Lian Zhen and Po Jun in the Parents Palace usually describe a family line that is hard, changeable, or emotionally discontinuous rather than soft and steady.
What This Means
Read this as structure in the parents line: distance, separation, strict rules, or early pressure to grow up. It can describe absence, instability, or a home that matures the person too early.
How To Read It
Start with the Parents Palace, then compare the Sun and Moon lines, the Life Palace, and the Inner-Life Palace. Separate physical separation from emotional distance before you judge the family story.
Simple Examples
- A strong pattern does not always describe the person directly; sometimes it shows up through siblings, parents, or children first.
- Read the palace first, then decide whether the pattern is about money, role, relationships, health, or the outside world.
- Use the opposite palace to understand what supports or pressures the main topic.
Practical Order
First define the question. Then read the palace, its opposite palace, the supporting palaces, and the ten-year or annual trigger. This keeps the reading useful for career, money, relationships, and real choices.
