Introduction
Korean Saju is a traditional way of reading a person’s birth year, month, day, and time through the language of the Four Pillars. In Palza, we treat it as a structured lens for self-understanding rather than a tool for fear-based prediction.
The Four Pillars
The four pillars describe birth timing across year, month, day, and hour. Each pillar contains symbolic information that can be interpreted through relationships between elements, seasons, and personal patterns.
Why It Matters
Many people first encounter Saju as fortune telling. A modern reading can be more useful when it focuses on temperament, emotional rhythm, relationship patterns, work style, and decision tendencies.
Summary
Saju is most valuable when it helps people name patterns they already sense in themselves. Palza’s goal is to make that process clear, respectful, and practical.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Saju the same as BaZi?
They are closely related Four Pillars traditions, but Korean Saju has its own language, cultural context, and reading conventions.
Does Saju predict the future?
Palza avoids deterministic claims. We focus on self-understanding, reflection, and practical language for personal patterns.