ALUTRA.
Timing

2,000+

Years of Documented Strategic Use

The System That Won Wars Before It Advised Boardrooms

Qi Men Dun Jia was originally developed for military strategy: choosing when to attack, when to retreat, which direction to advance, and what conditions favored victory. Today, the same framework applies to business decisions, career moves, and negotiations. The battlefield changed. The principles did not.

The Heaven Realm

Good Decisions at the Wrong Time Still Fail.

In the classical framework, every outcome is shaped by three forces: what you are born with (Man), where you exist (Earth), and when you act (Heaven). Qi Men is the Heaven lens. It reads the timing landscape around a specific decision at a specific moment.

Most people believe that if the strategy is right and the person is capable, the result should follow. But timing is not a minor variable. It is an equal third of the equation. The same action taken in the wrong window produces a fundamentally different outcome than the same action taken in the right one.

The Foundation

Built for Generals. Applied by Strategists.

Qi Men Dun Jia was not created for self-help. It was created for commanders who needed to know whether conditions supported their next move. The system uses 1,080 possible configurations across time, direction, and celestial positioning. It reads the landscape around a decision with precision down to the two-hour window.

Zhuge Liang

Strategist of Shu Han

Three Kingdoms (181–234 CE)

Known as the "Sleeping Dragon," Zhuge Liang used Qi Men Dun Jia to plan military campaigns, choose battle timing, and position forces. His strategic brilliance was not intuition. It was calculated reading of conditions.

Zhang Liang

Strategist of the Han Dynasty

Late Qin / Early Han (262–189 BCE)

One of the "Three Heroes of the Early Han Dynasty." Zhang Liang used Qi Men principles to advise Liu Bang on military positioning and timing, playing a decisive role in the founding of the Han Dynasty.

Liu Bowen

Advisor to the Ming Dynasty

Yuan / Ming Dynasty (1311–1375 CE)

Called the "Chinese Nostradamus," Liu Bowen deployed Qi Men Dun Jia to help Zhu Yuanzhang overthrow the Yuan Dynasty and establish the Ming. His strategic timing of military actions became legendary.

Modern Application

The Battlefield Changed. The Principles Did Not.

Today, Qi Men is used for the same purpose it was built for: reading the conditions around a specific decision and determining the optimal timing, direction, and approach. The client brings a question. The chart reads the landscape around it.

01

Career Moves

When to resign, when to accept an offer, when to negotiate. The same opportunity accepted in March versus June can produce completely different outcomes. Qi Men reads which window actually supports the move.

02

Business Launches

When to launch a product, open a location, or announce a partnership. Timing a launch is not superstition. It is strategic selection of conditions that support visibility, traction, and reception.

03

Negotiations and Deals

Which day and hour give you the strongest position. Where to sit, which direction to face, what approach fits the energetic landscape. Qi Men was built for exactly this kind of tactical precision.

04

Investment Timing

When to enter, when to hold, when to exit. The difference between a good investment and a great one is often not what you buy but when you buy it. Qi Men reads the timing landscape around a specific financial decision.

05

Difficult Conversations

When to have the hard conversation with a partner, a board, or a family member. The same words delivered at the wrong time create conflict. Delivered at the right time, they create resolution.

06

Property and Relocation

When to sign, when to move, which direction to relocate toward. Combined with feng shui analysis of the space itself, Qi Men ensures the timing of the transition supports the outcome.

The Process

Not a Prediction. A Strategic Position.

Qi Men does not predict the future. It reads the conditions around a specific moment and tells you whether they support your intended action. You bring a question or decision. A chart is cast for the moment of inquiry. The chart reads what forces are in play, which directions are favorable, what approach fits the conditions, and what to avoid.

You walk away with a clear read: move or hold. The best timing and approach. What to watch for. What to avoid. Not a fortune. A position.

Qi Men is often used alongside BaZi. BaZi tells you who you are and what season of life you are in. Qi Men tells you whether this specific moment, for this specific decision, is the right time to act and how to act.

The Cost of Getting It Wrong

The Wrong Timing Is Not a Missed Opportunity. It Is the Wrong One Taken.

Qi Men operates in two-hour windows across 1,080 possible configurations. A misread does not just mean bad advice. It means acting at the exact moment conditions are working against you.

Wrong Window, Real Consequences

A negotiation entered during a clash formation gets harder, not easier. A contract signed during a void configuration stalls or unravels. A product launched in a retreating energy cycle arrives dead on arrival. These are not metaphors. They are patterns that repeat across documented case studies. The difference between acting Tuesday morning versus Thursday afternoon can be the difference between a deal that closes and one that collapses. Qi Men does not predict the future. It reads which positions are open and which ones are blocked. Acting on a blocked position does not just fail. It costs time, capital, and credibility that you do not get back.

Why Generic Timing Fails

Most timing advice is generic: “this is a good month for business.” Qi Men does not work that way. The same two-hour window that is favorable for one person may be destructive for another depending on their personal chart, the direction they are traveling, and the specific nature of the decision. A window that is ideal for signing a lease may be the worst possible moment to negotiate salary. The system has 1,080 configurations for a reason. Flattening it into monthly horoscopes is not simplification. It is malpractice.

Begin

Timing Is Not a Detail. It Is the Decision.

Submit a private inquiry. If there’s fit, we’ll read the timing landscape around your next critical move.