I Ching Oracle Result: Transformation from Hexagram 27 with Changing Lines 2, 3, 4 to Hexagram 14

Yin Yang symbol, representing balance

Yì Jīng’s Response: Hexagram 27.2.3.4 -> 14

27. Nourishment (頤 Yí)

Trigrams

Above
☶ Gèn (Mountain)
Below
☳ Zhèn (Thunder)

The Symbolism of Hexagram 27

Hexagram 頤 (Yí) concerns what is taken in and what is expressed. It describes the system of intake, processing, and output that sustains life and action.

Hexagram 27 Judgment

The Judgment reads:
Original Chinese:
頤,貞吉。觀頤,自求口實。
(Yí, zhēn jí. Guān yí, zì qiú kǒu shí.)
English Translation:
"Nourishment. Alignment brings stability. Observe nourishment, and seek what fills the mouth for yourself."

This hexagram directs attention to both intake and source. What is taken in must be examined, and its origin understood.

Sustenance must ultimately be secured by oneself, not passively received or misdirected.

Hexagram 27 Image

The Image reads:
Original Chinese:
山下有雷,頤。君子以慎言語,節飲食。
(Shān xià yǒu léi, yí. Jūn zǐ yǐ shèn yán yǔ, jié yǐn shí.)
English Translation:
"Thunder beneath the mountain: nourishment. The superior person regulates speech and measures intake."

Thunder initiates movement; the mountain contains it. This reflects controlled intake and controlled expression.

Speech and consumption are parallel systems—both must be governed to maintain balance.

Line 2 Changing

This line reads:
Original Chinese:
顛頤,拂經,于丘頤,征凶。
(Diān yí, fú jīng, yú qiū yí, zhēng xiōng.)
English Translation:
"Disturbed nourishment, deviating from the proper channel. Seeking sustenance from the heights. Moving forward brings misfortune."

Nourishment is misaligned—taken from the wrong place or in the wrong way.

Attempting to advance under these conditions leads to failure.

Line 3 Changing

This line reads:
Original Chinese:
拂頤,貞凶,十年勿用,无攸利。
(Fú yí, zhēn xiōng, shí nián wù yòng, wú yōu lì.)
English Translation:
"Rejecting nourishment. Holding to this brings harm. For a long period, nothing is beneficial."

The system refuses what sustains it. This is a structural error, not a temporary imbalance.

Persistence in this condition leads to prolonged dysfunction.

Line 4 Changing

This line reads:
Original Chinese:
顛頤,吉。虎視眈眈,其欲逐逐,无咎。
(Diān yí, jí. Hǔ shì dān dān, qí yù zhú zhú, wú jiù.)
English Translation:
"Disturbed nourishment resolves. Focused attention like a hunting tiger. No fault."

Nourishment is corrected through precise attention. The tiger image reflects disciplined focus.

When intake is properly directed, balance is restored.

Changing to:

14. Great Possession (大有 Dà Yǒu)

Trigrams

Above
☲ Lí (Fire)
Below
☰ Qián (Heaven)

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

The Judgment reads:
Original Chinese:
大有,元亨。
(Dà yǒu, yuán hēng.)
English Translation:
"Great possession. Originating and flowing."

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

The Image reads:
Original Chinese:
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.)
English Translation:
"Fire above heaven: this is great possession. The superior person restrains what disrupts and brings forward what accords, following the pattern of what is given."

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.

Peace and wisdom on your journey!

With gratitude,
The I Ching Team