Nature as Our Teacher and Guide

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For many centuries in the East, the Four Pillars of Destiny has been used as a method of divination to guide individuals with their relationships, wealth, fortune. But very little is known about the method as a theory. Saju master and author Sarah Kim offers an easy-to-follow instructional guide with the basic tenets that will enable you to read and interpret the saju charts. Decoding your saju chart is like diving into water to examine the bottom of the iceberg; you will gain knowledge about yourself through the unique perspective of natural anthropology as presented in this primer. Bring your questions about your life--past, present, and future--and about your relationships with significant others to engage in this spiritual exercise. Your saju chart will be your personal oracle to provide the answers you need.



by Sarah Kim 2/21/2024



Nature as Our Teacher and Guide

“Location, location, location.” This phrase is a popular saying in business. It might seem faded with the prevalence of digital commerce nowadays, but no wise business person would underestimate the correlation between a favorable location and a successful business. Likewise, we can examine the locations of a person’s journey in this world to better understand his or her character, life, and prospects for success. For humans, location can generally be described in two ways: spatially and temporally. When we name places where people belong, we can conjure up images of their existential locations: the mountainous hills of the Himalayas, the deep rainforests of the Amazon, crowded and bustling cities in Europe, the burning deserts of Central Africa. We can almost see their faces, perhaps even the color of their eyes, and speculate about what kind of life awaits them. But space alone tells only half the story. We must understand time as part of our existential context. People who lived through 2020 and the following years, for instance, are pandemic survivors whose memories are indelibly seared by the loss of millions of lives to the COVID-19 virus. The hardest hit year 2020 was the Year of the White Rat—which felt like nature’s revenge for the countless white mice sacrificed in laboratories for scientific advancement. No one anticipated the historic tragedy, yet everyone was affected worldwide. Time inevitably dictates human experience; and space and time, as inseparable as they are, determine human destiny.

In the book, Be Your Own Saju Master: A Primer of the Four Pillars Method, I introduce another type of location informed by nature’s cyclical patterns. It is a location unique to each individual that reveals information about their living environment and life experience. This location is defined by Saju, the Korean word for “Four Pillars.” A Saju is composed based on a person’s year, month, day, and hour of birth—the four temporal contexts establishing the Four Pillars. Everyone is assigned a Saju at the moment of their first breath taken outside the womb. A person’s first breath is given special importance because it is her first encounter with Yang energy. Yang energy represents metaphysical reality, nature’s unseen forces. Though oxygen is a chemical element with physical properties, its abundant presence in the earth’s atmosphere (known as the sky) makes it Yang by nature and is associated with heavenly energy. On the contrary, Yin energy represents physical reality—everything we can see and touch—which is associated with earthly energy. When we accept that all of creation, both animate and inanimate, are energies in their purest forms, we can see the significance of one’s birth where Yin energy (the baby’s body) meets Yang energy (the breath of life), culminating in a complete Yin-Yang harmony called individuated life.

Once a person is born and prescribed a Saju, the personal journey begins. The four pillars of Saju come with eight characters (two characters per pillar) that can be decoded to describe the journey. The act of decoding the characters or interpreting one’s Saju composition is often referred to as “fortune telling.” This is a stigmatized term that can be misleading since a person’s fortune is not something inalterably ordained so that it is told once and for all. A Saju is more like a road map that offers guidance for our journey through life. It informs its owner about life’s critical junctures so she can prepare and make informed decisions. Similar to weather forecasting, saju reading helps us forecast the kairos moments of our lives and plan accordingly.

In light of the hardship they are experiencing in life, people frequently ask,“Is my Saju really bad?” A Saju shouldn’t be categorized into good or bad, just as an obstacle course on a game field wouldn’t be categorized into good or bad. An obstacle course can be best described by the level of difficulty it presents to the player. Sajus foretell the difficulty levels of lives. The level of difficulty can be surveyed by one’s inherent character and external circumstances illuminated within the Saju composition. The difficulty lies in an imbalance of Saju’s natural environment depicted by the different elements and their yin-yang energies. What, then, can be done about these difficulties? It so happens that each Saju is assigned a set of luck cycles that may help balance the Saju. As luck cycles change over time, no ill or good luck stays forever. This is because Yin and Yang must always alternate, like the sun and moon alternate dominance over the sky.

When an imbalanced Saju can’t benefit from its luck cycles, it presents a predicament. As a reader, I’ve faced helpless situations with clients seeking relief from difficult life situations. People suffering from critical illnesses, dysfunctional families, abusive relationships, and financial losses are among them. Clients tend to seek help after misfortunes hit, so it’s often too late to avoid life’s mishaps. This is understandable since help isn’t required when things are going well. This is why I am motivated to teach people how to read their own Saju so they can plan ahead. In saying this, I don’t mean to minimize the universal predicament of human existence laced with tragedies and misfortunes. Life is what it is; we have to face and live it and do what we have to in order to survive and thrive. But we can benefit from some information before hand. We explore the Enneagram or MBTI to learn more about ourselves and others. Consulting the Saju chart is no different: we may get a better sense of who we are and our life’s path by probing the meaning encoded in the eight characters of our Saju.

People sometimes ask why I’ve become a Saju Master after a career in the church as an ordained minister and counselor trained in Western psychology. Some even give me a pitying look—perhaps because they believe my former life was a better one. Admittedly, there has always been socially conditioned prejudice toward practicing the Four Pillars Method. It is generally known as an ancient art of divination; but because so few people have mastered the art, there is a lot of mystery and suspicion surrounding the Method. The literature on Saju studies entails a set of theories and symbols that trace their origin to the Chinese classical text called I Ching (The Book of Change)—a literary invention dating back a few thousand years. When this body of knowledge spread from China to other parts of the Northeast Asian region including Korea and Japan, the Four Pillars philosophy developed according to various cultural contexts. I coined the term “sajuology” to refer to the Four Pillars philosophy from the Korean scholarly perspective. Sajuology should be distinguished from Chinese astrology—or even Korean astrology. While astrological wisdom may be a component, the Four Pillars philosophy delves deeper into nature to discover truths about human nature and destiny. This is why I appreciate a prominent scientist saying these words: “Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.” Albert Einstein observed and learned from nature and made scientific discoveries. We may also learn from nature and discover the divine purpose behind our lives.
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