Are naming or renaming really useful?
Hello everyone (๑╹◡╹)ノ This is your 31st meeting with Huoyun.
Someone in the fan group asked me before why I’m called. Huoyun.
Fan Baby: Mosquito, why are you called Huoyun? It doesn’t have a good meaning, does it?
Huoyun: Treasure, this is because the last character of my name is “Yun” (cloud), and as I was given the nickname Huoyun, it became Huoyun.
Actually, this name with “cloud” in it is a changed name 🤫 My original reasons for changing my name were twofold: one was that my original name had a slightly high rate of being duplicated, and the other, of course, was for some mystical reason, hahaha.
Today we’re going to talk about something funny:
What exactly is the significance of naming and renaming from a numerological perspective?

A good name is certainly important.
Because a name is a symbol, and symbols can convey a lot of information to a person and the group they belong to, and then have a reciprocal effect on that person.
For example, if you look at a child’s birth chart and find that they are not suited for studying, and then you insist on calling them “Tsinghua,” everyone who has received compulsory education knows more or less how much obvious or subtle name discrimination this “Tsinghua” child will encounter at school, including but not limited to teachers mocking you for doing so poorly on exams and still being called “Tsinghua,” etc.
This is the power of a “name”.
For example, if you give a child with a melancholic personality a cold name, people will really keep their distance from him, and he will eventually become more and more isolated. But if you give him a warm name, you can neutralize his innate melancholy and improve his communication with the outside world.

There are many different schools of thought in name analysis.
The current mainstream algorithm, which is also the method adopted by many name-generating websites, is called “Three Talents and Five Elements”.
According to the Three Talents and Five Elements theory, a name can be scored to determine its auspiciousness or inauspiciousness.
The core principle for Huoyun’s self-naming and renaming is still based on the “favorable elements in the Eight Characters” (Ba Zi), while also considering the strength structure of the Eight Characters, the phonetics, the meaning, and the name preferences of the child’s parents/the child, and taking into account the Three Talents and Five Elements theory, to make a comprehensive choice.
Therefore, if you want to find a name that suits you relatively well at a low cost, you should first determine the favorable elements in your birth chart, and then find a character that matches those favorable elements.
For example, if someone likes the element of fire, then they should use characters that represent fire, such as those with the fire radical, like 烽, 炜, and 阳.
Generally, following this pattern when naming your child will prevent you from making mistakes.
However, if you want to be more accurate, you need to look at the meaning of the whole name, because the five elements energy may change when some characters are combined.
For example, the character A originally represents earth energy and the character B represents fire energy, but when A and B are put together, they no longer represent fire and earth energy. This situation may also exist.
Therefore, if ordinary people want to name their children without spending money, they should avoid using characters that easily “distort” the five elements’ energy. These characters are mostly “empty” characters, such as 之, 子, and 若, which can easily change when combined with other characters.

Then, after a lot of practical experience, I discovered a very strange phenomenon:
In the absence of human interference, most people’s names correspond to their birth charts.
What does this mean? It means that without the intervention of a fortune teller, a person with a strong wood element in their birth chart will also have a strong wood element in their name, such as having many characters with the grass radical or the wood radical; a person with a strong fire element in their birth chart will also have a strong fire element in their name, such as having characters with the radicals for light, brightness, or morning, etc.
A small percentage of these cases occur without the intervention of a fortune teller; the names are chosen by the family themselves to supplement the favorable elements in the birth chart. However, these are very rare, accounting for only 5% to 10% of the cases I’ve seen.
Then, if you look at his year pillar or the state of his seal star, it often looks good, which means that his ancestors accumulated good karma. Then when you ask him, he says yes, either his grandparents helped the local area repair bridges and roads, or they were honest officials who benefited the people, or they practiced medicine and helped the world, and they have a lot of good reviews, and so on.
To this, I can only say it’s amazing. At the same time, I am once again amazed that doing good deeds and accumulating virtue is the best way to cultivate one’s destiny and bless future generations.