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Blog post: Rich in your neighbours

hilary

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Rich in your neighbours

abundant blackberries growing wild

Three lines​

Here’s another phrase that appears three times in the Yijing: 富以其鄰, fu yi qi lin, ‘rich in one’s neighbours’. In 9.5, you are rich in your neighbours –
‘There is truth and confidence as a bond.
Rich in your neighbours.’

while in 11.4 and 15.5, you aren’t –
‘Fluttering, fluttering.
Not rich in your neighbours.
Not on guard against truth and confidence.’

‘Not rich in your neighbours:
Fruitful to use this to invade and conquer.
Nothing that does not bear fruit.’

Not all translations make this obvious. Wilhelm, in particular, gives the phrase completely different meanings in different lines: ‘rich in your neighbour’ in 9.5, but ‘not boasting of his wealth, together with his neighbour’ in 11.4 and ‘no boasting of wealth before one’s neighbour’ in 15.5.

I have – of course – huge respect for Wilhelm, but I simply can’t see where this comes from. In 11.4 and 15.5 you have the exact same four words as in 9.5 – ‘rich in one’s neighbours’ – preceded by ‘not’, 不 bu. It’s very simple: rich, or not rich. Richard Rutt notes this and says of 9.5, ‘Possibly the positive form of the same oracle found here is a mistake and the negative particle has been lost.’ Possibly… but let’s assume it means what it says.

What it says​

‘Neighbours’, 鄰 lin, means what’s neighbouring, adjacent, and also a ‘neighbourhood’ of four or five families. The significant component of the character means ‘city’. It’s used in a couple of other places in the Yi: 51.6,
‘Shock twists and turns,
Watching in fear and terror,
Setting out to bring order: pitfall.
The shock does not reach your self,
It reaches your neighbour –
No mistake.
There are words of marital alliance.’

and 63.5,
‘The neighbour in the East slaughters oxen.
Not like the Western neighbour’s summer offering,
Truly accepting their blessing.’

The Western and Eastern neighbours are the Zhou and Shang: neighbouring states, first allied through marriage, then at war. So we might remember Zhou and Shang whenever the text mentions neighbours – though I think it’s enough just to think of neighbouring states, which could mean allies or enemies. Making them into allies was a pressing concern of King Wen: as he readied his people to take on the Shang, he made an alliance with one neighbouring state and conquered five others, creating a secure base from which to launch their campaign.

‘Rich’, 富 fu, means wealth, abundance and becoming wealthy. The old character shows a long-necked jug under a roof:


fu, rich – from Richard Sears

It’s used at 37.4:
‘Enriching the home.
Great good fortune.’

Rich in your neighbours?​

It seems natural, in 37.4, for a home to have fu – wealth pictured as a jug under a roof. That’s where you would expect your wealth to be, surely: securely under your own roof. But if you are rich in your neighbours, the wealth is in your surroundings, where you live – distributed through the fabric you’re part of. It’s not exactly yours, but it is close at hand. (No remote treasure-hunting quests required.)

Or – in two of the three lines – it isn’t close at hand, in which case you’ll need to do something different.

Line by line​

9.5​

‘There is truth and confidence as a bond.
Rich in your neighbours.’

Truth and confidence, fu – that wonderful quality of sincerity, trust and presence – acts as a bond. The ‘bond’ is a close, tight one, meaning passionate attachment, being inseparable, tangled together.

Part of the word for ‘bond’ means ‘chaos’, and experience suggest this is not a formal agreement: the truth and confidence makes that unnecessary. This is help that comes naturally, with no scorecard: a mutually supportive community, unquestioned friendship, help from family.

I’ve also experienced it recently as wealth fully distributed through the whole fabric of my life: oracle, friends, family, ‘cello, essential oils, trees, a local market… – a reminder that security doesn’t necessarily involve owning or controlling.

This is good to know when you’re under the dark clouds of Hexagram 9 – ‘dense clouds without rain’ – with their concomitant frustration and gloom. Hexagram 26 – Great Taming – in the background encourages you to let your world expand: not eating at home, crossing the great river. You can’t make it rain, but look a little further afield and see how rich you are now.

11.4​

‘Fluttering, fluttering.
Not rich in your neighbours.
Not on guard against truth and confidence.’

‘Fluttering’ is pian 翩: graceful, light, swift, flying, fluttering. There are feathers in the character – and given the line’s position, just on the edge of the upper trigram, looking out over an ’empty space’ of yin lines, with the energy of inner qian flowing through it, I’ve always imagined it as a fledgling testing its wings. Line 4 is so often asking, ‘What can I do out here?’

Fu, truth and confidence, trust and presence, has got a great deal harder since 9.5. There is no support to be had nearby – you are not provided for, not looked after – but this should not translate into defensiveness. On the contrary, you need to go further.

I think this line’s developing the same theme we saw in 11.3:
‘There is no level ground without a slope,
No going out without a return.
Constancy in hardship is not a mistake.
Do not sorrow about its truth (fu).
In eating and drinking there is blessing.’

Yes, things are hard; no, this is not a calamity to be mourned; you need to participate in your world (line 3). Or – no, your neighbours will not look after you, but this is no reason to shrink into yourself and become demoralised (line 4). If anything, you should be encouraged by adversity.

That’s been my experience with readings, anyway: if these people or circumstances are not helping you, you need to trust to your inner strength, or the support of thin air, and flutter past this negative experience in search of a new neighbourhood. If these people aren’t buying, reach more people; if this workplace is nightmarish, look for another job; if this landlady is malicious, start searching for another home.

The zhi gua for this line – the hexagram it changes to – is 34, Great Vigour, and the fan yao – the mirroring line, changing back from 34 to 11 – speaks of breaking through a hedge. There’s a whole world out there beyond these neighbours.

15.5​

‘Not rich in your neighbours:
Fruitful to use this to invade and conquer.
Nothing that does not bear fruit.’

On the face of it, this is an odd message to find at the apex (5th line) of the hexagram of modesty and not taking too much on oneself. Invade and conquer? Why?

Bradford Hatcher has been the greatest help to me in understanding this one. He wrote,
‘It was interstate propriety, if not unwritten law, to offer emergency relief to neighboring states in times of crisis. This refers to a neighboring state refusing to do so, probably looking for political advantage in the neighbor’s misfortune.’

There’s at least the beginning of an explanation: the neighbour should have helped you in your difficulty. Perhaps this invasion is something like the action of the noble one in the Image –
‘In the centre of the earth there is a mountain. Integrity.
A noble one reduces what is too much and increases what is diminished,
Weighing things up to even out their distribution.’

Could this be a kind of Robin Hood raid?

This is Integrity encountering Hexagram 39, Limping, difficulties, struggle. ‘Not rich in your neighbours’ is the opening statement of the line: here is the challenge to deal with. How does Integrity respond? Not by glossing over the problem – no ‘I’m fine, really, you don’t have to worry about me.’ This looks like a ‘put your own oxygen mask on first’ message: don’t take too much on yourself, certainly, but do take what you need.

In my encounters with this line so far, I’ve yet to see it call for true aggression. The ‘invading and conquering’ required has always been quite undramatic: be assertive, maybe ask forgiveness rather than permission. If people owe you money, get paid. If your experience has been bad, how will you change it?

The omen that concludes the line is important, too: ‘Nothing that does not bear fruit’ carries overtones of, ‘Really – nothing – not even this.‘ In other words, the text anticipates our bewilderment. Quoting Bradford Hatcher again, in the I Ching Community:
“The phrase “Wu Bu Li”, nothing not worthwhile, nothing not advantageous, nothing not favorable, nothing (can)not be turned to advantage, occurs a lot in the Yi. Essentially it says that there is rarely a situation which cannot be turned around or improved. Of course it takes an opportunistic approach to things – it’s enlightened self-interest which does this best. Sometimes one must presume that one knows what’s best. And sometimes it’s just like aikido, finding the center of things and turning the momentum around. When the Yi uses this phrase it seldom implies that things are going to turn around all on their own. One needs to own the moment.”

Read together​

What’s to be learned from reading these three lines together?

Well… I think they can all be located in the Zhou Conquest story, and we can see it developing from one line to the next.

Hexagram 9 is a time of preparation, not yet ready for action, when King Wen is out working the fields with his people, and needs above all to make alliances. At this stage, your neighbours are your wealth already, with nothing to separate you.

Then as the story progresses and you can no longer rely on neighbours, you need to depend on truth, or your sense of truth. Small goes, great comes, says Hexagram 11. This hexagram marks a turning point in the story, where you might begin to look forward to greatness to come. If you have the Mandate of Heaven, then bad circumstances are not meant to discourage you, and above all, don’t mean you have lost your connection to spiritual support – on the contrary. ‘Fluttering’ might suggest an inbetween state – losing the support of your surroundings, on the verge of trusting yourself to something more insubstantial – or at least, not on guard against it.

And finally, the moment for invasion and conquest comes in 15.5. A lack of wealth in your neighbours is now the defining quality of the time, the precise moment that it is ‘fruitful to use’ for invasion. Not only should unsupportive surroundings not make you demoralised or paranoid, they should be your sign that now is the time to act to change them.

abundant blackberries growing wild
some wealth in my neighbours I enjoyed last year
 

dobro p

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Wilhelm: When in doubt, follow the 'that reminds me' rule and be poetic. Just saying.

Wilhelm found the door, opened it and went through to show us how. That doesn't mean that others didn't do an even better job of it sometimes.
 

hilary

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Yes. I'm always mindful that if Wilhelm hadn't found the door, I'd never have known it existed. Without his translation, odds are none of us would have heard of the I Ching at all. It all makes me quite cautious about criticising him.
 

dobro p

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We learn from others, and then things develop better (rich in our neighbors). Wilhelm's version is a huge achievement, and doubly so because he didn't have the luxury of being able to compare notes like the ones who followed him. I'm still just getting into Balkin, but I r-e-a-l-l-y like it. He follows the Wilhelm/Baynes translation really closely, so for me it's interesting when he deviates from it, and I'll be interested to see if, when that happens, it's because he reckons Wilhelm didn't get it entirely right.
 

my_key

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'Rich in your neighbours' might simply mean to be at one with the abundance that is there for us all in the Universe. Perhaps the story of the lines is something like:

9.5 - speaks to the notion of countering the idea we my have of of being alone or not enough. Encouraging growing into and slowly accumulating the wealth that is waiting there for us all, should we choose to cultivate such things.

11.4 - comes under the remit of how best to embrace the Way of Heaven. Fluttering frantically to make progress along the road, the decisions and choices we make are the best we can do at this time, as we learn how to fly.

15.5 - At 15 there is a natural rebalancing undertaken. We become more in touch with our authentic self. We strive to keep building the new structure to support us as we engage more readily with the truth and abundance in and around us. Equally, we are encouraged to walk our own path as the most effective means by which we can overcome the lack, or lacks, that exists in our world. We become the change we want to see.

Simply put, the progression might be
9.5 - being overwhelmed by our environment and surroundings
11.4 - finding an uneasy balance point with our surroundings
15.5 - creating new surroundings free from external influences.
 
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hilary

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'Rich in your neighbours' might simply mean to be at one with the abundance that is there for us all in the Universe.
Yes, or more simply, what is immediately around you, that you do not have to travel far to find.

It made a big difference to me when I registered that it could just as well be 'neighbours', plural, as 'neighbour'.
 

my_key

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Yes, or more simply, what is immediately around you, that you do not have to travel far to find.

It made a big difference to me when I registered that it could just as well be 'neighbours', plural, as 'neighbour'.
Yes - we are immediately surrounded by all we need all the time. We have contact with all our 'neighbours', we just have to develop our immediacy to be able to reorganise our barriers and make effective contact with them in each moment.
 

Liselle

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I had "neighbor" once where it meant the other cat in the house. 🐈 Very helpful reading, was at my wits' end, was delighted I managed to put that together.
 

my_key

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I had "neighbor" once where it meant the other cat in the house. 🐈 Very helpful reading, was at my wits' end, was delighted I managed to put that together.
Good point! It's always important to explore 'neighbours' in literal, lateral and other diverse ways and certainly at different levels of consciousness and meaning.
 

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