Your eight Saju characters are fixed at birth, but Korean Saju overlays a second layer called Daewoon (Great Luck) which gives you a new stem-branch pair every ten years. Whether the current Daewoon is favorable or hostile to your Day Master determines whether the decade ahead feels like an upswing or a slog. This guide explains how Daewoon is calculated, how to read yours, and how Koreans use it to time major life moves.
Each of the four pillars in your Saju chart is doing real work. Together they cover four overlapping life dimensions: your origin (Year), your career and public face (Month), your core self and partner (Day), and your children and late-life destiny (Hour). A reading that ignores any one of these pillars is incomplete.
The classical Korean order of importance is Day, Month, Hour, then Year. Notice that the Year Pillar (which is the only thing Western zodiac-style horoscopes use) is the least important pillar in a serious Korean reading.
Each pillar has two characters stacked vertically. The top character is a Heavenly Stem (one of ten possibilities). The bottom character is an Earthly Branch (one of twelve possibilities). Stems are clean, single-element characters. Branches are more complex; each branch contains one to three hidden stems inside it.
When Korean readers analyze your chart, they expand each branch to expose the hidden stems and then run the relationship analysis (Sip-sin) on the full eleven-to-thirteen character expanded form. This is why an experienced reader catches things a simple eight-character read misses.
Korean Saju has formal rules for stem-stem combinations and branch-branch combinations. Stems can combine into element-changing pairs. Branches can form three-harmony groups (samhap), six-harmony pairs (yukhap), six-clashes (yukchung), and three-way punishments. These interactions shift the apparent strength of your Day Master and either amplify or neutralize specific Sip-sin themes.
This is why two people with identical Day Masters can have very different lives: the interactions between their other six characters take the same Day Master in different directions.
A practical Korean Saju reading takes about thirty minutes with an experienced reader, or three minutes with a good app. The reader (or the app) will identify your Day Master, count your Five Elements, label each character with its Sip-sin, identify your strongest and weakest themes, and overlay your current 10-year Daewoon to tell you where you are in your life cycle right now.
If you are reading your own chart, start with Day Master, count elements, then look for Wealth and Officer stars. That alone gives you about 70% of what a paid reading delivers.
Korean Saju and Western astrology answer different questions, so direct accuracy comparison is misleading. For career, money, and timing questions, Korean Saju produces more concrete, decision-useful predictions because the Sip-sin system directly labels which characters represent those themes. For emotional and psychological questions, Western astrology has a richer symbolic vocabulary. Most Korean practitioners use both, treating them as complementary.
The two-hour window of your birth determines your Hour Pillar, which represents your children, your late-life destiny, and your hidden talents. A chart without the hour is three quarters complete. If you do not know your hour, you can still get a meaningful reading from the other three pillars, but the most personal layer is missing. Korean birth certificates traditionally record the hour, which is why most Koreans know it.
Your eight characters are fixed for life. What changes is the 10-year Daewoon (Great Luck) overlay and the annual year pillar. So at any given moment your "reading" is the static eight characters plus the current Daewoon plus the current year. As you move through life, the Daewoon shifts every ten years and the year pillar shifts every solar new year (around February 4), producing a constantly updating prediction even though the underlying chart never changes.
Korean Saju is not a falsifiable scientific theory in the Popper sense; it is a 1,400-year-old interpretive tradition. What is empirically defensible is that Korean Saju is internally consistent (the rules are deterministic), culturally stable (the same reading is reproducible across practitioners), and decision-useful (real Korean institutions use it for real decisions). Whether the underlying causal claim is correct is a separate question that Korean Saju, like astrology in any tradition, cannot definitively prove.