Born in 2009? Your Year Pillar is 己丑 — Yin Earth sitting on the Ox branch. The Year Pillar is the broadest layer of any BaZi chart: it sets the elemental backdrop for births under it, but it doesn’t determine your Day Master, your personality, or your fate. What it does — and how to read 己丑 alongside the rest of your chart — is what the rest of this page is for.
2009 BaZi summary: the year of 己丑 (Yin Earth Ox), position 26 of 60 in the sexagenary cycle. BaZi solar year began at 2009-02-04 00:49 CST (Sun at 315° ecliptic longitude, Li Chun 立春). Chinese Lunar New Year fell on January 26, 2009.
About the Year Pillar
The Year Pillar is one of the four pillars in your BaZi natal chart, alongside the Month, Day, and Hour pillars. Of the four it carries the broadest, most environmental flavour — you can think of it as the elemental climate of the era you were born into, rather than the weather of any individual day.
For 2009, that pillar is 己丑: the Heavenly Stem 己 (Yin Earth) sitting over the Earthly Branch 丑 (the Ox). Two questions follow naturally: what does 己 contribute, and what does 丑 contribute — and the same Year Pillar will read very differently depending on the Day Master it sits next to. The sections below walk through both pieces.
Heavenly Stem: Yin Earth (己)
Yin Earth (己) at the Year Pillar is fertile soil — the kind that supports crops and plant life. 己 contributes nourishment to the natal environment, but only when the chart provides moisture (Water) and warmth (Fire) in the right proportion. Too much Water and the soil floods; too much Fire and it dries out.
For a deeper reading of how Yin Earth functions when it appears as the Day Master itself, see the Yin Earth Day Master entry.
Earthly Branch: Ox (丑)
The Earthly Branch 丑 (the Ox) is late winter — the transitional moment when frozen ground begins to thaw. Its primary flavour is Yin Earth, but it is famously a “wet earth” carrying hidden stems 己 (Yin Earth), 癸 (Yin Water), and 辛 (Yin Metal). At the Year Pillar, 丑 contributes earth that holds residual Water and a hint of Metal — complex rather than simple.
The classical reading consideration is the chart’s overall warmth: 丑 needs Fire to dry out the soil before its Earth quality becomes useful. Without Fire, the year reads as cold and damp.
Combinations & clashes for 丑
In BaZi the twelve Earthly Branches form fixed pairings: every branch has exactly one combination partner (六合) and one clash partner (六沖). When a chart contains both members of a pair, the relationship transforms or destabilises that part of the chart. For year pillars, this matters most when reading 2009 against the Month, Day, or Hour Branches in someone’s chart.
How 2009’s Year Pillar reads against each Day Master
Your Year Pillar takes on a different meaning depending on what your Day Master is. Below is the Ten God relationship between 2009’s Year Stem (己) and each of the ten possible Day Masters. Find your Day Master in the table to see what 己 represents to you.
The Year Pillar tells you something about the elemental backdrop of your life, but it is not the centre of your chart. Your Day Master — the Heavenly Stem in your Day Pillar — is what most BaZi readings rotate around. Two people born in 2009 can have very different Day Masters and very different lives, even though they share the same Year Pillar. This is also why people born 60 years apart with the same Jiazi (e.g. 2009 and 1949) share elemental conditions but lead different lives shaped by different Day Pillars and different luck cycles.
The descriptions on this page are generic commentary on what 己丑 contributes at the year-pillar level. They are not a reading of any specific person’s chart. Practitioner-grade interpretation requires the four pillars together, the seasonal strength of the Day Master, the Ten Gods’ positioning, the auxiliary stars present, and the Luck Pillars currently active — all of which only emerge from a full chart cast against an individual birth date and time. There is no reading the Year Pillar in isolation that does justice to a real chart.
Important caveat on Li Chun: BaZi years run from Li Chun (立春), the precise astronomical moment when the Sun reaches ecliptic longitude 315°. For 2009 this falls at 2009-02-04 00:49 China Standard Time (UTC+8). Births before that exact moment are categorised under the previous BaZi year (2008 — 戊子). Always convert your local birth time to CST before interpreting a chart, especially if you were born within a few hours of Li Chun.
Frequently asked questions
What does it mean to be born in a Yin Earth Ox year?
It means your Year Pillar is 己丑 — one of the four pillars that make up your BaZi chart. The Year Pillar describes elemental backdrop, not personality. To read what 己丑 actually means for you specifically, you need to compute the full chart (Year, Month, Day, Hour pillars) and read the Year Pillar against your Day Master. Run your details through the BaZi Calculator for a starting point.
Is 2009 a good or unlucky year to be born in?
BaZi doesn’t classify years as universally lucky or unlucky — the same Year Pillar reads as helpful for some Day Masters and challenging for others. 己丑 provides Yin Earth energy at the year level; whether that’s welcome depends on whether your Day Master needs it, can use it, or is destabilised by it. The Ten God table above shows the relationship between 2009’s Year Stem and each of the ten Day Masters.
How is 2009 different from 1949 (also a 己丑 year)?
2009 and 1949 share the same Year Pillar (both 60 Jiazi cycles produce 己丑), so the Year Pillar reads identically. What differs is everything else: the Month, Day, and Hour pillars depend on individual birth date and time, the Luck Pillars rotate through different elemental phases, and the broader era’s context (社会大运) is different. Two people born under the same Jiazi but 60 years apart will share elemental conditions but live very different lives.
I was born in early 2009. Am I really a Ox?
BaZi years start at Li Chun (立春), which fell at 2009-02-04 00:49 CST in 2009. If you were born before that moment, your BaZi year is the previous one (2008 — 戊子). The Western calendar year matches the BaZi year only for births on or after Li Chun. Note: this differs from the lunar Chinese New Year date, which can fall earlier or later depending on the year.
Further reading from the blog
Selected posts from Master Sean Chan’s blog that cover this topic or closely related ones in practice:
2009 sets the Year Pillar of your chart, but the Day Master, Month Pillar, and Hour Pillar are what actually shape your reading. Book a one-on-one BaZi consultation with Master Sean Chan ($588–$788) for a rigorous, personalised analysis.
The BaZi Calculator takes your full birth details (solar-time corrected) and surfaces all four pillars — Year, Month, Day, and Hour — along with the Ten Gods and auxiliary stars derived from your Day Master.
The BaZi Bootcamp at Sean Chan’s Academy of Astrology takes you from beginner to confident chart reader — structured lessons, exercises, and live community.