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Life Stage ·

Tomb ()

the vault — qi buried and stored, kept rather than gone

Position in cycle:
9 / 12
Qi state:
stored, dormant but retrievable

The ninth stage — an element's qi put into storage: buried, kept, not lost.

Overview

Tomb (墓, Mù) is the ninth of the Twelve Life Stages, and like Dying its grave-sounding name is a metaphor for an energy state, not an event. Also called the Storehouse (庫), it is the stage where an element's qi is buried and STORED — put away in the vault rather than destroyed. The four storage branches (辰戌丑未) are where this happens.

This is the key nuance: at Tomb the element is not gone, it is kept. Dormant, sealed, but retrievable — and a chart that later 'opens the storehouse' can release it. So Tomb is one of the four most-watched stages, with a double character: weak and hidden on the surface, but holding a reserve that can be drawn on.

In a chart

An element at Tomb reads as stored — weak and inactive at the surface, but held in reserve rather than spent. Whether it stays sealed or is 'opened' depends on the rest of the chart. It is a distinctive placement precisely because it is dormant-but-recoverable, not simply weak. This describes the element, not the person.

Worked example

Yang Wood (甲) is at Tomb in Wei (未): Wood put into storage in the late-summer storehouse — buried, dormant, but kept. The yin stems run the cycle in reverse.

Cross-system reference

SystemClosest archetypeNote
Zi Wei Dou ShuAlso a Zi Wei star — 墓 in the 長生十二神 (the twelve life-stage stars), placed by the 五行局Zi Wei runs the identical twelve-stage cycle as its 長生十二神 star series, dropped onto the palaces according to the chart's element class (五行局). 墓 is the same-named Zi Wei star — read there as a palace's phase-strength, not a Bazi element's qi. Both are strength-phase readings; neither is a life-event forecast.
Western astrologyNo clean analogy — a planet's energy held in reserve rather than expressedA loose analogy at best: Western astrology has no real equivalent of a 'storehouse' that seals an element's strength for later release. The idea of dormant-but-retrievable energy is specific to this system.

Cross-system anchors are a loose heuristic, not a literal equivalence. The Twelve Life Stages track the strength of an element's qi around the branch cycle — a mechanism Western astrology does not share; the nearest idea is a planet's strength by position (dignity / debility).

Reading this descriptively

Tomb describes the strength of an element's energy at a branch — stored and dormant, not destroyed — not a grave, death, or any event in a person's life. It is read for what it says about that element's reserve, and the same stage plays out very differently across different charts.

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