
What does "strong self, weak wealth" mean
"Strong self, weak wealth" refers to a strong day master and a weak wealth element. The core is "having the potential to carry wealth, but lacking the conditions to activate it," not an absolutely bad fate.On one hand, a strong self can bear wealth, like a "large-capacity water bucket." As long as it encounters opportunities (such as changing jobs or a high-quality project), it can quickly accumulate wealth, and it is less likely to be drained by wealth (for example, those with weak self who gain wealth easily may get sick). For instance, someone with technical skills, a strong self represents solid foundation, while a weak wealth element simply means fewer orders at present, but when opportunities come, income can jump significantly.
On the other hand, weak wealth can bring hidden dangers: the elements representing competitors (those who compete for wealth) may snatch opportunities (such as colleagues competing for promotion, partners undermining each other); the wealth element represents goals, and weak wealth can make one confused about "how to make money." For example, trying multiple fields at the same time but failing to focus, leading to difficulty in accumulating wealth.
The key is that a strong self is an advantage, and weak wealth is an area that needs improvement. With the help of major fortunes or later adjustments, this potential can be transformed.
Which is better: "strong self, weak wealth" or "weak self, strong wealth"
There is no absolute good or bad between the two; the core is "compatibility and harmony," and each has its own advantages and disadvantages."Strong self, weak wealth" excels in "potential and risk resistance," requiring waiting for the right timing. Its advantage is that when entering a wealth or food-shen fortune (fortunes that supplement or generate wealth), it can experience a leap in wealth, and it earns more without easily encountering disasters. It also has strong risk resistance, able to recover quickly from short-term losses. Its disadvantage is that when wealth is weak, it needs to wait; if the major fortune lacks a wealth element, it may feel unappreciated, requiring active expansion of networks and learning new skills to seek opportunities.
"Weak self, strong wealth" wins in "having wealth to pursue," but fears "wealth overwhelming the body." Its advantage is that there are plenty of opportunities around (part-time work, collaborations), often experiencing passive wealth (support from elders). However, a weak self cannot bear wealth, which can lead to illness, more interpersonal conflicts, or wealth coming and going without being saved, even causing losses due to greed.
In terms of universality, "strong self, weak wealth" is slightly better — it can steadily accumulate wealth once opportunities arise, without the risk of "wealth overwhelming the body." "Weak self, strong wealth" requires more caution. Without the support of an印星 (element that transforms wealth into strength) or比劫 (elements that assist in bearing wealth), it may fall into "earning more but having more worries." Ultimately, whether it's good or bad depends on whether one can take action to avoid disadvantages (those with "strong self, weak wealth" should expand their sources of wealth, while those with "weak self, strong wealth" should learn to manage wealth properly).
Related Questions
Q: How to activate the potential if "strong self, weak wealth" hasn't entered a wealth fortune?
A: Supplement with food-shen elements to generate wealth, such as learning low-barrier skills like editing or copywriting to take small orders; wear jewelry with wealth attributes (e.g., green amethyst for wood wealth, red clothes for fire wealth); save fixed monthly amounts to prepare for a major fortune of wealth.
Q: How to protect wealth and health if "weak self, strong wealth" fears "wealth overwhelming the body"?
A: Only accept opportunities within your capacity, refusing excessive part-time jobs; use the印星 (element that transforms wealth into strength) to balance (wear black obsidian, read more books) to reduce impulsive spending; entrust some money to family members for safekeeping to avoid the impact of wealth on the body.




















