Lian Zhen and Tan Lang Weakened in the Siblings Palace with Kong Jie and Tian Ma

A plain-English guide to Lian Zhen and Tan Lang Weakened in the Siblings Palace with Kong Jie and Tian Ma, with a practical reading order, simple examples, and clear boundaries for Zi Wei Dou Shu learners.

Lian Zhen and Tan Lang Weakened in the Siblings Palace with Kong Jie and Tian Ma becomes easier to read when you name the palace first, then connect the pattern to role, pressure, and timing in everyday life.

What This Means

For English readers, the useful move is to name the life area first, then connect the pattern to practical choices instead of treating one symbol as a fixed prediction.

How To Read It

Do not judge one star or one palace alone. Look at the main palace, the opposite palace, the career and wealth structure, and whether the chart shows stable support or only pressure. A strong pattern needs a place to work; a weak pattern needs rules, limits, and practical correction.

Simple Examples

  • A strong pattern does not always describe the person directly; sometimes it shows up through siblings, parents, or children first.
  • Read the star through the palace and the real-life role it points to, rather than using a vague fixed prediction.
  • When Hua Ji appears, treat it as a bottleneck that needs rules and risk control.

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.