胃 — Wèi, the Stomach, is mansion 17 of 28 in the classical lunar-mansion cycle and one of the seven mansions of the White Tiger (白虎) quadrant. The Stomach — the body’s granary. Favourable for harvest, storage, and stocktaking.
胃 Wèi: classical reading
Wèi — the Stomach — classically the body’s granary, the seat of digestion and storage. Tong Shu doctrine reads Wèi days as favourable for the storage of grain, the opening of warehouses, formal harvesting, and matters of consumption; cautious for swift action or undertakings that bypass careful preparation.
Configuration
Mansion:胃 (Wèi) — the Stomach
Position: 17 of 28
Four Symbol:白虎 White Tiger — West, Autumn, metal element
Animal totem:雉 (Pheasant)
Element: earth
Presiding weekday: Saturday
Classical domain
Wèi — the Stomach — classically the body’s granary, the seat of digestion and storage. Tong Shu doctrine reads Wèi days as favourable for the storage of grain, the opening of warehouses, formal harvesting, and matters of consumption; cautious for swift action or undertakings that bypass careful preparation. The mansion’s classical domain encompasses the stomach, the granary of the body, storage and digestion.
Auspicious activity register (Tong Shu doctrine)
Classical Tong Shu commentary records Wèi as broadly favourable for: harvest, storage, opening of warehouses, the formal preparation of food for ceremonies, accounting and stocktaking.
Cautious activity register
Classical commentary records caution for: travel, swift decisions, beginning of new ventures requiring rapid response. The cautious register is descriptive of the mansion’s classical reading, not prescriptive of a fixed prohibition — chart-specific reading determines whether the caution applies in a given case.
White Tiger context
The White Tiger governs the western quadrant — the autumn constellations, the metal element, and the register of judgment, harvest, and martial strength. Its 7 mansions describe the tiger’s anatomy and the regalia of authority. Wèi is mansion 3 of the White Tiger’s seven, sitting within the broader metal-element register of the western quadrant.
Why the lunar mansion alone is not enough
The Wèi (胃) mansion is one signal in a complete date-selection reading — not the whole answer. Classical Tong Shu (通書) doctrine layers four inputs into any date selection.
The lunar mansion governing the date. The 28 Mansions cycle through the calendar in a fixed seven-day weekday-coupled rhythm, so each candidate date carries one mansion as its presiding register. This is the input these reference pages describe.
The day’s stem-branch pillar. Every calendar date is also a 60-jiazi day pillar — one of the 60 stem-branch combinations that cycle every 60 days. The day pillar carries its own register, classical activity associations, and clash-or-combination relationships with the chart of whoever the date is for.
The year and month context. The current Tai Sui (太歲, the year god), the month branch, and the running shen sha for the year all modulate the date’s register. A mansion classically auspicious for marriage may be partially neutralised if the date falls in a month that clashes with the bride’s zodiac.
The chart-specific question. The date is being selected for a specific person and a specific event. The combination of mansion + day pillar + year/month context + the person’s own BaZi chart determines whether the date is genuinely auspicious for them. The same date can be excellent for one person and contradicted for another.
This page describes the first input — the Wèi (胃) mansion's register. The reading is a useful starting reference. It is not a substitute for a chart-aware date selection that layers in the other three. Master Sean Chan’s auspicious date selection reads all four layers against your specific event question.
Practical priorities
Note Wèi’s classical register — the mansion is classically associated with the stomach, the granary of the body, storage and digestion and its activity register reflects this domain.
Read the mansion against the event you are planning. Classical Tong Shu doctrine records Wèi as favourable for harvest, storage and cautious for travel, swift decisions.
The mansion is one of four inputs. See the “Why the lunar mansion alone is not enough” section above for the full date-selection calculus that includes the day’s stem-branch pillar, year/month context, and your specific BaZi chart.
What does the 胃 (Wèi) mansion mean in classical date selection?
Wèi (胃), the Stomach, is mansion 17 of 28 in the classical lunar-mansion cycle — one of the seven mansions of the White Tiger (白虎) quadrant of the night sky. Classical Tong Shu doctrine reads Wèi as the stomach — the body’s granary. favourable for harvest, storage, and stocktaking.
What is the Wèi mansion classically auspicious for?
Classical Tong Shu commentary records Wèi as favourable for: harvest, storage, opening of warehouses, the formal preparation of food for ceremonies, accounting and stocktaking. The classical register reflects the mansion’s underlying domain — the stomach, the granary of the body, storage and digestion. Note that the lunar mansion is one of four inputs into any complete date-selection reading; chart-specific application requires layering in the day’s stem-branch pillar, the year and month context, and your own BaZi chart.
Should I avoid events on Wèi mansion days?
Classical commentary records caution for travel, swift decisions, beginning of new ventures requiring rapid response on Wèi days, but the caution is descriptive rather than prescriptive. Whether the cautious register actually applies to your specific event depends on the day’s stem-branch pillar, the year/month context, and your own chart. A chart-aware date selection consultation reads all four layers together to determine whether a candidate date is genuinely contraindicated for you.
AUSPICIOUS DATE SELECTION
Get a chart-aware auspicious date for your specific event.
Master Sean Chan’s date selection service reads your specific event against your own BaZi chart, the year and month context, the lunar mansion governing each candidate date, and the shen sha that activate. Zero generic almanac advice — every date is chart-specific.
A BaZi consultation reads your full four-pillar chart and identifies the shen sha that activate around career, relationship, and event-specific questions — the chart-side context that makes any date selection actually meaningful.
For pre-computed auspicious dates by occasion type and month — weddings, ROM, business openings, contract signing, moving house, renovation — see the master index of auspicious dates by month.