Let me get one thing clear first: no matter how low you are right now, if you have the patience to read this article carefully all the way through and follow through for one year — you will absolutely climb out of that valley, and your wealth will grow steadily richer.
Because every secret an adult needs to turn their life around, I, Master Chi, have laid out completely and thoroughly in this article.
When a family sinks into decline and poverty, there is always a reason: the family has no navigator.
A navigator is someone with a grand life pattern (格局), far-reaching vision, and clear understanding — a core figure who can look at objective reality and know exactly how the family should take each step forward.
The moment a family has even one such navigator, all internal friction, conflict, and strife dissolve. Everyone’s strength converges toward a single great goal.
Frankly, I have little patience for people who, even in this day and age, keep serving up endless inspiration — glossing over life’s real difficulties with feel-good platitudes.
Especially over the past two years, whether through messages in my backend or during destiny readings (命理), I’ve felt clearly how much pressure people are carrying from every direction. I myself have been through one upheaval after another, so I want to share something real — advice that can actually help you climb out of your darkest moments faster.
These past couple of days have been hectic in a way I can barely explain — part of it was spending time at the hospital with family, and part of it was the sheer number of year-end dinner gatherings that pile up this time of year.
Those dinners have a way of loosening things up once a few drinks go down. Stories start flowing, especially when you get a room full of middle-aged men who’ve actually made something of themselves. The conversation almost always drifts toward their own rise to success.
Master Chi hopes you will read these words every day — whenever you feel lost, anxious, or simply idle.
What’s remarkable is that many brothers and sisters who have read this passage find their Chi fortune (qi yun) truly beginning to flow more smoothly.
In life, encountering difficulties and setbacks is perfectly normal. The world is always changing — seas become mulberry fields, and so do I.
So there is no reason for me to wholesale deny my own wisdom and abilities just because of hardships and obstacles.
Not long ago, a private bank invited me to lead a small, closed-door sharing session for their most important clients — their top-tier high-net-worth customers in the region.
The moment I walked in, I realized that nearly half the faces in the room were familiar — people I’d already met through other circles and events.
So I tossed the script and spoke freely. With people I know well, I only ever say the honest things that cut deep.
These past few years, we have truly experienced more than our share of upheaval.
What comes next? Though we hold onto optimism, the path forward remains a mystery.
And so, I’m often asked by friends: should we seize this moment and take a bold plunge — in investments, startups, or business ventures?
My answer is unequivocal: when the weather keeps shifting between sun and storm, stay away from the open sea.
Only after truly experiencing the finality of life and death do we realize that all worldly desires and material cravings weigh nothing — lighter than a feather — compared to health and living well.
When you’re out and about, remember: don’t keep your eyes glued to your phone. Whether you’re in a crowd or walking down a back alley, take a moment to scan your surroundings as you go.
In everyday life, don’t get drawn into unnecessary conflicts. Mind your own business, don’t speak harsh words, and if you come across someone who is visibly on edge or highly agitated — avoid them if you can.
Tonight’s article is going to hit hard — every word is carefully chosen, and every word is soaked in the blood and sweat of hard-fought experience.
Because I, Master Chi, have never been one for comforting platitudes. I won’t tell you “just be a good person and the world will be kind to you.” That’s a lie designed to keep you docile.
What I want is for you to read my articles and come away with a stronger will and a tougher mind — and to use that to build a life that actually gets more comfortable, and a skill set that actually gets more powerful.
These past couple of days I went along with the crowd and watched a couple of episodes of Goodbye, My Love.
Many small thoughts came to mind. I’ve distilled them into the observations below. But the biggest takeaway is something I’ve said before: In this lifetime, the one mistake you absolutely cannot afford to make is choosing the wrong marriage partner.
Unlike other decisions where there’s room to course-correct, marrying the wrong person doesn’t cost you just a few short years — it rewrites your entire life story. And more often than not, it rewrites it as a tragedy.