The Eight Mansions (八宅, bā zhái) school divides the eight cardinal and intercardinal directions into four auspicious and four inauspicious orientations for any given Kua-holder. The classification depends on the chart-holder’s personal Kua number, calculated from birth year and sex. For a Kua 2 chart-holder, the eight directions distribute as follows:
Kua 2 belongs to the West Life Group (auspicious directions: NE, NW, SW, W). The four auspicious directions are dedicated to specific life functions — Sheng Qi (career), Tian Yi (health), Yan Nian (relationships), Fu Wei (stability) — and the four inauspicious directions register their classical names as — Wo Hai (low-grade friction), Wu Gui (relational theft), Liu Sha (legal/contractual harm), Jue Ming (severe loss).
For Kua 2 specifically, the East direction maps to Wo Hai (禍害) — Calamity / Misfortune. This is one of Kua 2's four inauspicious directions. The classification is fixed by classical doctrine and does not vary by year — the same Kua 2 occupant facing East in 2027 has the same Eight Mansions classification as in 2025 or 2030. What changes year-on-year is the annual flying-star overlay (covered in the next section).
Earth-element Kua-holders in the matriarchal Kun register. The classification also reflects the trigram dynamic between Kua 2's native trigram (坤 Kun, Earth (matriarchal)) and the East sector's native trigram (震 Zhen, Thunder). The inter-trigram relationship determines whether sleep in this direction nourishes or drains the chart-holder.
Sleep-quality reading for East bed-head + Kua 2
The Wo Hai direction is the mildest of the four inauspicious sleeping orientations. Classical Eight Mansions doctrine reads it as the source of low-grade friction — petty disputes, minor accidents, gossip cycles, the kind of recurring small irritations that wear at energy without causing acute harm. Sleeping with the head toward Wo Hai is not classically considered dangerous, but it is suboptimal: the orientation slowly accumulates relational friction over months. Where layout permits an alternative, practitioners recommend rotating away from Wo Hai for the primary bed.
For a Kua 2 chart-holder, bed-head pointing east is classically discouraged. Where the room layout permits any alternative, the head should be reoriented to one of Kua 2's four auspicious directions: NE, W, NW, SW. If the bedroom physically cannot accommodate any of those four orientations, the bed-head can rotate to a less-bad inauspicious direction within the same room (the rank-order of the four inauspicious directions is: Wo Hai mildest, then Wu Gui, then Liu Sha, then Jue Ming worst).
Sleep-quality signature. Occupants sleeping with the bed-head pointing east on a Kua 2 chart for extended periods (months to years) typically report patterns consistent with the classification's domain: petty disputes, minor accidents, gossip, low-grade friction. For an inauspicious orientation, the manifestations include: Recurring minor disputes with housemates, gossip cycles in the workplace, repeat small accidents — these are the classical Wo Hai signature; if they emerge after a bed move into Wo Hai, the orientation is the suspect.
2027 annual chart overlay
The 2027 annual flying-star chart places the 7 Red Metal star (七赤) in the East sector for the year. This star carries the register of theft, sharpness, security risk at year level, layered on top of the personal Eight Mansions classification.
The combination is doubly unfavourable. The personal Eight Mansions classification (Wo Hai) is inauspicious for Kua 2, AND the 2027 year-star (7 Red Metal) is a negative register at this direction. Sleeping in this direction during 2027 layers personal-level and year-level registers in the same orientation — classically the strongest case for relocating the bed to one of Kua 2's auspicious directions before mid-2027 if relocation is feasible.
For occupants planning bed moves in 2027, the cleanest reading is to align bed-head direction with both the personal Eight Mansions classification AND a favourable year-star sector where layout permits. Where the two layers conflict (auspicious personal direction + negative year-star, or inauspicious personal direction + positive year-star), the personal Eight Mansions reading is structural and wins over the year-level shift — but year-level register can predict the specific quality of disturbance that occupants experience.
Practical orientation guidance
For Kua 2 occupants currently sleeping with the head pointing East (or considering a layout that requires it), the practical priorities are:
- Reorient the bed where layout permits. The head should rotate to one of Kua 2’s four auspicious directions: NE, W, NW, SW. Even small rotations within the same room often help — classical Eight Mansions doctrine reads orientation by quadrant rather than by exact compass degree.
- If the bedroom physically cannot accommodate any auspicious orientation, the next-best option is to move sleep to a different room in the home where layout permits an auspicious orientation. A guest bedroom or study with a sofa-bed in an auspicious direction often outperforms a master bedroom locked into Jue Ming or Wu Gui.
- If room relocation is also impossible, the next-best within-room compromise is to rotate the bed-head to the least-bad inauspicious direction. The four inauspicious directions rank from worst to best as: Jue Ming (worst), Liu Sha, Wu Gui, Wo Hai (mildest). Wo Hai is significantly preferable to Jue Ming even though both are "inauspicious."
- Day-time activity and short-term occupancy in this direction is not problematic — the Eight Mansions sleep rule applies specifically to extended-occupancy sleep orientation. Sitting at a desk facing this direction during day work, or briefly using a guest room here, does not accumulate the same effect.
Households where the East bedroom cannot be relocated and has consistent occupants benefit from a professional feng shui audit. The classical correction for difficult Eight Mansions assignments is site-specific and often involves trade-offs between competing constraints (room availability, partner Kua, life stage, year overlay).