your decisions come to play. If everything but the timing is right, all you have to do is wait. If only the activity is inauspicious, change the activity. If you are not the right person for the situation, then become the right person.
Regardless of the circumstances you are given, there is always something you can do about it if you know the right context. At its core, Qi Men Dun Jia is outcome based. As long as you have the determination to make things happen with whatever it takes, the end result will always be in your favour. Everything begins with the right mindset applied to the right situation.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior permission of the publishers/author. If you wish to do so, please write to us at qimentribe@joeyyap.com and we will discuss the terms in detail. The Chinese Metaphysics terminologies used in this article are Dato’ Joey Yap’s original literary expression and they’re copy protected by Joey Yap Research International Sdn Bhd.