Elon Musk’s life is a spectacle that could rival any Hollywood blockbuster. A tale of staggering ambition, romantic misadventures, and the kind of unpredictability that makes the stock market tremble. One moment, he’s revolutionising space travel. The next, he’s naming his child something that looks like a Wi-Fi password. And just when you think he’s hit peak Musk, he goes and buys Twitter, fires half the company, and renames it X.

But what if all of this—the meteoric rise, the messy love life, the feuds, the obsession with legacy—was already written in the stars? Or rather, in his BaZi, the Four Pillars of Destiny, a system that reveals the unseen forces shaping a person’s fate. Today, we peel back the cosmic layers of Elon Musk, decoding why he is the way he is and what it means for the empire he’s built, the women who’ve loved him, the children who’ve distanced themselves, and the conspiracy theories whispering his name.

Jia Wood: The Relentless Climber

Musk’s Day Master is Jia Wood (甲木), the sturdy, towering tree that refuses to bend, refuses to break, and refuses to be anything but the tallest in the forest. Jia Wood people are not just ambitious; they are relentless. Once they set their roots, they push forward with unstoppable force, weathering storms, setbacks, and in Musk’s case, bankruptcy scares, legal battles, and the occasional Twitter meltdown.

A tree doesn’t move easily. It stands firm, no matter how much wind tries to shake it. This explains why Musk, even when ousted from PayPal, even when Tesla was on the brink of collapse, even when critics called SpaceX a billionaire’s foolish dream, simply refused to give up. It wasn’t just business to him; it was a fight for dominance. Jia Wood individuals don’t just want success. They must win.

The problem? Trees can also be stubborn to the point of self-destruction. Musk’s workaholic nature, his need to control every aspect of his companies, and his inability to delegate effectively are all classic signs of a Jia Wood personality gone extreme. He will sacrifice anything—sleep, relationships, public perception—if it means achieving his vision. But for a man with such a vast empire, it begs the question: at what cost?

The Love Life: Women, Weddings, and Walkouts

Musk’s romantic history is an endless cycle of attraction, obsession, control, and collapse. For a man who prides himself on being a futurist, he has an oddly Victorian approach to relationships. He once admitted he hates sleeping alone. He needs companionship, but not just any kind—he needs devotion. His partners must orbit around him, fuel his ambitions, and yet, somehow, remain content with being second to his empire.

His first marriage to Justine Wilson was supposed to be a fairy tale. Both intelligent, both ambitious, both dreamers. But what happens when two people with strong opinions clash? The marriage became a battleground, with Musk’s need for dominance overpowering Justine’s desire for equality. Jia Wood does not like being questioned, and Justine was not the type to sit quietly. When the marriage crumbled, she took a hefty settlement and left with the full realisation that love, in Musk’s world, would always come second to ambition.

Then came Talulah Riley, the actress who married him twice and divorced him twice. Their relationship played out like a high-budget sequel nobody asked for. First marriage—he adored her. Second marriage—he decided he didn’t love her anymore and sent a text about it. Just like that. Jia Wood is decisive, but not always considerate. A tree only moves when it chooses to, and Musk, once he had emotionally detached, did not hesitate to cut the cord.

Then, there was Grimes, the tech-pop artist who seemed like a match made in AI heaven. With her futuristic aesthetic and his obsession with innovation, they were the couple no one saw coming. But the relationship soon became a chaotic, meme-fuelled circus, complete with unconventional baby names, bizarre interviews, and a public spectacle of a breakup. While Grimes fascinated him, she was also too independent, too free-spirited. Jia Wood wants stability, predictability. She thrived in unpredictability, and eventually, the great Muskian tree let go of the quirky storm that was Grimes.

But even while with Grimes, Musk had another set of twins on the way—this time with Shivon Zilis, an AI executive at Neuralink. The world didn’t find out about them until months later, confirming what many suspected: Musk’s life operates on multiple timelines. He doesn’t just run several companies at once—he seems to run parallel relationships, fathering children across different realities like some omnipotent being conducting a long-term genetic experiment.

Fatherhood: Legacy or Liability?

Musk doesn’t just have children. He has an empire of offspring. With at least 11 children (and counting), it seems as though his mission to populate Mars has started right here on Earth. But while he parades around little X Æ A-12 at Tesla events, beaming with fatherly pride, his relationship with his other children is far more complicated.

His eldest child, Vivian Jenna Wilson, made headlines when she legally changed her name and cut all ties with Musk, declaring she wanted nothing to do with him. This was a very public, very direct rejection of her father—not just as a person, but as a legacy. Musk, ever the pragmatist, blamed “woke ideology” for turning his child against him, refusing to introspect on what role he may have played in her decision.

This detachment is key to understanding Musk. Jia Wood is not emotionally driven. It functions on logic, strategy, and control. A father-child relationship, in his mind, should operate on similar principles. His child, however, had no interest in playing by his rules. She severed the connection, and Musk responded not with heartbreak, but with intellectual justification. He framed the loss not as personal pain, but as a product of external forces he could not control.

In contrast, his current obsession with showcasing his son X Æ A-12 at public events feels almost like overcompensation. If he can’t have one child, he will double down on another. It’s a classic Jia Wood response—when something is taken away, grow stronger in another direction. If Vivian will not be part of his future, then X will be the next heir to the empire.

Power and the Muskian Shadow Government

Musk’s influence has always extended beyond business. His whispers in political circles, his involvement in controlling global internet access via Starlink, and his strategic meetings with world leaders have led many to speculate that he is far more powerful than any elected official.

There is an ongoing conspiracy theory that Musk is pulling the strings behind the Oval Office, subtly guiding policies, influencing elections, and shaping the future not just of technology but of geopolitics. Whether it’s true or not is irrelevant—what matters is that Musk cultivates the perception of power. Jia Wood people don’t just want success. They want influence that lasts generations.

His BaZi supports this notion. His Xin Metal (辛金) Year Pillar represents strategic, hidden power. He does not need to publicly declare control; his movements behind the scenes already shift the balance of power. The way he has embedded himself into military contracts, global satellite communications, and now even political discourse shows that his goal is not just innovation—it is legacy-building on a planetary scale.

The Final Muskian Destiny

Elon Musk’s BaZi is a fascinating blend of relentless ambition, emotional detachment, and an almost godlike urge to create, control, and conquer. His Jia Wood nature means he will never retire, never step away, and never truly be satisfied. He will continue building, fathering, dismantling, and reconstructing his empire in new forms.

His relationships may remain chaotic, his children may continue their complicated journeys with him, and the world may always remain unsure whether he is a visionary genius or an unhinged megalomaniac. But one thing is certain:

Musk will never stop expanding. The tree must always keep growing.

Want to Discover Your BaZi? Start Here!

  1. Find your Day Master using a BaZi calculator.
  2. Identify your Five Elements balance.
  3. Understand your Luck Cycles.

BaZi is not about predicting the future but understanding timing, choices, and energy cycles. It empowers you to align with favorable energies and make better decisions.


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