TL;DR
In Korean Saju (사주, "Four Pillars of Destiny"), your Day Master (일간, Il-gan) is the single character that represents you. It is one of the 10 Heavenly Stems (천간) — five elements (Wood, Fire, Earth, Metal, Water), each split into Yang and Yin. Find yours for free at sajuapp.app, and read on for a plain-language breakdown of all ten — plus what each Day Master can expect in 2026.
This article is a follow-up to my earlier post introducing Cheonmyeongdang, the Korean Saju reading app I built for a global audience.
What is the Day Master?
Saju is a 1,200-year-old East Asian system that maps the moment of your birth — year, month, day, and hour — to four pillars of two characters each. Each pillar carries a Heavenly Stem (천간, Cheon-gan) on top and an Earthly Branch (지지, Ji-ji) below.
Of the eight characters in your chart, one matters more than the others: the Heavenly Stem of your Day Pillar, called the Day Master (일간, Il-gan).
Why is the Day Master so important?
- The other seven characters describe your environment — family, career, partner, opportunities, obstacles.
- The Day Master describes you: your core temperament, how you naturally engage with the world, and what kind of "fuel" you run on.
A useful mental model: if your full Saju chart is a movie, the Day Master is the protagonist. Everything else is the setting and supporting cast.
In classical Saju texts, this is referred to as 日干為我 ("the Day Stem is the Self"). Every other relationship in the chart — wealth, status, relationships, health — is calculated relative to the Day Master. So if you only learn one thing about your chart, learn this character.
The Five Elements (오행) and Yin/Yang
Before we go through the 10 stems, two quick concepts:
Five Elements (오행, Oh-haeng):
| Element | Korean | Hanja | Theme |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wood | 목 | 木 | Growth, expansion, planning |
| Fire | 화 | 火 | Energy, expression, passion |
| Earth | 토 | 土 | Stability, mediation, trust |
| Metal | 금 | 金 | Structure, precision, justice |
| Water | 수 | 水 | Adaptability, depth, wisdom |
Yin/Yang (음양): Each element exists in a Yang (양, outward, active) and Yin (음, inward, refined) form. So 5 elements × 2 polarities = 10 Heavenly Stems.
This is the entire alphabet of who you are at the most fundamental level.
All 10 Heavenly Stems Decoded
Each section below covers: the symbol, plain-language personality, classical metaphor, and a 2026 outlook on productivity, relationships, and finances.
Note: 2026 is the Year of Byeong-O (병오년, Yang Fire Horse) in the Saju calendar. The "Yang Fire Horse" energy is dominant, which colors how each Day Master will experience the year. Yang Fire types ride the wave; Yin Water types should pace themselves; everyone else lands somewhere in between.
1. Yang Wood (甲 갑) — Gap
Classical metaphor: A tall pine tree on a mountain ridge.
Personality: Straightforward, ambitious, sees the long path and starts walking. Yang Wood people are natural leaders who hate stagnation and love big goals. They can be stubborn — once committed, hard to redirect.
2026 outlook:
- Productivity: Strong year for launching long-term projects. The Fire energy of 2026 helps you "leaf out" — but watch for burnout in Q3.
- Relationships: You attract people who need structure. Don't take on emotional labor that isn't yours.
- Finances: Favor compounding plays — real estate, equity, slow-build SaaS — over quick flips.
2. Yin Wood (乙 을) — Eul
Classical metaphor: A flowering vine that grows by wrapping around supports.
Personality: Adaptable, sociable, persistent in a soft way. Yin Wood people get things done through relationships rather than force. They often look gentle but are surprisingly resilient — a vine can outlast a storm.
2026 outlook:
- Productivity: Excellent collaboration year. Your network is your leverage in 2026.
- Relationships: High romantic energy. Be selective; you attract more interest than you can manage.
- Finances: Side income via partnerships, affiliate work, or community-driven products outperforms solo plays.
3. Yang Fire (丙 병) — Byeong
Classical metaphor: The midday sun.
Personality: Bright, generous, magnetic, hates being ignored. Yang Fire people are extroverts even when they think they aren't. They give energy to everyone around them and can lead public-facing work brilliantly — but they need real downtime, or they crash.
2026 outlook:
- Productivity: This is your year. The 2026 Heavenly Stem is also Yang Fire (병), so your natural rhythm is amplified. Big launches, public speaking, video content — green light.
- Relationships: You will be the social hub. Don't burn bridges in moments of excitement.
- Finances: Visibility-driven income (creator economy, sales, broadcasting) spikes. Save aggressively — the year after a "you year" tends to cool off.
4. Yin Fire (丁 정) — Jeong
Classical metaphor: A candle or hearth fire that warms a single room.
Personality: Warm, focused, deeply loyal. Yin Fire people light up small groups rather than crowds. They are often the "quiet expert" — the surgeon, the technical lead, the editor — who isn't loud but is indispensable.
2026 outlook:
- Productivity: You will be in demand. Set rates; do not over-deliver out of guilt.
- Relationships: Strong year for deepening one or two key relationships rather than expanding your circle.
- Finances: Premium expertise pays. Raise your prices once in 2026 — the market is ready.
5. Yang Earth (戊 무) — Mu
Classical metaphor: A mountain.
Personality: Solid, reliable, slow to anger, slow to move. Yang Earth people are the rocks others lean on. They are excellent at endurance projects but can stay too long in situations (jobs, relationships, cities) that no longer serve them.
2026 outlook:
- Productivity: The Fire energy of 2026 supports you (Fire produces Earth, in the cycle of elements). Expect a confidence boost mid-year.
- Relationships: Family commitments take focus. Don't let "duty" replace honest communication.
- Finances: Favor tangible assets and steady income. Skip speculative trades.
6. Yin Earth (己 기) — Gi
Classical metaphor: Cultivated soil — a garden bed, a rice paddy.
Personality: Nurturing, practical, deceptively shrewd. Yin Earth people are the operators behind successful teams. They notice everything, manage details masterfully, and are often underestimated until you try to replace them.
2026 outlook:
- Productivity: Strong year for operational roles — ops, finance, product management, education.
- Relationships: Caretaker fatigue is the risk. Schedule time that's yours alone.
- Finances: Boring is beautiful. Index funds, savings ladder, debt paydown.
7. Yang Metal (庚 경) — Gyeong
Classical metaphor: A sword, an axe, raw ore being forged.
Personality: Decisive, principled, courageous, sometimes blunt. Yang Metal people cut through ambiguity. They thrive in roles that require judgment under pressure: military, law, surgery, founding a company.
2026 outlook:
- Productivity: 2026's Fire energy forges Metal — meaning challenge will sharpen you. Expect a hard but transformative year.
- Relationships: Soften your edges intentionally. Yang Metal often wins arguments and loses warmth in the process.
- Finances: Cut a recurring expense in Q1. The discipline pays compounding dividends.
8. Yin Metal (辛 신) — Sin
Classical metaphor: A polished jewel, a refined blade, a piece of silver.
Personality: Elegant, exacting, image-aware, perfectionist. Yin Metal people care deeply about craft, beauty, and reputation. They make excellent designers, writers, surgeons, and luxury-brand operators.
2026 outlook:
- Productivity: Best year in five years for personal branding and portfolio work. Publish more, polish less.
- Relationships: Don't confuse aesthetic compatibility with emotional safety.
- Finances: Investments in your own visibility (website, portfolio, equipment) return well.
9. Yang Water (壬 임) — Im
Classical metaphor: A great river — or the open ocean.
Personality: Strategic, wide-ranging, deceptively patient. Yang Water people see systems and move in long arcs. They are explorers, founders, scholars, and travelers. They get bored before others get started.
2026 outlook:
- Productivity: The Fire energy of 2026 opposes Water, which means friction. Choose fewer, larger bets. Don't dilute focus.
- Relationships: International or long-distance connections feature heavily.
- Finances: Liquidity matters this year. Keep more cash than feels comfortable.
10. Yin Water (癸 계) — Gye
Classical metaphor: Rain, dew, a quiet spring.
Personality: Intuitive, sensitive, deeply observant. Yin Water people read rooms before others have noticed there's a room. They make exceptional therapists, researchers, novelists, and analysts.
2026 outlook:
- Productivity: Pace yourself. The Fire energy of 2026 evaporates Yin Water if you over-extend. Two-thirds of your normal load is wisdom, not weakness.
- Relationships: You will give a lot. Make sure you receive too.
- Finances: Build a buffer in H1; deploy it strategically in H2.
How to Find Your Day Master (Free)
You only need three pieces of information:
- Date of birth
- Time of birth (hour and minute, if you know them)
- Time zone of birth location
Head to sajuapp.app, enter your details, and your full Four Pillars chart appears in seconds — Day Master prominently displayed. The free reading is enough to identify your Day Master and basic chart structure. Deeper readings (full 10-year cycle, relationship compatibility, business timing) are available on paid tiers:
- Daily reading: ₩1,500 (~$1.10)
- Monthly subscription: ₩29,900 (~$22) — unlimited readings, all features
- Annual subscription: ₩287,040 (~$210, save 20%)
No credit card required for the free chart. The app supports English, Korean, Japanese, and Chinese.
Common Misconception: Saju Is Not MBTI or Western Astrology
Three things Saju is not:
1. It is not personality typology like MBTI.
MBTI is a self-report psychological instrument that groups people into 16 types. Saju is a calendar-based system that produces millions of distinct chart configurations from birth time. Two people with the same MBTI rarely share a Saju chart, and vice versa.
2. It is not Western horoscopes ("Sun signs").
Western horoscopes use a 12-sign zodiac based on the sun's apparent position. Saju uses a sexagenary cycle (60 stem-branch combinations) applied across four pillars, producing 60⁴ ≈ 12.96 million possible base configurations before luck cycles are layered in.
3. It is not fortune-telling in the "I will win the lottery" sense.
Classical Saju texts repeatedly emphasize that the chart describes tendencies and seasons, not deterministic events. The Korean phrase often used is 운칠기삼 (운七기三) — "seven parts circumstance, three parts effort" — but effort is the part that moves the needle.
Think of Saju as a high-resolution weather forecast for your life: it tells you whether you're walking into a rainy season or a sunny one, but you still choose what to wear and where to walk.
Lessons from Building a Saju App (Engineering Perspective)
A few things I learned shipping this product as a solo developer:
1. Calendar math is the boss fight.
Saju calculations depend on the traditional solar calendar (24 solar terms, jeolgi 절기), not the Gregorian calendar. Each "Saju month" begins on a specific solar term — not the first of the Gregorian month. Hour pillars rotate on a 12-branch cycle anchored to local solar time (true sun time), not zoning-defined standard time. You need:
- A reliable solar-term ephemeris (I use a precomputed table from 1900–2100).
- Accurate longitude-based solar time correction.
- Lunar/solar calendar conversion (for users who only know lunar birthdays — common in older Korean and Chinese populations).
A single off-by-one minute can change someone's hour pillar, which can change their entire interpretation. The bug surface is unforgiving.
2. Internationalization is more than translation.
The hanja characters (甲乙丙丁...) need to be displayed alongside Korean/Japanese/Chinese readings AND romanized for users who can't read CJK scripts. Tooltips and accessibility labels matter. Right-to-left isn't an issue, but vertical-text rendering is a nice-to-have I haven't shipped yet.
3. Cultural sensitivity beats clever features.
I shipped — and then removed — a feature that analyzed compatibility between two users by name. Saju traditionally requires consent: you don't read someone else's chart without permission. The feature returned, but only when both users authenticate. Small detail, big difference.
4. Skip the K-pop celebrity content.
Easy traffic, real legal risk. Don't analyze public figures' charts without consent — Korea's privacy and personality-rights frameworks are stricter than people assume, and the content is forgettable anyway. Focus on the user's own chart.
5. Trust comes from disclaimers, not despite them.
The app clearly states Saju is a traditional interpretive system, not medical, financial, or psychological advice. Counterintuitively, putting that front and center increased trust and conversions. Users who don't want a clear framing self-select out — which is fine.
Try Yours
Now you know what to look for. The fastest path:
- Open sajuapp.app
- Enter your birth date, time, and time zone
- Read the Day Master section first — that's your protagonist
- Compare to the section above
If your Day Master surprises you, sit with it for a week. The 10 stems aren't compliments or insults — they're shapes. The interesting question isn't "which one am I?" but "given this shape, what am I building this year?"
If you found this useful, the first post in this series — Introducing Cheonmyeongdang: Korean Saju Four Pillars Reading for the World — covers the app itself, the four pillars, and how I'm building it as a solo developer.
More deep dives coming: Earthly Branches, the 10-Year Luck Pillar cycle, and how to read compatibility (without the K-pop gossip).
Thanks for reading.
— Deokhoon, KunStudio
Top comments (0)