July 2, 2026. Feng Shui

What Is Bu Gua (卜卦)? What to Expect from an I Ching (易经) Reading

If Bu Gua is new to you, it’s easy to imagine something mysterious happening behind closed doors. In practice, it’s much simpler than that. Bu Gua is a way of consulting the I Ching, the ancient Chinese Book of Changes, to think through a decision you’re facing. You bring a real question, we cast a hexagram, and we read what it says about your situation and its timing. There’s nothing spooky about it. It feels less like fortune-telling and more like sitting down with someone who helps you see your options clearly.

Feng Shui master conducting a house feng shui consultation to assess home energy and improve harmony in Singapore.

What Bu Gua Actually Is

In Chinese, bu means to divine, and gua refers to the trigrams and hexagrams of the I Ching. So Bu Gua simply means casting a gua to consult the Book of Changes, a text people have turned to for guidance for around three thousand years.

The whole idea rests on one simple truth: nothing stays the same. Things move between yin and yang, between action and rest. A Bu Gua reading looks at where your situation sits in that flow, and where it seems to be heading. It doesn’t lock in the future. It helps you read it.

How a Bu Gua Reading Works

People often expect the process to be complicated. It isn’t.

We start with a short conversation about what’s on your mind. Maybe it’s a career move, a business decision, or a personal crossroads you keep going back and forth on. The clearer your question, the more useful the reading.

From there, the hexagram is cast, traditionally by tossing three coins six times, one line at a time.

Here’s what typically happens:

  • We talk through the decision you’re weighing
  • We settle on one clear, specific question
  • We cast the hexagram, line by line
  • We read the primary hexagram, your situation now
  • We look at the changing lines, where things are moving
  • We explain the resulting hexagram, where it may be heading

Master Vanessa Lian, an accredited feng shui consultant, ties all of it back to your real situation. You leave with something practical to act on, not something abstract.

Traditional Bagua compass representing feng shui services in Singapore for home, office, and property energy analysis.

The Eight Trigrams

Every reading is built from eight trigrams. A trigram is just three stacked lines, each one either solid (yang) or broken (yin). Each one stands for a force in nature:

  • Qian (Heaven): drive and creativity
  • Kun (Earth): support and patience
  • Zhen (Thunder): sudden movement
  • Xun (Wind): gentle, steady influence
  • Kan (Water): working through difficulty
  • Li (Fire): clarity and light
  • Gen (Mountain): stillness and pause
  • Dui (Lake): openness and joy

Stack two trigrams, and you get a hexagram, six lines in all. There are sixty-four of them, and each one describes a situation or a stage in a process. That’s the whole toolkit. You don’t need to memorise any of it. Reading it is our job.

What Kind of Questions It Helps With

Bu Gua works best when you’re facing a real choice and the way forward isn’t obvious. It’s not really for idle “what will my year look like” questions. It’s for decisions.

People usually bring things like:

  • Should I take this job, or stay where I am?
  • Is this the right time to start or grow a business?
  • How should I handle a difficult relationship or negotiation?
  • Should I go ahead with this move or purchase?

If you like having a clear, structured way to weigh a decision, this is where Bu Gua is at its best.

Traditional Chinese Feng Shui coins symbolising wealth and prosperity in feng shui Singapore consultations.

Bu Gua, Bazi, or Feng Shui?

These three often get mixed up, so here’s the short version.

Bu Gua Bazi Feng Shui
What it reads One question, right now Your birth chart and life cycles Your home or workspace
Best for A decision you’re weighing today Understanding your long-term patterns Setting up a space that supports you
You walk away with Direction and timing for that choice A map of your strengths and luck cycles Practical changes to layout and flow

Many people use them together. You might start with a Bazi reading to understand your bigger patterns, turn to Bu Gua when a specific decision comes up, and bring in a house feng shui consultation or our wider feng shui services when you move house or set up an office. Different questions, different tools.

How to Prepare

You don’t need to do much. It just helps to:

  • Come with one clear decision in mind
  • Be honest about what’s really bothering you
  • Keep an open mind about the timing
  • Note down any follow-up questions as they come up

That’s it. The rest happens during the session.

Frequently Asked Questions

  1. Does Bu Gua predict the future?
    No. It reads the conditions and timing around your question and points to a likely direction. The choice always stays yours.
  2. Is it suitable for first-timers?
    Yes. You don’t need to know anything about the I Ching. We explain everything as we go.
  3. What do I need to prepare?
    Just one clear, specific question about something you’re facing. The sharper the question, the better.
  4. How is it different from a Bazi reading?
    A Bazi reading maps your birth chart and life cycles. Bu Gua answers one question, right now. Plenty of people use both.
  5. Why work with a consultant instead of an app?
    A trained consultant reads the changing lines in the context of your actual situation, so the guidance fits your life instead of being generic.

Ready to Try Bu Gua?

A Bu Gua reading won’t make the decision for you. What it will do is give you a clearer, calmer way to look at it.

If there’s a choice on your mind, a Bu Gua consultation with Master Vanessa Lian is a good place to start. Reach us through our contact page or send a message to +65 8118 5620. You’re always welcome to visit us at 16 Jalan Elok, Singapore.