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Ten Gods Guide: How Saju Reads Roles and Relationships

Ten Gods describe how your Day Master relates to the rest of the chart. Learn the core groups and how they shape personality, work, money, and relationships.

What the Ten Gods actually measure

The Ten Gods are not random labels. They describe how the other stems in your chart support, challenge, produce, control, or mirror your Day Master. In practice, they tell you which roles and pressures show up most strongly around you.

A strong Saju guide does more than define terms. It shows readers how to move through a chart in a practical order, so the Four Pillars feel like one structure instead of a scattered list of symbols.

This page frames the Ten Gods as a language of roles, pressure, and relationship inside the chart. Within Ten Gods Guide: How Saju Reads Roles and Relationships, the What the Ten Gods actually measure section works best when the reader treats it as a reading question, not just a glossary entry. Matching it against a real chart usually turns the concept into something concrete and usable.

Readers usually understand What the Ten Gods actually measure better when they hold Day Master, seasonal climate, and elemental pressure in view at the same time. That shared frame is what keeps the explanation useful when the reader later moves into relationship, career, or timing questions.

Read the five major groups first

Beginners do better when they start from the five broader families: Companion, Output, Wealth, Officer, and Resource. Once you know which family is strong or weak, the detailed Ten God names become much easier to remember and use.

Saju interpretation becomes more reliable when season, Day Master strength, and elemental balance are read together. A label on its own is rarely enough; the useful question is how a condition changes once the rest of the chart is taken into account.

This page frames the Ten Gods as a language of roles, pressure, and relationship inside the chart. Within Ten Gods Guide: How Saju Reads Roles and Relationships, the Read the five major groups first section works best when the reader treats it as a reading question, not just a glossary entry. Matching it against a real chart usually turns the concept into something concrete and usable.

Readers usually understand Read the five major groups first better when they hold Day Master, seasonal climate, and elemental pressure in view at the same time. That shared frame is what keeps the explanation useful when the reader later moves into relationship, career, or timing questions.

Use Ten Gods with season and structure

A strong Wealth star does not mean the same thing in every chart. You still need to check whether the Day Master can handle it, whether the seasonal climate supports it, and whether another structure changes how that energy behaves.

Guides like this are most helpful when they sit next to an actual chart. Readers who compare the explanation with their own calculation output can move much faster from abstract vocabulary into real self-interpretation.

This page frames the Ten Gods as a language of roles, pressure, and relationship inside the chart. Within Ten Gods Guide: How Saju Reads Roles and Relationships, the Use Ten Gods with season and structure section works best when the reader treats it as a reading question, not just a glossary entry. Matching it against a real chart usually turns the concept into something concrete and usable.

Readers usually understand Use Ten Gods with season and structure better when they hold Day Master, seasonal climate, and elemental pressure in view at the same time. That shared frame is what keeps the explanation useful when the reader later moves into relationship, career, or timing questions.

Related links

Beginner article on Ten Gods Day Master guide Try the Saju calculator

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