A Korean way of reading time, temperament, and balance.
Saju, also known as the Four Pillars, is a Korean traditional system that reads a birth moment through year, month, day, and hour pillars. Each pillar is made from a heavenly stem and earthly branch, creating eight characters that are interpreted through the five elements: wood, fire, earth, metal, and water.
A saju reading is not a fixed verdict. At its best, it is a language for rhythm and relationship: where energy is strong or thin, where timing feels supported or strained, and how a person can live with more awareness of their tendencies.
How SajuRead uses saju
SajuRead calculates the four pillars and five-element balance from the birth information you provide. We then provide an interpretation focused on reflection, timing, relationships, money, family, and daily balance.
Compatibility and family consultations may ask for another person's birth data so the two charts can be compared with more context. Health rhythm readings are not diagnosis or medical advice.
Bokchae and bujeok guidance
Bokchae is used in SajuRead as a credit for follow-up consultations. A full reading also includes a personalized Korean talisman. After you write the wish or concern it should support, your personalized bujeok is prepared and added to your reading. It is presented as a symbolic reflection aid, not as a guaranteed result or supernatural promise.
A 부적 (bujeok) is a Korean charm, or talisman — part of the same folk tradition as the mudang, Korea's shamans. It is a written charm built from meaningful color, form, and intention. Yellow paper and vermilion red ink are common because they symbolize brightness, life force, cleansing, and protection. Some bujeok invite a blessing — smoother fortune, family peace, study success, or prosperity. Others are protective, meant to symbolically clear fear, misfortune, illness anxiety, or disruptive patterns.
SajuRead does not claim to reproduce temple-made materials or ritual preparation. Instead, each personalized talisman uses traditional Korean visual language as a personal keepsake for reflection. You can keep it privately, print the PDF, or return to it when setting an intention connected to your reading. It should be treated as a focus for attention and practical resolve, not as a substitute for medical, legal, financial, or safety decisions.