Qi Men Dun Jia Case study | Miss Mary’s Overseas Job Offer



In this Qi Men Dun Jia lesson, Mr. Dougles Chan analyzes a serious career decision involving a young student who received a job offer as a marketing person in a gambling company.

The offer looked attractive on the surface. Her salary would be about three times higher than her current income, but she would need to travel to a foreign country to work. She was only around 24 years old, so the question was important: should she take up the offer, or should she be careful?

This case teaches students that a job reading is not only about salary. A high salary can look exciting, but Qi Men Dun Jia helps us check the job, the answer, the contract, hidden risks, the asker’s condition, and whether the situation is safe.

The first step is to clean the chart and identify the relevant reference points. The asker is located in Palace 6. Her palace shows Rest Door, Nine Earth, Ren, and other symbols that describe her character and state of mind. Rest Door can show someone calm or comfort-seeking. Nine Earth suggests groundedness. Ren can show flexibility and emotional movement.

The job is represented by the Open Door. At first glance, the Open Door may look acceptable because it is connected to Nine Heaven, which can suggest a high-level opportunity, a big offer, or something attractive. This matches the real situation because the salary is three times higher than her current pay. However, a high-looking opportunity does not automatically mean it is safe.

The answer is located in Palace 8. This is where the reading becomes concerning. Palace 8 contains Injury Door and White Tiger. Injury Door is one of the unfavorable doors, and White Tiger can represent aggression, danger, harsh impact, accident, pressure, or a forceful situation. When Injury Door and White Tiger appear together in the answer palace, Mr. Dougles Chan warns students to be very careful because this is a harsh combination.

Palace 8 is also connected with Enter Grave and Six Punishment. Enter Grave can show something hidden, trapped, buried, unclear, or difficult to escape from. Six Punishment can show pain, pressure, trouble, complication, or a harsh experience. When these appear in the answer palace, the job offer becomes highly questionable.

The contract is another important reference point. Since the offer involves overseas relocation, employment terms, salary, legal conditions, and obligations, the contract must be examined carefully. The contract area shows Darkness, Geng, obstruction, and unclear information. Darkness can mean hidden matters. Geng can represent a strong obstacle, danger, or major challenge. Obstruction shows blockage and difficulty. This suggests that the contract may contain hidden issues, unclear clauses, or conditions that are not fully understood.

The chart also raises questions about the truthfulness of the information being presented. The job may look real, the offer may sound official, and the company may appear legitimate, but the energy behind it is not clean. In such cases, Mr. Dougles Chan teaches that we should not judge only by documents, salary, or impressive promises. We must ask whether the entire setup makes sense.

A marketing job in a gambling company, overseas relocation, and a salary three times higher than the current job create multiple warning points. The chart reflects this through the bad answer palace, questionable contract, hidden symbols, and the strong presence of White Tiger and Injury Door.

Mr. Dougles Chan explains that the work may appear to be normal marketing, but the actual environment can be different from what was promised. The real issue is not only the job title. It is the hidden structure behind the offer.

The conclusion is that she should not take the offer. The answer is negative, the contract is questionable, the opportunity is not clean, and the overseas element increases the risk. In the actual case, she did not take the job. Another friend accepted a similar offer and later got into serious trouble, confirming the warning shown in the chart.

This case is an important reminder that Qi Men Dun Jia can help protect people from risky opportunities. A high salary is not enough. A proper reading must check whether the opportunity is safe, whether the contract is clean, whether the job supports the asker, and whether hidden danger exists.

In this video, you will learn how to read a risky job offer, use Open Door for career opportunities, check the answer palace, interpret Injury Door and White Tiger, examine a suspicious contract, understand Enter Grave and Six Punishment, and combine chart symbols with practical judgment.

To learn Qi Men Dun Jia directly from Mr. Dougles Chan, click the link below:

Qi Men Dun Jia Apprentice Course

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