For some 3,000 years, people have turned to the I Ching, the Book of Changes, to help them uncover the meaning of their experience, to bring their actions into harmony with their underlying purpose, and above all to build a foundation of confident awareness for their choices.
Down the millennia, as the I Ching tradition has grown richer and deeper, the things we consult about may have changed a little, but the moment of consultation is much the same. These are the times when you’re turning in circles, hemmed in and frustrated by all the things you can’t see or don’t understand. You can think it over (and over, and over); you can ‘journal’ it; you can gather opinions.
But how can you have confidence in choosing a way to go, if you can’t quite be sure of seeing where you are?
Only understand where you are now, and you rediscover your power to make changes. This is the heart of I Ching divination. Once you can truly see into the present moment, all its possibilities open out before you – and you are free to create your future.
What is the I Ching?
The I Ching (or Yijing) is an oracle book: it speaks to you. You can call on its help with any question you have: issues with relationships of all kinds, ways to attain your personal goals, the outcomes of different choices for a key decision. It grounds you in present reality, encourages you to grow, and nurtures your self-knowledge. When things aren’t working, it opens up a space for you to get ‘off the ride’, out of the rut, and choose your own direction. And above all, it’s a wide-open, free-flowing channel for truth.
Hello, and thank you for visiting!
I’m Hilary – I work as an I Ching diviner and teacher, and I’m the author of I Ching: Walking your path, creating your future.
I hope you enjoy the site and find what you’re looking for here – do contact me with any comments or questions.
Clarity is my one-woman business providing I Ching courses, readings and community. (You can read more about me, and what I do, here.) It lets me spend my time doing the work I love, using my gifts to help you.
(Thank you.)
Warm wishes,
Hilary”
Blog
As you might have guessed from the title of this episode, it's about a reading with Hexagram 22, Beauty, changing at line 1 to 52, Stilling:
It was all about becoming imperfectly visible - which the reading's owner has just begun to do on her Youtube channel...
https://livingchange.s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/episode48.mp3
There's more than one story of the Yi's origins…
Mythical origins
The story begins in the 29th century BCE with Fuxi, China's first emperor, who may have had the body of a serpent. It was through his insight that the trigrams were discovered, and people could begin to understand their world:
"In high antiquity, when Fuxi ruled the world, he looked up and observed the figures in heaven, looked down and saw the model forms under heaven. He noted the appearances of birds and beasts and how they were adapted to their habitats. He examined things in his own person near at hand, and things in general at a distance. Hence he devised the eight trigrams with power to communicate with spirits and classify the natures of the myriad beings."
This story comes from the Dazhuan, the Great Treatise (in Richard Rutt's translation), which is part of the Yijing itself. In another version, the trigrams were inspired by the markings on the back of a dragon-horse that emerged from the Yellow River - but I find the Great Treatise's version the most resonant and eloquent. We can all still look at our own bodies and the natural world and see trigrams.
At least a millennium later - maybe two - the future King Wen of the Zhou (1152–1050BCE) was imprisoned by the Shang tyrant Zhouxin. During his imprisonment, he combined the trigrams into hexagrams, and gave the hexagrams their names. After his death, his son the Duke of Zhou added texts to the moving lines.
And Confucius (551-479BCE), a faithful student of the wisdom of early kings, wrote the Ten Wings - all the commentaries that have become part of the Yijing we know, such as the Image text describing the noble one's response to a hexagram's trigrams.
So the story unfolds naturally, from simple trigrams through hexagrams to changing lines and finally the addition of the Wings.
(A much fuller version of this story - the most vivid and colourful one I've read yet - can be found in the introduction to Benebell Wen's I Ching.)
Historical origins
The history of the Yijing's origins, as it's been pieced together from archaeological records and textual analysis, is - unsurprisingly - altogether more mysterious and less clear than its myth.
The earliest records of divination in China, dating from the Shang dynasty (c.1600-1046BCE), are of pyromancy: divination with fire. Tortoise plastrons and ox scapulae were carefully prepared, drilled and cracked by the application of heat. The cracks could be interpreted by the king - mostly, it seems, to give direct 'yes' or 'no' answers on questions of policy (would there be good weather for a hunting expedition? was now the right time to open this field for ploughing?), though sometimes with a little more detail. The questions and sometimes also the oracle's responses were inscribed on the bone and kept as records. It's not clear whether the bone oracle was a direct ancestor of the Yi - perhaps it's more of an older cousin.
But there are also records of a counting oracle in the Shang: people recorded series of six numbers that had 'spoken', like a cracked bone could 'speak'. If you've ever cast a reading with yarrow stalks or coins, you've joined this tradition: generated a series of six numbers, paid attention to their pattern and listened to what it has to tell you. The numbers used have changed, but the basic principle of differentiating odd numbers (which we call 'yang' lines now) from even ('yin') is ancient. Were the Shang already sorting and counting yarrow stalks? We have no way of knowing.
The oracle we recognise as the Yi was brought together in the early years of the Zhou Dynasty, around 800 BCE. Hexagrams, those series of six numbers, now had names and associated text that anyone could learn. The text was drawn from many sources: sayings, song, legend, myth, maybe divination records for the hexagram or line. (WikiWing has its roots in a long tradition!)
The Zuozhuan has several early records of divination with Yi, which hint at how it was spread across the kingdom by travelling diviners and became more widely known, working its way into people's language and understanding. Over the centuries, as people added their reflections, experience and commentaries to the core text, it became recognised as a book of wisdom. And in 136BCE, the Yi along with its Wings was one of the five core texts, the Wujing, identified as underpinning all Chinese thought.
(The more recent reprints of my book - 2018 and 2021 - have a fuller historical introduction. It doesn't include all I wanted to, as it had to be cut by about 30% for publication, but Change Circle members can download the original, uncut version from the Change Circle Library.)
A 'fact check'
So, what of the mythical version?
Were the trigrams in use for millennia before they were combined into hexagrams? I don't know of any evidence for that - though it does look as though hexagrams have long been understood as interacting trigrams. (The Fuxi bagua or Early Heaven Arrangement of the trigrams, though, is not ancient - it's considerably younger than the Later Heaven arrangement, as Harmen Mesker explains.)
Are hexagram names and texts a generation older than changing lines? Maybe. Fragments of the Guicang, traditionally said to be the hexagram oracle of the Shang dynasty, have been discovered - and they contain hexagram texts but nothing resembling a line text. Intriguingly, the hexagram names of the Guicang are very often the same as those in the Yi, even though the text that follows is completely different. The same hexagram is named 'Marrying Maiden', for instance, but what follows is the story of Heng E stealing the elixir of immortality and fleeing to the moon.
Did King Wen name the hexagrams and write the oracles? Did the Duke of Zhou write the line texts? How would anyone know? (It's worth noting, though, that the Great Treatise itself doesn't attribute the text to them, simply to 'sages', and you'd think that if their authorship had been commonly accepted at the time, they would have been given credit.)
And did Confucius write the Wings? No - but plenty of his wisdom found its way into them.
Beyond the 'fact check'
…there's an oracle whose origins no-one can pretend to understand.
Who first realised that strings of three or six numbers had meaning? Or discovered if you put a question to the spirits and generated a 'random' series of numbers, your question would be answered?
How did they know that - for instance -
meant 'marrying maiden' specifically, or that
meant 'abundance'?
Who had the insight that these numbers/lines might be changing?
How did they not only name single hexagrams, but create a complete matrix where any hexagram can change into any other - and the nature of that change is captured in the moving lines?
(And not just when the hexagrams differ by one line, but multiple lines? Imagine trying to create something that complex…)
And while we're asking, how come casting coins at random delivers a meaningful answer?
(I'm fairly sure the archaeological technique to answer these has not been invented yet.)
An annual reading, this time: the first thing Maria does on her birthday is to sit down and ask to be shown a reading for the coming year. Here's hers for 2023-24: Hexagram 36, Brightness Hiding, with no changing lines.
Since this was an unchanging reading, we had the time and space to explore some of the hexagram's 'relations': its inverse and contrast, 35, Advancing -
and its complement or opposite - the hexagram where every line is different - 6, Arguing:
And not least, its hidden core, the nuclear hexagram, 40:
...which seemed to open everything out for her.
https://livingchange.s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/episode47.mp3
Shock in the background
I've been mulling over how Hexagram 51, Shock, feels as relating hexagram. After all, a relating hexagram is often the background to an answer - scene-setting, a personal theme, the chapter heading for this part of your life. How does something as abrupt as 'Shock' work here?
I've found the basic experience of 51 relating is of the ground falling away under my feet. Of course - as with any hexagram in any position - this can happen on different scales. It could be a complete existential collapse, or something narrow and specific, like technology not behaving as expected. Only the basic 'shape' of things is consistent: what you imagined this all rested on isn't really there. Your next step might be onto solid ground, or then again it might not.
(It's worth remembering that Shock means not only thunder but also earthquake.)
The Oracle of Hexagram 51 paints a very vivid emotional picture:
'Shock, creating success.
Shock comes, fear and terror.
Laughing words, shrieking and yelling.
Shock spreads fear for a hundred miles.
Someone does not lose the sacred ladle and libation.'
I think this falls into two parts: the fear and terror, shrieking and yelling, spreading ripples of panic on the one hand; the one who does not lose the sacred ladle and libation, on the other. So you're both in the centre of the panic, and also - perhaps - you could be the one who holds to enduring truth and isn't infected by the prevailing headless-chicken-itis. Can you be in the midst of the upheaval without losing touch with the essential?
Single lines changing to 51
Six hexagrams are just one line away from Hexagram 51...
Hexagram 16, line 1
'Enthusiasm calling out,
Pitfall.'
How does Enthusiasm work with Shock? Not well, apparently. From the readings I've seen, this 'calling out' tends to be a reaction to shock or insecurity - more headless chicken, not much sacred ladle. The calling out comes without considering the whole picture, or without full understanding; sometimes this is just loud self-expression without listening. (Shock can follow, too, when reality catches up!)
There are also a few readings where I think Yi was using this line to criticise an unconsidered question, especially one that neglected the querent's own agency.
Hexagram 54, line 2
‘With one eye, can see.
A hermit's constancy bears fruit.’
This one seems (also from experience) to be most about the aftermath of shock, and often more gradual subsidence than outright earthquake. What would the marrrying maiden's shock be? Surely having it fully sink in that her standing is not what she might have thought it would be - or your position in this relationship is not what you expected. (I've had it a couple of times when I was expecting to be given credit and status for work, and instead saw it erased. Very bad for the ego!)
But this is a second line, in the inner centre - unlike line 1, which is more likely to be an unmediated/instinctive reaction. There's the possibility here to continue on your own way, by your own lights, and not be disrupted. I think the hermit is a close cousin of the priest who doesn't lose the ladle.
Seeing with one eye, you're not completely unaware - though you can't see everything; the hermit up his mountain isn't aware of everything going on in the valley. (And that could be a useful reflection in itself...) But you can see enough to go on your way, self-possessed, internally rather than externally motivated.
Hexagram 55, line 3
'Feng is flooded with darkness
At midday, seeing a froth of light.
Your right arm broken,
Not a mistake.'
The readings I've seen with this one provide good examples of the variety of scale in readings: from a website going down to a loss of sanity. What follows is confusion, disorientation, bewilderment: Shock striking in the midst of Abundance, at Feng, where there is a lot going on. Here you are in the middle of it all, and incapacitated: unable to do anything about it at all. And apparently this is no bad thing - which makes sense if you remember 16.1. Inaction has to be better than a blind, kneejerk reaction.
The example the Sorrells give for this line in their I Ching Made Simple is of getting into financial trading and finding themselves 'in over our heads'. That's a good choice of language, as there's actually a lot of water imagery here: Feng is darkened, but with a word that also means heavy rainfall; at midday you see dimly, but with a word that also means foam; both characters contain the radical for 'water'. And the name of Hexagram 51 itself includes 'rain'.
Hexagram 24, line 4
‘Walking in the centre, returning alone.’
The Shock isn't evident in the moving line text here, but it's clear enough in reading experience. People are often dealing with disquiet in the aftermath of shock - such as finding yourself unemployed. As Mousse wrote in Shared Readings, "For months, I've been totally lost and unsure about what to do with my life." That seems to sum it up well.
Walking in the centre - with two broken lines one each side of it - this line is in a resonant relationship with 24's solid first line, and so it need not 'follow the crowd'. Instead, there's a process of waking up to your own inner voice, as life is gradually brought back into good order - like the Image of Hexagram 51:
'Rolling thunder. Shock.
A noble one in fear and dread sets things in order and is watchful.'
Hexagram 17, line 5
'True and confident in excellence.
Good fortune.'
Again, there's no Shock apparent in the line itself, but plenty in experience. At line 5, it shows up differently - often as the recurrent disturbance that makes it harder to stay on track. (The I Ching Community archives have two readings with this line for people who were focused on staying sober, and two for people trying to follow a creative path.)
The world at large is not designed to be helpful: you need to keep your own grip on the ladle, holding fast to your own self-respect. The word for 'excellence' has two components: a phonetic element meaning 'place on, confer on, add to' and a drum - which makes me wonder whether I should be hearing the |:: |:: of Hexagram 51 as the drumbeat.
Hexagram 21, line 6
Looking back through the 'story so far'...
16.1 seems disconnected from the real world, calling out without listening; 54.2 has limited insight but retains self-direction; 55.3 is similarly limited, but without mistake - maybe even because it can't act. 24.4 walks in the midst of it all but rediscovers its own way, and 17.5 holds fast to what is praiseworthy no matter what.
The pattern that emerges for me is of being in the middle of the action, but still going your own way - internally, not externally motivated, despite everything that's going on around you. It's that basic 'shape' of Hexagram 51: spreading panic and someone not losing the ladle - except that your own way is not always necessarily the best idea. 21.6, for instance...
'Shouldering a cangue so your ears disappear.
Pitfall.'
... takes that theme of being internally, not externally motivated to the wrong extreme when it stops listening.
Punishment, in Hexagram 21, isn't supposed to be a shock: it's meant to be understood. That's why the ancient kings brought light to punishments, why inner thunder translates into outer light. Only this can't happen if you can't listen, as often seems to be the case with this line. (My most recent journal entry for 21.6 describes it as a moment of being 'punch drunk', unable to take more in - and sure enough, disastrously missing the point.)
Reflections and examples
So here's 51 relating: coping with insecurity, with uncertainty, and trying to find self-determination anyway. 'Coping with uncertainty' might sound like relating hexagram 4 - Not Knowing - or 29 - Repeating Chasms, and there are some similarities.
Hexagram 4 also isn't certain and would really like to be - but it doesn't have 51's deep insecurity, and it does have a place to stand and a way to find out (if not as much or as fast as it would like). With 51 relating, that feeling of having no solid ground underfoot can be overwhelming.
Hexagram 29 is also floundering in the emotional depths, but it's more in the dark than 51. With 51 going on, you probably know exactly where you are (unemployed, or homeless, or dealing with someone emotionally volatile) - you just have no idea what might happen next.
Hexagram 2 changing to 51 shows this very simply and directly:
'Treading on frost,
Hard ice is arriving.'
'Tied up in a bag.
No blame, no praise.'
The signs of the times are clear and immediate, crunching underfoot; the contents of the bag are unknowable.
Of course, if understanding it all now is vital, you're in trouble - as in 21.6, and also as in 62.1.3 to 51:
'Bird in flight means a pitfall.'
'Not going past, he defends himself.
Someone following may strike him down.
Pitfall.'
Small exceeding demands that you meet the reality: listen to the bird, get the message. This doesn't easily happen in a state of Shock, and so you end up both with 51's panic (line 1) and missing the essential / losing the ladle (line 3). Being in the midst of it 62 without complete connection doesn't go well.
(I received this one many years ago when asking about recurrent episodes of gastric upset - which had me thoroughly 51-d as I've always been ridiculously healthy. I was flapping about, following pet theories, cutting back on wheat and sugar - and only realised much later, after a bout that laid me out for a week, that this was actually food poisoning from raw milk.)
Overall, 51 relating seems to mean a fine balancing act is required between awareness of present reality and truth to one's own path. Take 49.3.5 to 51 -
'Setting out to bring order means a pitfall,
Constancy means danger.
As words of radical change draw near three times,
There is truth and confidence.'
'Great person transforms like a tiger.
Even before the augury, there is truth and confidence.'
Line 3 needs time to create connection and confidence with others; line 5 has a tiger's utterly independent truth and confidence.
This also shows up in line texts as discussion of constancy - see for instance 35.1.6 and 34.2.3, with constancy in different circumstances or with different strategies (nets vs horns!) means different results. Marching (49.3) or charging (35.6, 34.3) ahead regardless through the earthquake zone could be a bad idea - but then so is running aimlessly about trying to dodge the falling masonry.
(Other two-line changes leading to 51, in case you'd like to explore: 40.1.2, 45.1.5, 19.2.4, 58.2.5, 38.2.6, 36.2.4, 22.3.6 and 3.4.5.)
I've written before about Yi's kindness, but it's something I keep rediscovering.
There's the gentleness of its responses to people in crisis - all degrees of crisis, without judgement. One of my own favourite readings comes from a moment when I suddenly felt I'd experienced the final straw, had nothing left and couldn't cope. I sat on the floor and said, 'Help!'
Yi responded with Hexagram 48, the Well:
'The Well. Moving the city, not moving the well.
Without loss, without gain,
They come and go, the well wells.
Almost drawn the water, but the rope does not quite reach the water,
Or breaking one's clay jug,
Pitfall.'
The Well is still flowing, in all your comings and goings it hasn't gone anywhere, so...
There's another reading that comes down to 'How can I cope?' or just 'Help!' on the 'Aha!' answers thread at the I Ching Community: itsyourlife asked, 'How do I do today?' and cast Hexagram 57 unchanging - Gently Penetrating. She wrote,
"That made me literally break down and I cried for like 10 seconds, composed myself and went on about my business gently. I finished earlier than expected and with ease. Breezy!"
How to do it? Gently. And that's another of Yi's one-hexagram answers - I find Yi often uses unchanging hexagrams when I'm overwhelmed and incapable of taking in anything more complicated. (One more example from the 'Aha!' thread: help with a mental health crisis, Hexagram 14 unchanging.)
Only Yi, being Yi, does not always stop at comfort. There's reassurance, the indescribable sense of being seen - and then there's also the kindness of unstinting honesty, and readings that turn out to be as much question as answer.
Actually, my much-loved Hexagram 48 answer is one of those. The Well is still flowing, in all your comings and goings it hasn't gone anywhere, so... why do you feel as though you have nothing left? What's going on with your rope and bucket?
Kafuka had a similar Hexagram 48 experience, though with the presence of mind to form a question beyond 'Help!': "I asked what could I do to stop having those "I'd better be dead" thoughts and got 48.4>28". Line your well!
I experienced this fierce kindness again a little while ago, when I had - laughably - been trying to be tactful, and ended up saying something appallingly insulting and hurtful. That's the short version: I've told the whole, sorry story in WikiWing.
In a complete emotional tailspin immediately afterwards, I asked Yi how to cope with my own crashing rudeness, and cast Hexagram 44 with the 6th line changing:
'Coupling with your horns.
Shame.
Not a mistake.'
There's the kindness of being seen - I had, exactly, gone in with horns lowered, which of course meant I couldn't see where I was going, and caused unintended injury. 'Shame' - well, yes. And then there was comfort: 'No mistake' - no, all the catastrophic consequences I was imagining were not real. The person I'd injured had already, with vast kindness, told me I was forgiven.
So in the moment, this reading let me breathe again and start to return to something like stability. But looking back on it now, and remembering other times I've received Hexagram 44, I've started asking bigger questions, like 'Who/ what is that powerful, unmarriageable woman?'
I think I recognise her in the inner impulse that tells me I really have to step up and do/ say something - 44 is the pair of 43, after all - but at a moment when there is no good way to do/say it, as there is nowhere it can be received, no king's chamber to speak in: this woman is not to be married. (With a different line active - 44.5, perhaps - there might be a way.)
And the deeper kindness of this, the one that emerges as I reflect on a series of readings over the course of years, is that now I recognise what that obligation-impulse feels like, and I get the chance to learn something, maybe. Perhaps, if I remember these readings at the critical moment, I might even avoid some horns-first blunders in future.
(There are countless examples of kind, blunt, honest, eye-opening readings in the 'Aha!' answers thread - I can recommend it.)
In this episode, Katarina and I discuss her reading about moving to a new part of the country - Hexagram 7, the Army, changing at line 2 to 2, Earth:
As we talk about her plans, you can hear the qualities of the hexagrams - that meeting of organised focus with openness to guidance that's found in the moving line, where the general must stay on the alert for new orders...
'Positioned in the centre of the army.
Good fortune, no mistake.
The king issues a mandate three times.'
If you'd like to learn to read the I Ching for other people, the Reading for Others Class starts in September. Booking isn't open yet, but if you're interested, please make sure your name and email is on the notifications list so I can let you know! You'll find the sign-up form and all the details here.
I Ching Community
Podcast
Join Clarity
You are warmly invited to join Clarity and –
- access the audio version of the Beginners’ Course
- participate in the I Ching Community
- subscribe to ‘Friends’ Notes’ for I Ching news