The configuration applies when the chart-holder’s day stem activates Hua Quan (化權) on a star that occupies the Spouse palace (夫妻宮). The activated star itself varies by day stem — for example, Jia stem activates Hua Quan on Lian Zhen; Yi activates it on Tian Ji; Bing activates it on Tian Tong; and so on across the 10 stems. Whichever star is activated, when it sits in the Spouse palace, the configuration described here applies. The palace also sits opposite the Career palace (官祿宮) on the Spouse–Career (夫妻–官祿線) — classical practice always reads the two palaces together.
Practitioner reading: Hua Quan in the Spouse palace can produce two readings. The favourable: a partner of strong character with their own authority. The friction: power dynamics in the relationship that require careful navigation. Often appears in marriages between two strong-willed people.
At textbook level, the configuration concentrates executive force into this life domain — the area where the chart-holder exercises genuine direction. The exact reading depends on which star receives the transformation in your day-stem column (different chart-holders see different stars activated here). Either way, the activated palace becomes a primary domain in any chart reading: it features in the favourable-cycle forecasts and re-fires whenever the chart-holder’s 10-year or annual luck stem matches the natal stem.
Practitioners reading at depth weigh four further layers that this reference does not develop: which Main Star is actually receiving Hua Quan for the chart-holder’s day stem, what other stars share or oppose the Spouse palace, whether self-transformations (自化) on adjacent palaces alter the configuration’s expression, and how the current 10-year and annual luck cycles re-activate or quiet the configuration. Synthesising these layers across a real chart is the practitioner skill the Zi Wei Dou Shu Masterclass teaches.