Structurally, the configuration sits opposite the Children palace (子女宮) on the Children–Property (子女–田宅線) axis, and forms the ‘downward transmission’ axis with Children: Siblings · Health · Property · Children. Po Jun transforms 化祿 under Gui (癸), 化權 under Jia (甲); does not transform 化科 or 化忌.
Practitioner reading places the configuration where disruptor — clearing the field for renewal meets the chart-holder’s real estate, family home, and inherited assets: the chart-holder tends to bring reform instinct to the reservoir to liquid wealth’s river — accumulated, fixed, often inherited.
The textbook reading: chart-holders relate to property, home, and inheritance through disruptor — clearing the field for renewal. Common signatures include serial entrepreneurs, career-changers, restructuring specialists, reformers of broken institutions. Po Jun’s characteristic risk — unwanted upheaval rather than chosen reinvention when killings dominate — surfaces specifically through property, home, and inheritance when supporting conditions are absent. Pairings with Qi Sha reinforce this picture; pairings with the Four Killings (擎羊, 陀羅, 火星, 鈴星) sharing or opposing the palace can flip it.
Practitioners reading at depth weigh four further layers that this reference does not develop: which auxiliary stars (左輔, 右弼, 文昌, 文曲, 天魁, 天鉞) share or oppose the palace, whether any of the Four Killings (擎羊, 陀羅, 火星, 鈴星) sit in the same or opposing palace, whether self-transformations (自化) on adjacent palaces alter the configuration’s energy, and how the current 10-year and annual luck cycles activate or suppress what sits in the Property Palace and the opposing Children Palace. Synthesising these layers across a real chart is the practitioner skill the Zi Wei Dou Shu Masterclass teaches.