View Full Version : 3 ways to consult an oracle
heylise
December 18th, 2004, 06:43 AM
There are 3 ways to consult the oracle. They are the same 3 ways for any oracle, because they hardly depend on the kind of oracle, they depend on the querent, or the question.
1) asking as a independent individual, hoping the shaman will trigger one?s creativity.
2) as an insecure child, asking to be told what to do
3) as an unrealistic scaredy-cat, wanting to know the future
Example, 3.3-63:
1) look carefully at what you are planning to do, make precautions, a strategy, get information, look at alternatives.
2) desist
3) you will get lost in a forest
LiSe
candid
December 18th, 2004, 10:26 AM
You mean... you mean... (gasp)... taking responsibility?
candid
December 18th, 2004, 11:05 AM
LiSe,
I'm not sure I completely agree with this. Especially the connotations. I know what you mean in general, but consider that sometimes the best perspective is as a child, but not always an insecure one. Same with wanting to know the future. Sometimes that's just asking for a little foresight, a little peek down the road or around the corner, ie: what does today look like? There is a certain awe in perceiving the forester as someone or something outside yourself; a universal eye, a bodhisattva, a god, a spiritual teacher. But after this, accepting responsibility.
What would coyote say?
hilary
December 18th, 2004, 11:54 AM
Putting on my devil's advocate hat http://www.onlineclarity.co.uk/I_Ching_community/clipart/mischief.gif...
Isn't the child who simply asks what to do, and does it, the most secure one?
And sometimes I think people need to get a look at the future, at where they're headed, before they can even start thinking about being creative, strategic et al. Eg - "Can this relationship ever work out? Because if there's hope, I'll throw myself into it... but if there's none, I'd rather know now than after years of futile 'creativity'."
lindsay
December 18th, 2004, 12:17 PM
Yes, I agree with LiSe. In fact, I think she touches upon a couple of important points about the Yi (and any oracle) that do not come up very often in this forum.
First, the Yi is only as perceptive as the people using it. A person with a lot of mental furniture ? a good education, lots of life experience, familiarity with creative work, psychological insight into the ways of the world ? will produce a much richer and more rewarding reading than a person without these things. That is because the language of the Yi is symbolism. Whether one reads the text, the trigrams, the line structure, or any other feature of the Yi, they are all symbols requiring interpretation. A master of symbols will be a master of the Yi. That is why mathematicians, musicians, poets, artists, and religious folk are the best diviners ? they are well acquainted with thinking in symbols.
Second, the Yi speaks to people on the same level as their character. A noble person will get a noble reading; a suspicious person will find cause to suspect; a dishonest person will uncover layers of duplicity. The Yi can not make you a better person unless you already have the potential and desire for improvement. The Yi will not drag you down unless you want to go down. The Yi is everything to all people. It is a mirror of ourselves.
Third, there is no way to know the future. Anyone who says different is a charlatan. No oracle in the world can tell you what will actually happen tomorrow. Oracles can suggest lines of future development that may seem plausible. But frankly any thinking person can do the same.
I do think the Yi can offer good advice that is near universal in its application. That is because it is relentlessly centrist in its approach to problems and situations, nearly always counseling the middle way. I know of no wisdom literature that does not essentially follow the same tack. In this regard, the Yi is no better or worse than a hundred other sources of good advice.
The one positive thing the Yi can do very well is ? as LiSe says ? ?trigger one?s creativity.? It can introduce you to the unfamiliar, and reintroduce you to the obvious in a way you cannot do yourself. It is, I think, an explorer?s tool for accessing and retrieving information from the ocean of psyche. It connects us to mystery, the quality giving life its tang and relish. Most of all, it gives us hope. People who use the Yi for counsel and inspiration are saying life?s problems are worth solving. They are alive and well.
LiSe, you are such a treasure! Thank you for this posting.
lindsay
December 18th, 2004, 12:36 PM
Semantic games are being played here with "children." Who says children do not have wonderful qualities we could all use: sincerity, honesty, curiosity, innocence, energy, playfulness, and so on? In Zen, "beginner's mind." But, despite their admirable qualities, children are not adults. We do not want children running the world. "Lord of the Flies." There is a time when we must put away childish things. Let children be children, but encourage adults to be mature when facing their problems and those of others - including the problems of their children.
candid
December 18th, 2004, 12:45 PM
Hi Lindsay,
I agree, LiSe is certainly a treasure.
I disagree that Yi can not (ever) foresee the future. It is not a fortune teller, that I agree with, but it certainly can and does prepare us for immediate forthcoming events. Call it charlatanism, if that satisfies you, but I know from personal experience, Yi has eyes that see beyond the present.
candid
December 18th, 2004, 12:56 PM
Lindsay, I see no semantic games being played here. Have you never heard the saying: And a child shall lead them? Or, suffer not the children to come to me? How about, Wu Wang, hexagram 25?
candid
December 18th, 2004, 01:26 PM
The individual contains the shaman, the insecure child and the scaredy cat. Isn't one of the main reasons we consult the Yi to bring the lower up to the higher? It seems pretty limiting to reserve the oracle for only the shaman. He/she doesn't even need an oracle. He/she is the oracle.
hilary
December 18th, 2004, 01:39 PM
Hatless, I agree with a lot that's been said here, too. (And I notice that LiSe didn't actually say we should only ever come from option 1 http://www.onlineclarity.co.uk/I_Ching_community/clipart/happy.gif )
Possibly we don't want children running the world - but luckily for us, all we have to divine about is how we run our own lives. Children don't run their own lives... divining as a child might mean saying that we don't want to run ours, either. 17,2 or 17,3? Commentators tend to say very bad things about 17,2; Yi offers no verdict at all.
About 'mental furniture' - good point. Nowadays I find Yi helps to arrange the furniture I add. New books get hexagrams pencilled in the margins so I remember what a particular passage is about. Periodically a passage gets copied into my hexagram notes, as I've just realised what a hexagram is about.
Or another good way to furnish the understanding - divine about stories.
candid
December 18th, 2004, 01:53 PM
Let?s take the worst case in LiSe?s scenario: (just playing this out in my head, hope nobody minds)
An unrealistic scaredy-cat, wanting to know the future.
Here?s the challenge: Can the unrealistic scaredy-cat receive Yi?s council, and then follow it? Everything hinges on this.
Let?s say he/she does receive it and follows it. Now the unrealistic scaredy-cat becomes the insecure child, and asks ?what do I need to doooo!!!? hwaaaa!? Along comes the independent individual, who says ?geeze, this kid needs help.? The independent individual summons the shaman, who triggers creativity in the independent individual, who tells a story to the insecure child, who then puts to rest the unrealistic scaredy-cat. (love that phrase)
martin
December 18th, 2004, 01:56 PM
<BLOCKQUOTE><HR SIZE=0><!-Quote-!><FONT SIZE=1>Quote:</FONT>
And I notice that LiSe didn't actually say we should only ever come from option 1<!-/Quote-!><HR SIZE=0></BLOCKQUOTE>
Yes, right! No judgment implied, we Dutch are not judgmental, y'know. http://www.onlineclarity.co.uk/I_Ching_community/clipart/biggrin.gif
<BLOCKQUOTE><HR SIZE=0><!-Quote-!><FONT SIZE=1>Quote:</FONT>
2) as an insecure child, asking to be told what to do<!-/Quote-!><HR SIZE=0></BLOCKQUOTE>
Oracular language?
(divining mode on)
I guess LiSe means that one pretends to be helpless or thinks one is helpless, while one isn't, in fact. The questioner overlooks his or her resources, talents, abilities, and so on.
I think it is this kind of helplessness that the Yi sometimes addresses when it answers with hexagram 4.
(divining mode off)
candid
December 18th, 2004, 02:07 PM
"And I notice that LiSe didn't actually say we should only ever come from option 1"
Correct. She didn't.
lindsay
December 18th, 2004, 02:38 PM
Yes, I love the Dutch! I'm planning on being reincarnated in Holland - but not just yet, thanks.
What LiSe said and what LiSe meant are two different things. If you guys don't see a bit of judgment in her posting, I think you are being a trifle disingenuous. Anyway, LiSe - like any mature adult - can speak for herself. And will, no doubt.
Candid, about knowing the future, we do not disagree, I think. What I am saying is this: there is no oracle in the world that can tell you the future with dead certainty, so you can bet on it in advance without a flicker of doubt or without lifting a finger. An oracle is not tomorrow's newpaper today. That's all I am saying.
As usual Martin is on target. Martin, with all that intelligence and wit, why aren't you rich and famous?
Hilary, I am wondering about "divining about stories"? Does that mean you tell the Yi a story, and then see what the reaction is? "Once upon a time, there was a nice man who needed to pay his bills . . ."
martin
December 18th, 2004, 02:47 PM
Dear Lindsay, how do you know that I'm not rich?
And why do you think that I'm not famous?
http://www.onlineclarity.co.uk/I_Ching_community/clipart/biggrin.gif
hilary
December 18th, 2004, 02:48 PM
Nothing so sophisticated. More 'I was reading this novel/ watching this embarrassingly juvenile TV programme, and this happened. Felt like a highly significant moment to me. How would you describe it?'
candid
December 18th, 2004, 02:51 PM
Lindsay, I agree with you there. And I also see your point more clearly about children, after re-reading your comments.
I'm curious too what LiSe has to say to these things. I honestly don't know whether to read judgment into her comments or not. Maybe it was more just creative impulse, which isn't always gentle. Admirable, nonetheless.
hilary
December 18th, 2004, 02:58 PM
Fr'instance...
example from Buffy the Vampire Slayer, no less. (Told you it was embarrassing.)
Buffy's best friend Willow, who's a witch, is just reuniting with her lover. Her lover is shot and killed. Willow turns into a very black, superpowered witch, and goes on a revenge rampage before setting out to destroy the world. (What all the best villains do in Buffy-land.)
Buffy catches up with Willow and tries to talk her out of it, convince her of what a wonderful place the world is. Unfortunately, Buffy died at the end of the previous series and went to heaven, but was brought back to life on earth (by Willow). So she's actually very depressed and hasn't really convinced herself that the world is worth saving. Willow knows this, and laughs Buffy's best efforts to convince her to scorn.
I asked Yi about this moment, and received 56, line 4:
'Wanderer in a shelter,
Gains property and an axe.
My heart is not glad.'
luz
December 18th, 2004, 03:24 PM
I might be a bit over my head here, but I think that what LiSe is talking about is the attitude one has when reading interpreting an answer.
The question might be the same, but if you have the attitude of being told what to do or your hope is to be told exactly what will happen, then your answer - in that example - will be very gloomy. If you interpret it as a mature individual, then you see the direction. You get the message, see the hope, or the need to take control in the situation.
candid
December 18th, 2004, 03:52 PM
Hilary, it took a few attempts to understand the question, and a connection to the topic.
Buffy gains her life back along with her "stuff", but her heart isn't glad. Why isn't her heart glad? Because nothing has really changed. She still has to deal with the witch, Willow, and it seems futile to try and save the whole world.
What Buffy (gawd, am I really saying this?) needs to recognize is in the relating hex.19 - she is not the One in total control of the world's welfare, but is acting as teacher and protector/defender. This will give her more tolerance of the people. But she must temper this optimism, knowing neither will this last forever.
heylise
December 18th, 2004, 04:00 PM
Ok, ok, I know. I did put it a bit too harsh on purpose. But not only ..
First I will answer Lindsay:
?If you guys don't see a bit of judgment in her posting, I think you are being a trifle disingenuous.?
Yeah, good observer?
?the Yi speaks to people on the same level as their character.?
This is the huge danger of using the Yi for telling you what to do. A wise person can ask what to do, but will interpret the answer according to his/her own judgment or intuition. Not taking the literal words as ?this is it?, but understanding their context, how they relate to this special question, how they should be understood in regard to the big differences in culture then and now. So he/she asks what to do, but essentially lets the answer trigger his/her own intuition.
?Encourage adults to be mature when facing their problems and those of others.? I have nothing at all against children, but when facing problems, being like a child is not the best way. If you have someone you can trust completely, then you can ask ?what shall I do?. Can you trust the Yi? As a child, I would not, because the answer will be a child?s answer.
Martin: ?I guess LiSe means that one pretends to be helpless or thinks one is helpless, while one isn't, in fact. The questioner overlooks his or her resources, talents, abilities, and so on.?
Yes. Innumerable people don?t even dare to think they can run their lives themselves. But it is the only way to live your life, every other way is second-hand. I do not mean, that it is always good to do all your way, and never listen to anyone else. If you can discern who can be trusted, then it can be very good to listen or to obey. But that trustworthiness has to accord with your own values. So the base is again your own judgment.
Hilary: ?all we have to divine about is how we run our own lives?
That was the source of my post! And with ?we? I do not mean our simple everyday rational or emotional way of running our lives, but it includes the shaman/god/intuition however you want to call it. The one who lives in all of us and in all of creation, but who is sometimes so difficult to hear.
Candid: ?..the shaman. He/she doesn't even need an oracle. He/she is the oracle.? Mm, maybe even a shaman sometimes appreciates the advice of another shaman.
?I know from personal experience, Yi has eyes that see beyond the present?.
This is the most difficult one. Yes, I have that experience too. Maybe Yi can indeed ?see the future?, but can we interpret it in a way, that we manage to see it as well? Maybe, very seldom, we can do so, with help of the Yi. But personally would not count on it to happen very often. There are people who have the ability to see beyond here and now, but not on command, not for practical questions, often not for very important ones either. I do know that these things happen, but they are so elusive, that anyone who tells me that you can simply throw a coin and open a book and there it is.. No.
LiSe
lindsay
December 18th, 2004, 04:17 PM
Ooooo, Hilary, I love this idea of divining about stories! For someone like me, who only divines for himself, it offers a break from the kind of unrelenting introspection and self-absorption I can fall into with the Yi. Sometimes I flay myself so many ways with the Yi that I feel like a tray of sushi. It would be wonderful to have another line of inquiry. Thank you! I can't wait to try it.
Candid, I don't think the shaman is ever the oracle. The oracle takes possession of the shaman in trance, but the shaman does not confuse his/her own personality with that of the gods.
LiSe, great post, but I don't have time to respond. Later, I hope.
heylise
December 18th, 2004, 04:21 PM
Seems like a contradiction, that I think it is not possible to ask how the future will be, but I do think there are flexibilities in 'time', of past, present and future.
I think you cannot ask for it - but sometimes a glimpse can be given to you.
I don't know exactly how that works. If I can figure it out, I will let you know. If I find it is rubbish, after a bit more thought, I will let you know too. Or maybe someone has an illuminating idea..
LiSe
hilary
December 18th, 2004, 04:46 PM
Yes, Candid, I have so far corrupted your intellectual purity that you really are saying this! Ha! Buffy's problem is that earth is a let-down after heaven, and it's hard to get enthusiastic about having to 'shelter' here over again. (But the relating hexagram is 52 ;) )
Do not search too hard for connections to the topic, they are tenuous at best. I have a whole day to think about readings instead of Word formatting, and I'm rambling.
(By the way, the world was saved in the end. I wouldn't want to worry anybody. It was saved in the following series, too.)
LiSe - yes, I agree all the way. I often try to nudge people towards option 1 instead of option 3. And I agree that Yi might talk about the future, but that today's reading is not tomorrow's newspaper. (Nice one, Lindsay.)
And yet... I think there can be a legitimate place for all 3 ways. Lindsay said we wouldn't want children to run the world... I've an idea that maybe at times we might want to give up 'running' our own lives, just to see what happens. Of course there are degrees of this - being a helpless Suzie, not good - but I do think it's possible to overdo the 'responsible adult', too.
There are a few lines about this kind of thing. 20, line 1: looking on things like a child is fine if you want to be 'small' and have no influence on your surroundings, not so good otherwise.
37,3: the wife is giggling with the children, but she's the one who's meant to hold the home together.
17,3: letting go the small child is the way to go after what you want; stick with it, stake your claim, get results.
17,2: holding to the small child, letting go the responsible adult... and no comment at all. http://www.onlineclarity.co.uk/I_Ching_community/clipart/happy.gif
As for the scaredy-cat... well, the man I love loves me, and I have food and a roof. If things were different, I can't say for sure that I wouldn't be quivering up a telegraph pole with the best of them.
candid
December 18th, 2004, 04:51 PM
Lindsay, if the oracle takes possession of the shaman, they become one. That's what I meant. As in 45, the central man acts as host.
LiSe, again I'll clarify what I mean be "seeing" the future. I am not talking about predicting a future outcome. I am referring to "seeing" what something looks like before entering into it.
Combining these two points, the central man becomes the shaman who ?sees? the future. This happens with or without the Yi. If the Yi isn?t there, dreams will be. If there are no dreams, a bird will tell. If there are no birds, a flea. If there are no fleas, a rock. If there are no rocks, he will know anyway because premonition will tell him. Premonition existed before yarrow stalks or any divination, and premonition existed before man. Observe the coyote. How then can you say Yi does not see the future?
jte
December 18th, 2004, 04:54 PM
"Third, there is no way to know the future. Anyone who says different is a charlatan."
Gotta say, Lindsay, that's simply not true. My experiences with the Yi indicate that it can indeed predict the future, albeit as subject to one's individual interpretation. In fact, it can predict future events at an extremely fine level of detail.
I have nothing of substance to gain by saying this and a lot to lose potentially - I have a fine job at an engineering firm run by scientists and businessmen/women who just might fire me if they knew I really and truly do believe in the I Ching. I have no plans to become a fortune teller or otherwise profit from predicting other people's future. I do, however, report my own experience here hoping that others will be able to benefit.
I'll add generally on this thread that it never hurts to contemplate and cultivate a respect and appreciation for the wisdom, talents, and many other positive personal qualities that the great body of Yi-users out there may have to offer.
- Jeff
candid
December 18th, 2004, 05:00 PM
Hilary, well thanks a lot. I was saving my virginity for something a bit more fun. But I guess Buffy's not so bad.
Oh yeah, 52. I was just seeing if you were awake on your day off from Word formatting. (nodnod)
martin
December 18th, 2004, 05:05 PM
I once asked the Yi if and how it can predict the future and the answer was 46.
It sees the roots in the ground. Because it sees the roots it knows what the new shoots will look like when spring comes. If there are new shoots, if .. that is uncertain. It is a matter of probabilities.
But some things are quite certain.
Question: Will we have bananas this summer?
Oracle: No stupid, this is the root of an apple tree!
I think what the Yi said is that it doesn't really predict the future in the sense that is 'sees' it directly. But it looks deep into the present - deeper than we - and sees the roots of the future. Or, using other metaphors, it sees the seeds, the babies in the wombs.
In abstract speak, it taps the causal levels.
kevin
December 18th, 2004, 05:11 PM
http://www.onlineclarity.co.uk/I_Ching_community/messages/48/2950.jpg
http://www.onlineclarity.co.uk/I_Ching_community/clipart/happy.gif
candid
December 18th, 2004, 05:14 PM
Martin, I love your points and do agree. But I believe it also goes beyond natural evolutionary causality.
martin
December 18th, 2004, 05:22 PM
Kevin, that is an unexpected development! http://www.onlineclarity.co.uk/I_Ching_community/clipart/biggrin.gif
Candid, I agree, it goes beyond that.
As LiSe said: "If I can figure it out, I will let you know." http://www.onlineclarity.co.uk/I_Ching_community/clipart/happy.gif
pagan
December 18th, 2004, 06:42 PM
Two points here. One involves the notion of Character=destiny again. If we are aggressive in character, there will be accidents, destruction, broken bonds etc. in the future. When that character changes, then the future changes. If a person's characater is soft and weak, that person's future will be abused and eaten alive by predators. It is a mathematical certainty.
Secondly, I notice many post questions from a standpoint that is already answered in the IC. For example, when involved with a married man (perhaps hex 54) the IC says "relationships that are based on personal affection but not protected by law (such as marriage) rely entirely on self restraint. You cannot presume upon them and you can't expect anything and you really have no power in the situation. So, if that is the situation you are in, the answer is already contained in the text of the IC and doesn't need a new answer.
It would seem to me that rather than doing the oracle, throwing coins or any other method, you should just seek the answer as it is already addressed in the IC. Using the IC as an oracle can confuse the point. If you want to know about the future, the 'rules' are already laid out in the IC and your answer is there if you study it.
Can anyone think of a question that isn't already answered in the IC?
P.
hilary
December 18th, 2004, 07:01 PM
Yes:
"Which hexagram and line best describe the situation I'm in?"
martin
December 18th, 2004, 07:12 PM
Wow Hilary, that's clever. http://www.onlineclarity.co.uk/I_Ching_community/clipart/happy.gif
And true ...
candid
December 18th, 2004, 07:54 PM
Exactly. It?s all in there, true, but where am I (or whomever) at this time, and what conditions are prevailing and countervailing?
lindsay
December 18th, 2004, 08:08 PM
And that's why the Yi is an oracle and is not a scripture.
pagan
December 18th, 2004, 10:56 PM
Sometimes the IC seems like a parent that knows the dangers that the unexperienced child has no cognition of. I do a daily reading in the morning and today I received hexagram 29. I had no idea of any danger, but it seems like the Sage did. (it was 60 line 1 changing to 29). I just decided that today I don't really need to do anything so I stayed home and cleaned out cupboards and simple stuff. If there was some danger I never saw it because I followed the direction of the Sage and stayed indoors.
Hillary, do you ever stop to consider what hexagram and line best fits the situation you are in? And then compare your own perception to what the oracle gives as an answer?
P.
hilary
December 18th, 2004, 11:59 PM
Not as a rule... though sometimes when I've got a line or two into the casting, I'll find myself anticipating the answer. And like I was saying, I do naturally think of hexagrams in association with ideas when reading.
I think when I do anticipate what hexagram I'll receive, this comes from something deeper and less rational than a consideration of the best fit, though.
jeanystar
December 19th, 2004, 04:03 AM
I love to be the individual looking towards the shaman to ignite my own creativity/intution......and yet, I can think of many times when the Yi proved to be an invaluable friend and guide when I was necessarily the "insecure child" and a scaredy cat with no one else to turn to in the immediate sense.
One example comes to mind: My husband was away and my 10yr old and went out for sushi. An hour after we got home, my daughter doubled over with stomach cramps. I was concerned and at first, just told her to breathe deep....but then she turned sheet-white and what threw me into a real panic was that she got down on her knees and started sobbing and praying to God. This was not only unusual but highly uncharacteristic. I was scared, to put it mildly, and my hands were trembling, I called an ambulance and then, kneeling next to her, I threw the coins. I didnt even formulate a question. I was just seeking a panic-overview.
The Yi gave me 21.3.....and all I remember from whatever simple text I had then was that it was a problem with poison and that there was no error or harm. I had enough trust in the Yi at that point in my life to feel assured, altho I was quite helpless to change anything. A minute or so later, she vomited and the pains stopped.
another instance was when I was about to drive 5 hours up a highway into New England on a clear winter's night by myself. I asked for an overview of my trip and got 29. 5 or 6..I forget which. I thought that sounded ominous but people were expecting me, so uneasily, I took off.
two hours later, I hit a blinding blizzard, the roads were absolutely treachourous and the traffic was at a snail's pace with cars skidding off to the sides, and across lanes. I made it, but oh, how I wished I had listened to the oracle.
When asking about the immediate future, pending trips, or likely conditions, I take the Yi very seriously. from that day forward. sometimes it seems we dont have the luxury to be creative and sometimes an answer is black and white. Ignore it at your own peril type of thing.
I guess my point is that the YI is a wise old advisor on issues that require thought and decision, but I dont underestimate it, and actually adore it, as a seeing friend and a trusted guide in those times when I am very frightened and/or "feeling" helpless and insecure.
heylise
December 19th, 2004, 06:26 AM
Jeany, I love your post. I think you are completely right. Happy I started this thread, because I am learning a lot myself.
One thing is staying in my mind through all the posts, and that is a tiny remark of Candid, at the very beginning ... him again, 'course , he has a way of making all my thinking stumble - darn. "What would coyote say?"
Most people think that they think rationally, or at least coherently, but in reality it looks as emotional as a bumblebee. LiSe is no exception.
"What would coyote say..." going to find that out today.
LiSe/coyote
martin
December 19th, 2004, 12:49 PM
There is another aspect to this and that is that although emotion may hinder when we try to interpret an answer it seems to enhance the connection with (what is behind) the oracle. At least that is my experience. Answers tend to be clearer and more direct, more to the point, when one is in a state of agitation. If I remember correctly research into ESP and telepathy (Rhine?) points in the same direction. It "works" better when emotion is involved. It doesn't work very well with neutral messages.
A thought pops into my mind: "a desperate call for help is heard throughout the entire universe."
There is some truth in that, I think. When we are emotional (upset, agitated, desperate) we are in a state of high energy and that energy can pierce through barriers between worlds and open channels that otherwise remain closed.
heylise
December 19th, 2004, 01:42 PM
This is very much my own experience too. There has been a (long) time, when I was in a very difficult situation, and every question to the Yi was a desperate cry for help. All the answers hit target.
Usually I ran to the Yi, threw the coins, with or without a question, and certainly never a well-phrased one, and then burst out in a mix of crying and laughing, grateful for the insight. I read the texts but had no trouble at all to interpret them. It was as if a very nice, very wise old sage comforted me in simple direct words.
Now my life is obviously in good shape: I often have trouble to find the meaning.
LiSe
martin
December 19th, 2004, 01:49 PM
I once had an odd experience with a desperate call for help. I had serious problems with my health and a being from another world (yes, I know, that's also odd, sorry http://www.onlineclarity.co.uk/I_Ching_community/clipart/happy.gif) was helping me. I called him "the doctor" at that time and later "the master", because I realized that he was much more than a doctor or a healer. He was (and is) my final teacher, my satguru.
Anyway, the treatment wasn't very successful, although in fact it was, but I didn't understand that. There was a relapse, old symptoms reappeared and it felt like I was going down, down again. I was desperate, and angry. He - the doctor - had promised to help me and it looked like he didn't. Had he fooled me, like all those other (human) doctors?
One morning, when I came out of bed and felt very ill I started to shout at him. I don't remember what I said exactly, something like <profanity> I guess. In any case, it was certainly not what one would expect to hear from someone who is supposedly addressing a higher being http://www.onlineclarity.co.uk/I_Ching_community/clipart/biggrin.gif.
And I probably didn't expect that he would respond to my outburst. But he did. Two hands appeared (that was one of the ways he communicated with me, through hand gestures) and what they expressed was "Sorry, there is nothing I can do about this, I'm very sorry."
I was stunned. Here was this being, so much wiser than me. I, little stupid human, had shouted at him and he ... apologized!
Incredible.
jeanystar
December 19th, 2004, 03:55 PM
<BLOCKQUOTE><HR SIZE=0><!-Quote-!><FONT SIZE=1>Quote:</FONT>
A thought pops into my mind: "a desperate call for help is heard throughout the entire universe." <!-/Quote-!><HR SIZE=0></BLOCKQUOTE>
and
<BLOCKQUOTE><HR SIZE=0><!-Quote-!><FONT SIZE=1>Quote:</FONT>
Usually I ran to the Yi, threw the coins, with or without a question, and certainly never a well-phrased one, and then burst out in a mix of crying and laughing, grateful for the insight. I read the texts but had no trouble at all to interpret them. It was as if a very nice, very wise old sage comforted me in simple direct words.<!-/Quote-!><HR SIZE=0></BLOCKQUOTE>
YES, Yes, Yes...to these two sentiments...and it is such a blessing to have this experience!
VERY interesting story Martin... love it.
candid
December 19th, 2004, 04:49 PM
I love it when folks get beneath all the mind analysis and down into the gut level of their Yi experiences.
pagan
December 19th, 2004, 05:30 PM
Several of my friends have mentioned to me that I am 'addicted' to the IC. They questioned "would the Sage want you to be dependent on throwing coins and looking up answers in a book?"
I feel like it becomes a question of the 'middle way' which doesn't go to extremes and follows a moderate approach.
I was taking a road trip across the US and it didn't really matter if I went the northern route or the southern route so I decided to as the IC about it. I was surprised how adamant the IC seemed to favor the northern route. Halfway through Kansas I stopped at a rest stop and found out that there was a tornado that had just hit the southern route, and blew out windows of houses and overturned cars etc. It is moments like that which make me feel humble and devoted to the Sage.
Nevertheless, I also feel that there are times when I asked the IC sort of indulgently, when I might have applied my own understanding of the IC's prinicples to the question before I ran to the coins.
P.
jte
December 19th, 2004, 06:05 PM
"would the Sage want you to be dependent on throwing coins and looking up answers in a book?
...it becomes a question of the 'middle way' which doesn't go to extremes ..."
I believe the same, Pagan: it's important if you feel you're becoming *dependent* on the IC to take a break and stand on your own two feet only for a bit. In my view, someone who wants the best for others doesn't want to become a crutch to them. A springboard, not a crutch...
- Jeff
hilary
December 19th, 2004, 07:06 PM
<BLOCKQUOTE><HR SIZE=0><!-Quote-!><FONT SIZE=1>Quote:</FONT>
A springboard, not a crutch...<!-/Quote-!><HR SIZE=0></BLOCKQUOTE>Lovely image! (And imagine the mess you'd get into trying to use a springboard as crutch...)
And I also agree no end with LiSe and Martin: Yi has always answered my cries for help absolutely directly.
martin
December 19th, 2004, 07:41 PM
Addiction to the Yi - without throwing coins I would say that 57.6 fits here (and 57.2 to a lesser extent).
And I was wondering, have some of you ever tried to cast hexagrams in your head, for instance by throwing imaginary coins?
I did something like that in the past sometimes, but not with coins and perhaps it's a good idea to (try to) learn it. Even if it is only an exercise in visualization, but I suspect that there is more in it than that.
Perhaps it can reveal how this so called 'randomness' works in the inner worlds and shed more light on what it really is?
candid
December 19th, 2004, 08:09 PM
Martin, interesting question.
For awhile, about two years ago, I was practicing a little ritual each morning. First, I?d lie there, focusing my attention on doing an imaginary reading. I?d just dwell there and allow the reading to unfold in my mind. Then after I was up awhile, I?d toss the coins. After 3-4 days, the readings were coming out to the same hexagrams as I?d imagined a short while before. Not all the change lines, relating hex and such, but the primary hexagram would come up about 3 out of 5 times the same. I was excited about this and mentioned here on the board. But the practice just slipped away.
tashij
December 19th, 2004, 08:13 PM
wow Martin what a great idea.
tashij
December 19th, 2004, 08:14 PM
maybe that's the 4th way. ...
candid
December 19th, 2004, 08:22 PM
Further explanation: When I did this exercise there was a specific question in mind. It wasn?t a blind test against itself. My thoughts at the time wondered if the oracle's roots, which had embedded into me over time, were going to work, or if it was just the synching up of the two events in time.
martin
December 19th, 2004, 08:51 PM
Did the hexagram appear spontaneously, Candid?
I mean, without any activity on your part that you were aware of, except holding the question in mind?
martin
December 19th, 2004, 08:53 PM
I bet that Tashij is throwing imaginary coins now ..
Tashij?
martin
December 19th, 2004, 08:55 PM
Of course, in the inner world they are real ..
tashij
December 19th, 2004, 09:10 PM
Hey Martin. Not yet, got to keep both feet on the ground right now. But for the future, I really do think this is a fascinating idea. You have a lot of freedom in your thinking Martin, and I have enjoyed your posts. The Yi has helped me tremendously. Yi has helped navigate me through a very difficult almost 7 year cycle. These Pluto transits are so damn slow. So these days I throw sparingly, but when I do, it Yi really sings, and I try to listen. I try to not put too much visualization in my mind right now, just happy with things as they are. Recently encountered Hua Ching Ni's book. wow. Im so happy with it. Also I am reading Sylvia Plath. I love her writing.
Good to hear your experience Candid.
martin
December 19th, 2004, 09:45 PM
Yes, these Pluto transits can be heavy.
http://www.onlineclarity.co.uk/I_Ching_community/messages/48/2955.gif
martin
December 19th, 2004, 09:48 PM
But after the transit ...
http://www.onlineclarity.co.uk/I_Ching_community/messages/48/2956.jpg
candid
December 19th, 2004, 09:52 PM
Martin, I didn't see the lines building, just quotes from the text would enter my mind, and then the image of the hexagram name would be recognized therein.
Again, was I answering my own question logically, based on prior knowledge of cause/effect as it pertains to Yi's examples? Was there something more magical going on? Or was it a time connection event? I never did answer that question.
Thanks Tash
tashij
December 19th, 2004, 10:06 PM
Pluto....omg i am laughing. where do you guys come up with this stuff. 2 funny. glad it's not the kitten with the MK.
martin
December 19th, 2004, 10:40 PM
Easy Tashij, I Googled 'Pluto'.
I was looking for a picture of the planet Pluto but then I found this .. http://www.onlineclarity.co.uk/I_Ching_community/clipart/happy.gif
martin
December 19th, 2004, 11:36 PM
I don't know, Candid. I think only you can find out what the answer to your questions is.
OMG, what a platitude, and I guess you have found that out already. http://www.onlineclarity.co.uk/I_Ching_community/clipart/happy.gif
I wonder what will happen when you try this exercise again. Perhaps it's different now.
Nice idea for Xmas?
I have no special plans for Xmas so I think I will try to learn to throw coins in my head. http://www.onlineclarity.co.uk/I_Ching_community/clipart/happy.gif
candid
December 19th, 2004, 11:44 PM
LOL.. Martin....
I'll have whatever he's having! Make it a double.
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