Clarity,
Office 17622,
PO Box 6945,
London.
W1A 6US
United Kingdom
Phone/ Voicemail:
+44 (0)20 3287 3053 (UK)
+1 (561) 459-4758 (US).
. . yes, hopefully a bit of bothBeautiful answer
. End of difficulties ? New begginnings ?
yes, sea-spray was the feel i got from this too
but being in A'dam it was also the image of being soaked from persistent, wind-driven rain that came up . . as if the ocean was trapped in those heavy clouds and cold air releases it . .
funny but there's not much gentleness in those images and in the Yi wind is referred to mainly as 'gentle' not sure why . . wind can often be quite the opposite of it . .
rodaki
59 - Mist is what evaporates from the lake or sea and becomes clouds.
My personal little metaphor for 59 is lighten up.
Ok, this I have a little trouble with, though LiSe's translation/interpretation agrees with what you've described. To me, rain would be the opposite of 59, and flooding is shown in 28. Rain is condensation, which is too heavy to stay aloft, and so falls. 59 - Mist is what evaporates from the lake or sea and becomes clouds.
My personal little metaphor for 59 is lighten up.
But these things are a bit like silly putty, in that they can always be squeezed into a context where they all can apply. And legitimately so. For instance, LiSe's - "Dissolving all the rigid structures, like opinions, prejudices, ties, obligations...", in this context, rain drops were liberated from the clouds, and that makes perfect sense.
But overall, would I consider rain as 59? uh uh.. not unless we're talking very fine partials, which float and are blown around and gathered to fall again. But right there is a situation which many hexagrams could apply, including 59.
No doubt the clouds release the rain, though. That's what makes interpreting for another so dicey. If it spoke clearly to you that way, I'd go with it. But I'll tell ya, some of my wrong interpretations (all of my own ignorance) caused significant enough damage to cause me to always tie my fate to mulberry trees, and ask "What if I'm wrong? What if it should fail?"
disperse |disˈpərs|
verb [ trans. ]
distribute or spread over a wide area : storms can disperse seeds via high altitudes | camping sites could be dispersed among trees so as to be out of sight. See note at scatter .
• go or cause to go in different directions or to different destinations : [ intrans. ] the crowd dispersed | [ trans. ] the police used tear gas to disperse the protesters.
• cause (gas, smoke, mist, or cloud) to thin out and eventually disappear : winds dispersed the bomb's radioactive cloud high in the atmosphere.
• [ intrans. ] thin out and disappear : the earlier mist had dispersed.
• Physics divide (light) into constituents of different wavelengths.
• Chemistry distribute (small particles) uniformly in a medium.
adjective [ attrib. ] Chemistry
denoting a phase dispersed in another phase, as in a colloid : emulsions should be examined after storage for droplet size of the disperse phase.
Clarity,
Office 17622,
PO Box 6945,
London.
W1A 6US
United Kingdom
Phone/ Voicemail:
+44 (0)20 3287 3053 (UK)
+1 (561) 459-4758 (US).