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Blog post: First steps into a reading

hilary

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First steps into a reading

stepping stones across a pond
A couple of things I’ve noticed at the I Ching Community

  • how much good, natural, intuitive interpretation goes on there, and also
  • how if people get stuck, it’s often because they haven’t looked at the whole reading.

There’s a natural tendency to jump straight to the moving lines. We know those are the most direct answer to the question, and that their meaning takes precedence over the hexagram as a whole. For instance, if you receive Hexagram 54 (‘to set out to bring order is disastrous’) but with line 1 changing (‘lame, can still walk; to set out to bring order is good fortune’) then you know that it’s good to hobble on and do your best to sort things out.

However, it really does make your life easier if you start at the very beginning of the reading, and ask why this hexagram? You need to start by recognising how the hexagram is addressing your question and situation, and then the line(s) will make sense.

Another way of saying this – you need to know where you are first. The other day, I was chatting with someone while we waited for a train, and mentioned needing to find the bus station. Ah, he said, that’s not far, it’s just round the corner from the John Lewis store. You go along the street from there and turn left and… and so on. Presently he noticed that I looked quite blank, and I explained that I didn’t know where John Lewis was.

Reading the lines without knowing what the hexagram’s about is quite a lot like this. His directions told me precisely what I needed to know; he was talking very directly about exactly what I’d asked, but this didn’t make me any less lost.

So… start with the hexagram, and locate it in relation to your question. If the primary hexagram is 48, what Well? (Perhaps you were just asking about a close friendship that needs care.) If it’s 10, what tiger are you getting close to? (Someone fierce? Your own untamed emotions?) If it’s 59, what’s Dispersing? (A relationship? A belief?)

This is often quite weirdly obvious, leaping to the eye as soon as you look – and then it suddenly becomes clear how the lines apply and are answering your question. You only need to know where you are.

A final note: this is not a rule: there’s no stone tablet engraved with ‘Thou Shalt Look at the Hexagram First.’ If something in the reading calls out to you, trust your response. If you received, say, 26 line 1 –

‘There is danger.
Fruitful to stop it.’

then it makes sense to stop first, and work out exactly what is being Greatly Tamed afterwards. But if you’re flummoxed, you need to absorb the whole reading, everything the oracle said to you, and not just zoom in on a few words.

stepping stones across a pond
 

my_key

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However, it really does make your life easier if you start at the very beginning of the reading, and ask why this hexagram? You need to start by recognising how the hexagram is addressing your question and situation, and then the line(s) will make sense.
Hi Hilary
This makes good sense. I would add to this that for I Ching beginners the way they phrase the question can also help enormously with finding a successful first stepping stone into understanding the reading.

Whilst there is nothing wrong, as such, with asking closed questions, as a beginner trying to make sense of whether Yi means yes or no can lead to confusion. e.g. Q: Is it a good idea to send a Valentine's Card to X?

Whereas an open question leads more naturally into explaining the reading to yourself "What is the outcome if I send a Valentine's Card?". The train of thought for addressing the question seems to spring forward more naturally i.e. "If I send a Valentine's card then 'hexagram info' and the details of this are 'changing lines info'.

Similarly, questions loaded with double enquiries just ramp up the chance for confusion e.g. Should I send a Valentine's card to X or to Y? Two questions and only one answer to spread between them.

It is all about, as you say, making it as easy as you can for yourself to obtain a meaningful interpretation.

Take care
 

hilary

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I think I have another post in the pipeline about this. People find it very hard to comprehend why a simple yes/no question is actually not simple when it comes to applying the answer.
 

my_key

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I think I have another post in the pipeline about this. People find it very hard to comprehend why a simple yes/no question is actually not simple when it comes to applying the answer.
mykey: Would I like to see this post? Yi: 'Yes you wouldn't' or 'No you would'.

Looking forward to it........ I think !!! :spinning: :spinning: :spinning:
 

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