I Ching Oracle Result: Transformation from Hexagram 22 with Changing Lines 2, 4, 5, 6 to Hexagram 43

Yin Yang symbol, representing balance

Yì Jīng’s Response: Hexagram 22.2.4.5.6 -> 43

22. Adornment (賁 Bì)

Trigrams

Above
☶ Gèn (Mountain) — 山 · Stillness
Below
☲ Lí (Fire) — 火 · Radiance

The Symbolism of Hexagram 22

Hexagram 賁 (Bì) describes the application of form, pattern, and appearance to what already exists. It is not substance itself, but the shaping of how something is presented and perceived.

Hexagram 22 Judgment

The Judgment reads:
Original Chinese:
賁,亨,小利有攸往。
(Bì, hēng, xiǎo lì yǒu yōu wǎng.)
English Translation:
"Adornment. Origin and smooth progress. It is favorable to proceed in small matters."

Adornment enhances but does not replace what is essential. It is effective only within limits.

Small actions that refine or present are appropriate. Larger undertakings fail if based on appearance alone.

Hexagram 22 Image

The Image reads:
Original Chinese:
山下有火,賁。君子以明庶政,无敢折獄。
(Shān xià yǒu huǒ, bì. Jūn zǐ yǐ míng shù zhèng, wú gǎn zhé yù.)
English Translation:
"Fire burns at the foot of the mountain: adornment. The superior person clarifies matters but does not decide judgments."

Fire illuminates the base of the mountain, revealing form without altering it. Adornment makes things visible and defined.

It is suited to clarification and presentation, but not to final decisions. Substance must precede judgment.

Line 2 Changing

This line reads:
Original Chinese:
賁其須。
(Bì qí xū.)
English Translation:
"Adorning the beard."

Adornment is applied outwardly, affecting appearance rather than substance.

This is superficial and limited in scope.

Line 4 Changing

This line reads:
Original Chinese:
賁如皤如,白馬翰如,匪寇婚媾。
(Bì rú pó rú, bái mǎ hàn rú, fěi kòu hūn gòu.)
English Translation:
"Adorned in plainness. A white horse arrives swiftly. Not an intruder, but a joining."

Adornment becomes minimal and clean. What appears sudden is not hostile.

Clarity removes misinterpretation, allowing proper connection.

Line 5 Changing

This line reads:
Original Chinese:
賁于丘園,束帛戔戔,吝,終吉。
(Bì yú qiū yuán, shù bó jiān jiān, lìn, zhōng jí.)
English Translation:
"Adorning the hills and gardens. Small offerings, limited means. Some constrained outcome, but ending in a favorable outcome."

Adornment is modest and constrained. Resources are limited.

Though insufficient at first, sincerity within limitation leads to a favorable outcome.

Line 6 Changing

This line reads:
Original Chinese:
白賁,无咎。
(Bái bì, wú jiù.)
English Translation:
"Plain adornment. No error."

Adornment reaches its highest form by becoming minimal. Nothing excessive remains.

When appearance aligns completely with substance, no error occurs.

Changing to:

43. Resolution (夬 Guài)

Trigrams

Above
☱ Duì (Lake) — 澤 · Open
Below
☰ Qián (Heaven) — 天 · Creative

The Symbolism of Hexagram 43

Hexagram 夬 (Guài) describes resolution—pressure has accumulated to a point where it must be released through decisive action.

Lake above heaven shows upward pressure exceeding containment. The system can no longer hold what has built up. A clear break or declaration becomes necessary.

Hexagram 43 Judgment

The Judgment reads:
Original Chinese:
夬,揚于王庭,孚號有厲,告自邑,不利即戎,利有攸往。
(Guài, yáng yú wáng tíng, fú hào yǒu lì, gào zì yì, bù lì jí róng, lì yǒu yōu wǎng.)
English Translation:
"Resolution. It is proclaimed in the court of the governing authority. Risk present. It is announced from one's own city. It is not favorable to engage in armed confrontation. It is favorable to move with direction."

Accumulated pressure requires explicit resolution. The issue cannot remain internal and must be declared.

However, escalation into conflict is not the correct path. The system resolves through clarity and decisive direction, not aggression.

Hexagram 43 Image

The Image reads:
Original Chinese:
澤上于天,夬。君子以施祿及下,居德則忌。
(Zé shàng yú tiān, guài. Jūn zǐ yǐ shī lù jí xià, jū dé zé jì.)
English Translation:
"The lake rises to heaven: resolution. The superior person extends benefits below and remains wary of resting on virtue alone."

When accumulation surpasses structural limits, release becomes unavoidable.

Proper resolution distributes what has built up rather than allowing rupture. Balance is restored by discharge, not suppression.

Peace and wisdom on your journey!

With gratitude,
The I Ching Team