Through your birth date
We all wish to be someone who stays consistent.
To show up every day with steady effort,
To follow through without giving up halfway.
But somehow, for some people, this seems to come easily.
While for others, even with the best of intentions,
They often find themselves stopping in the middle.
Where does this difference come from?
In Saju (Korean Four Pillars of Destiny — a form of traditional personality and fate analysis based on birth time),
consistency isn’t just about willpower or effort.
It’s about inborn temperament, the direction of your energy,
and what makes sustainability possible in your flow.
For example, someone with strong Pyun-in (偏印, the Lone Scholar energy)
may appear quiet or slow on the outside,
but inside, they hold a deep, patient endurance.
These are the people who can stay with a single book for a long time,
or return to the same topic over and over again without getting tired.
On the other hand, people with strong Sang-gwan (傷官, the Creative Rebel energy)
tend to start things with passion — like a bright but short flame.
They’re full of ideas and creativity,
but easily get bored with repetition.
That doesn’t mean they lack consistency.
In fact, when they build a routine filled with variety,
they can sustain their energy for a long time
through their originality and drive.
Those with strong Bi-gyeon (比肩, the Independent Self energy)
tend to go far while keeping their own pace — even alone.
Bi-gyeon literally means “shoulder to shoulder with oneself.”
It represents a repeating presence of energy just like yours.
If you are fire, then more fire surrounds you.
If you are wood, more wood walks beside you.
It’s like having multiple versions of yourself
standing quietly by your side.
This is why people with strong Bi-gyeon energy
don’t need external approval to keep going.
They already have enough “inner voices” telling them to move forward.
These people often carry a quiet confidence and persistence.
They believe their own direction is most accurate,
even when others give advice.
Sometimes that confidence may turn into solitude.
But walking alone also means
you deeply trust your own flow.
Everyone has their own way of being consistent.
And their own kind of environment that helps them sustain it.
Going long doesn’t always mean “doing it forever.”
Stopping halfway doesn’t mean you failed.
We are all creating something —
in our own rhythm,
in our own way.