Qi Men Dun Jia Health Case study | Grandmother's Health Crisis – Dougles Chan



In this Qi Men Dun Jia lesson, Mr. Dougles Chan analyzes an urgent health divination case involving a client’s husband who suffered a heart attack in the early morning. The wife wants to know whether her husband can survive the situation, and the chart is used to show how health readings should be handled when time is sensitive and the question is serious.

This lesson is not medical advice and should never replace emergency care. In a real heart attack situation, the person must receive immediate treatment from qualified doctors and hospital professionals. Qi Men Dun Jia is used here only as a case study for symbolic reading.

In this case, the man’s birth-year stem is Gui Gui is located in Palace 6, so Palace 6 becomes the husband’s palace. The wife can be ignored for the main medical outcome because the question is not about marriage or relationship status. The question is whether the husband can overcome the health crisis.

The husband’s palace shows Open Door with Nine Earth. In this health context, Open Door with Nine Earth is interpreted as “opening the grave,” a very serious sign. This is not a positive symbol combination when the person is already in a critical medical condition.

The next step is to check the Problem Star, which represents the illness or health issue. The Problem Star is also located in Palace 6. This means the health issue is together with the husband, and it also carries the same Open Door with Nine Earth structure. This gives a second serious warning sign.

The answer palace is also checked. The answer is again in Palace 6, repeating the same Open Door with Nine Earth signal. This creates a strong pattern: the husband, the Problem Star, and the answer all point to the same palace and the same serious combination.

When a chart repeats the same message three times, the interpretation becomes much stronger. Mr. Dougles Chan explains that this is one of those cases where the chart is very direct. Everything points in one direction, suggesting that the heart attack is very difficult to overcome.

The conclusion is that the husband’s survival chance does not look favorable from the Qi Men Dun Jia chart. However, Mr. Dougles Chan emphasizes that the words used in such a situation must be gentle. A practitioner should not speak harshly to a family member in crisis. Instead, the message should be delivered with care, such as saying that the situation does not look good, the family should hope for the best, and they should prepare emotionally.

A student asks whether the wife’s relationship palace should be used because the husband is related to her. Mr. Dougles Chan explains that in urgent health cases, the subject is the person whose condition is being asked about. The wife is the asker, but the husband is the subject. Unless the wife’s role affects the outcome directly, the chart should focus on the husband’s condition.

Students also ask about doctor and TCM support. In health readings, Western doctor and TCM doctor can be checked to see whether they can control or clash the Problem Star. In this chart, the doctors do not have the right relationship to resolve the Problem Star. This suggests that medical help may not be strong enough to reverse the condition, although emergency treatment is still necessary.

The lesson also discusses how destiny chart and divination chart can work together. A destiny chart can show the larger health pattern of a person, while a divination chart can show the immediate situation more specifically. Both can be useful if correct birth details are available.

Another important topic is intention and karma. Students ask whether it is wrong to check when an elderly or sick person may pass. Mr. Dougles Chan explains that intention matters. If the purpose is to prepare, spend meaningful time, or make compassionate decisions, then the intention is different from trying to cause harm or benefit from someone’s suffering.

The practitioner must be careful not to support harmful intentions. If someone asks a health or timing question with suspicious motives, the safest response is to decline the case. A consultant can simply say they cannot help with that situation.

This lesson teaches Qi Men Dun Jia students how to identify the correct subject in an urgent health case, use birth-year stem for accuracy, read Problem Star, check doctor support, interpret repeated serious signals, and communicate sensitive outcomes with compassion.

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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