Fortune Telling Collection - Comprehensive fortune-telling - What do you mean by loving God and avoiding God? Specific point

What do you mean by loving God and avoiding God? Specific point

The so-called use of god is one of the five elements in the eight characters, which can make up for disadvantages, save deviations or promote success. Lifelong remedy will affect a person's luck. Those who use God's strength is insufficient, those who use God with four pillars, or those who use God with four pillars to overcome evil are western gods. The four pillars don't need god, but they have to rely on luck to make up for it. For the four pillars with a balance of five elements and a lack of God, their lives are relatively smooth, with no ups and downs.

Generally, God is used to support God, call God, and go through customs.

1. If the sun is weak, the officials will kill more, and the gods will win the stars.

The first is to vent the role of official killing, and then to turn the enemy into a friend and use it for us. In the five elements, the reasons are: strong gold gets water, only to defeat its front, strong fire gets soil, only to stop its flame; Strong water gains wood, which releases potential; Strong soil and gold can only be made; Strong wood can get fire, so it can be stubborn. Only by defeating its spirit, eliminating its arrogance and venting its momentum can it be talked about and born. It stands to reason that gold can produce water and water is heavy; Water can produce wood, and wood shrinks when it meets water; Wood can make a fire. Fire can produce soil, and the soil is full of fire; Gold can be produced from soil, and more gold can change soil. This means that it backfires, but the sun is already weak, so many officials kill me. It is not enough to keep fit just by venting diseases, but it needs to be supplemented. Not only does water not sink gold, wood does not shrink, and fire does not burn soil, but also gold and water are born together, Shui Mu is born together, and wood and fire are bright ... This is called overcorrection.