個案分享 Case Studies

每個個案都展示分析過程、取捨邏輯和最終方案——讓你了解師傅點做、點解咁做。

Each case walks through the analysis process, trade-offs, and final recommendation.

When Fire Overwhelms the Chart — Applying Zi Ping Yong Shen Methodology to a Fire-Dominant Baby Name

Naming

When Fire Overwhelms the Chart — Applying Zi Ping Yong Shen Methodology to a Fire-Dominant Baby Name

A baby born in a double-Fire hour with a Fire-element surname had almost no Wood in the chart. Applying the Zi Ping (子平法) classical system, the true yong shen was Water — not Wood — because Wood would only deepen the root imbalance. Metal provided the secondary support through the productive cycle.

Naming Siblings with Opposing Yong Shen — When One Chart Needs Metal and the Other Needs Wood

Naming

Naming Siblings with Opposing Yong Shen — When One Chart Needs Metal and the Other Needs Wood

Two siblings whose Zi Ping (子平法) charts demanded opposing elements: the older brother's name was correctly Wood-heavy, but the younger child needed Metal as the primary yong shen. Forcing visual coherence through identical radicals would have undermined the younger child's chart. The solution was a structural bridge — a shared component that served different elemental functions in each name.

Trilingual Naming for an Overseas Chinese Family — Zi Ping Five Element Analysis Across Cantonese, Mandarin, and English

Naming

Trilingual Naming for an Overseas Chinese Family — Zi Ping Five Element Analysis Across Cantonese, Mandarin, and English

An overseas Chinese family needed a name that satisfied the Zi Ping (子平法) yong shen requirements while working phonetically in Cantonese, Mandarin, and English simultaneously. The standard sequential approach fails here — all three phonetic systems had to be applied as concurrent filters from the start.

A Name Change at 35 — Resolving a Wood-Metal Clash Between Birth Name and Finance Career Using Zi Ping Analysis

Naming

A Name Change at 35 — Resolving a Wood-Metal Clash Between Birth Name and Finance Career Using Zi Ping Analysis

A finance professional whose birth name was composed entirely of Wood-element characters had spent fifteen years in a Metal-governed industry while carrying a name in direct elemental conflict with their career domain. Zi Ping (子平法) analysis confirmed the Day Master's need for Metal and Water — the same elements the career had been drawing on — while the name actively worked against them. The name change resolved a structural misalignment grounded in classical Five Element theory.