Seven Killings is one of the Ten Gods, created by comparing another stem with the Day Master. It is a functional role in the chart, not a fixed personality label.
To read Seven Killings, first identify which visible stem or hidden stem creates it. A role shown in the Heavenly Stems behaves differently from one buried in an Earthly Branch, and a combined or clashed branch can change how strongly it is expressed.
Then compare whether the chart can carry the role. Strength, season, neighboring Ten Gods, hidden stems, current Da Yun, and annual timing decide whether it becomes useful structure, pressure, output, conflict, or resource.
How Seven Killings becomes useful in a chart
Seven Killings is a relationship to the Day Master. The important question is where it appears, whether it is exposed or hidden, and whether the chart can carry the role without becoming distorted.
A practical reading order
When Seven Killings appears strongly, do not jump straight to a verdict. Check whether the chart has the conditions described above, then compare the current Da Yun and annual pillar. The same symbol may describe confidence in one chart, pressure in another, and a temporary timing event in a third.
Reading notes
Reading Seven Killings in a chart
A Ten God is a functional relationship to the Day Master, not a fixed personality trait. Its effect changes with strength, placement, and timing.
- Identify which stem or hidden stem creates Seven Killings, then check whether it is exposed or buried.
- Compare whether the chart can carry the role: too little makes it weak, too much can crowd the reading.
- Read the paired concepts around it, because wealth, officer, resource, output, and peer roles often trade pressure with each other.
- Use Da Yun and annual pillars to see when the role becomes visible in work, money, relationships, or study.
How to read it in a real chart
Locate it first
Start by asking where the symbol appears and what job it has in the chart. pressure, risk, challenge, decisive force
Test whether it can be used
Then compare season, roots, support, and pressure before deciding whether the symbol is useful, excessive, blocked, or weak. crisis skill and disciplined courage
Bring in timing
A Da Yun or annual pillar can make the same symbol louder, quieter, clearer, or more difficult to manage. romanticizing danger without Resource or structure
Match it to the question
The reading changes when the question is about work, money, relationships, health, study, or long-range planning. competition, leadership, surgery-like decisions, and deadlines