I Ching Oracle Result: Transformation from Hexagram 31 with Changing Lines 1, 4 to Hexagram 63
Yì Jīng’s Response: Hexagram 31.1.4 -> 63
31. Resonance (咸 Xián)
Trigrams
- Above
- ☱ Duì (Lake)
- Below
- ☶ Gèn (Mountain)
The Symbolism of Hexagram 31
Hexagram 咸 (Xián) describes resonance—how one system responds to another through sensitivity and internal alignment. Influence here is not applied force, but the natural transmission of signal between receptive structures.
The mountain below provides stability, while the lake above allows openness and exchange. Together, they form a system where stillness enables accurate reception, and openness allows response. This hexagram models how connection forms through responsiveness rather than control.
Hexagram 31 Judgment
咸,亨,利貞。取女吉。
(Xián, hēng, lì zhēn. Qǔ nǚ jí.)
"Resonance brings progress. It is favorable to remain steady. Forming a union brings good fortune."
This describes a state where mutual responsiveness allows connection to form naturally. Stability is required so that influence is not distorted or forced.
When alignment is genuine, union emerges without friction. The system holds together because its components respond to one another accurately.
Hexagram 31 Image
山上有澤,咸。君子以虛受人。
(Shān shàng yǒu zé, xián. Jūn zǐ yǐ xū shòu rén.)
"A lake rests above the mountain: resonance. The superior person remains open and receives others."
The mountain holds still while the lake responds to what it encounters. This pairing creates a system capable of sensing and responding without distortion.
Openness is not passivity, but clarity of reception. By remaining unfilled, one can register external influence accurately and respond appropriately.
Line 1 Changing
咸其拇。
(Xián qí mǔ.)
"Resonance begins in the toes."
The initial signal is minimal and localized. Influence has begun, but it has not yet developed into meaningful movement.
At this stage, response should remain contained. Premature expansion would distort the signal.
Line 4 Changing
貞吉,悔亡。憧憧往來,朋從爾思。
(Zhēn jí, huǐ wáng. Chōng chōng wǎng lái, péng cóng ěr sī.)
"Steadiness brings good fortune. Regret fades. In ongoing exchange, others align with your pattern."
Here, resonance stabilizes and becomes continuous. Signals move back and forth without obstruction.
Because the system remains consistent, others naturally synchronize with it. Alignment spreads without force.
Changing to:
63. After Completion (既濟 Jì Jì)
Trigrams
- Above
- ☵ Kǎn (Water)
- Below
- ☲ Lí (Fire)
The Symbolism of Hexagram 63
Hexagram 既濟 (Jì Jì) represents a system that has reached full functional completion—every element is in its correct position, and all processes are operating as intended. It is a moment of achieved order, where structure and flow are in precise alignment.
Water above fire forms a dynamic equilibrium: the fire heats upward, the water cools downward, and together they create a stable exchange. Yet this balance is inherently temporary. Because all forces are fully engaged, even a slight disturbance can begin the process of reversal.
The essential dynamic is post-completion instability. Once a system reaches perfect order, it begins to drift toward disorder unless actively maintained. Completion is not an endpoint, but a transition point that requires vigilance, calibration, and ongoing correction.
Hexagram 63 Judgment
既濟,亨小,利貞。初吉,終亂。
(Jì jì, hēng xiǎo, lì zhēn. Chū jí, zhōng luàn.)
"After completion. Success in small matters. Constancy is favorable. At the beginning, good fortune; in the end, disorder."
This judgment describes a system that has successfully reached equilibrium. All components are aligned, and function is smooth—but only within limited scope. Large-scale changes are no longer appropriate.
Because the system is fully configured, its tolerance for disturbance is low. Even minor deviations can propagate and lead to instability over time.
The warning is clear: completion contains the seed of decline. Sustained order depends on continued attention, discipline, and small corrective actions. Without this, disorder inevitably emerges.
Hexagram 63 Image
水在火上,既濟。君子以思患而預防之。
(Shuǐ zài huǒ shàng, jì jì. Jūn zǐ yǐ sī huàn ér yù fáng zhī.)
"Water above fire: after completion. The superior person anticipates disorder and prepares against it."
Water above fire illustrates a delicate balance of opposing forces held in correct relation. The system functions because each element occupies its proper place, yet tension remains beneath the surface.
The superior person understands that this balance is not self-sustaining. Rather than reacting to failure, they anticipate it, identifying potential points of breakdown before they manifest.
Preparation becomes the key discipline. By recognizing that completion is inherently unstable, one maintains order through foresight rather than correction after collapse.
Peace and wisdom on your journey!
With gratitude,
The I Ching Team