I Ching Oracle Result: Transformation from Hexagram 14 with Changing Lines 3, 4 to Hexagram 41
Yì Jīng’s Response: Hexagram 14.3.4 -> 41
14. Great Possession (大有 Dà Yǒu)
Trigrams
- Above
- ☲ Lí (Fire) — 火 · Radiance
- Below
- ☰ Qián (Heaven) — 天 · Creative
The Symbolism of Hexagram 14
Hexagram 大有 (Dà Yǒu) describes a condition in which what is central holds and illuminates what is strong. Clarity governs power, and what is gathered is directed rather than scattered.
Hexagram 14 Judgment
大有,元亨。
(Dà yǒu, yuán hēng.)
"Great possession. Origin and smooth progress."
This describes a state in which much is held together under a unifying clarity. It is not accumulation alone, but the ability to direct what has been gathered.
Because the center is clear and properly positioned, movement proceeds without obstruction. What is held does not disperse.
Hexagram 14 Image
火在天上,大有。君子以遏恶扬善,顺天休命。
(Huǒ zài tiān shàng, dà yǒu. Jūn zǐ yǐ è è yáng shàn, shùn tiān xiū mìng.)
"Fire shines in heaven: great possession. The superior person restrains what disrupts and brings forward what accords, following the larger pattern of what is established."
Fire above heaven illuminates what is below, making everything visible. Possession here comes through clarity, not force.
The superior person does not impose control arbitrarily, but regulates what is present—checking what disturbs alignment and advancing what sustains it.
Line 3 Changing
公用亨于天子,小人弗克。
(Gōng yòng hēng yú tiān zǐ, xiǎo rén fú kè.)
"One in a central position brings it forward to the highest level; a person of limited capacity cannot do this."
What is held must be offered or directed upward into proper order. This requires alignment with the greater structure.
Those without that alignment cannot make use of what is held in this way, and so cannot sustain it.
Line 4 Changing
匪其彭,无咎。
(Fěi qí péng, wú jiù.)
"Not expanding it outward. No error."
Restraint is required. What is possessed should not be pushed beyond its proper scope.
By not overextending or displaying it excessively, balance is maintained and error avoided.
Changing to:
41. Decrease (損 Sǔn)
Trigrams
- Above
- ☶ Gèn (Mountain) — 山 · Stillness
- Below
- ☱ Duì (Lake) — 澤 · Open
The Symbolism of Hexagram 41
Hexagram 損 (Sǔn) describes reduction—removing excess to restore balance. The system is simplified by decreasing what is unnecessary.
Mountain above lake shows containment and limiting of what lies below. Reduction is not loss for its own sake, but a structural rebalancing.
Hexagram 41 Judgment
損,有孚,元吉,无咎,可貞,利有攸往。曷之用,二簋可用享。
(Sǔn, yǒu fú, yuán jí, wú jiù, kě zhēn, lì yǒu yōu wǎng. Hé zhī yòng, èr guǐ kě yòng xiǎng.)
"Decrease. There is underlying alignment. Primary favorable outcome. No error. Correct alignment is possible. It is favorable to move with direction. What is required is minimal: simple offerings are sufficient."
Reduction is effective when it is intentional and grounded in sincerity. The system does not require excess to function properly.
The final clause is critical: success does not depend on scale. Even minimal resources, correctly applied, are sufficient. Decrease simplifies without undermining function.
Hexagram 41 Image
山下有澤,損。君子以懲忿窒欲。
(Shān xià yǒu zé, sǔn. Jūn zǐ yǐ chéng fèn zhì yù.)
"The lake rests beneath the mountain: decrease. The superior person restrains anger and checks desire."
The mountain limits the lake, preventing overflow. This is controlled reduction.
The system improves by removing excess pressure and unnecessary expansion. Reduction restores stability.
Peace and wisdom on your journey!
With gratitude,
The I Ching Team