I Ching Oracle Result: Transformation from Hexagram 39 with Changing Lines 1, 2, 3, 5, 6 to Hexagram 41

Yin Yang symbol, representing balance

Yì Jīng’s Response: Hexagram 39.1.2.3.5.6 -> 41

39. Impediment (蹇 Jiǎn)

Trigrams

Above
☵ Kǎn (Water) — 水 · Depth
Below
☶ Gèn (Mountain) — 山 · Stillness

The Symbolism of Hexagram 39

Hexagram 蹇 (Jiǎn) describes impediment—movement encountering terrain it cannot easily cross. The system is not merely delayed; its present direction is structurally difficult.

Water above mountain creates a condition where flow meets elevation and cannot pass freely. Progress requires reorientation, support, and recognition of where movement is viable and where it is not.

Hexagram 39 Judgment

The Judgment reads:
Original Chinese:
蹇,利西南,不利東北。利見大人,貞吉。
(Jiǎn, lì xī nán, bù lì dōng běi. Lì jiàn dà rén, zhēn jí.)
English Translation:
"Impediment. It is favorable to move toward openness. It is not favorable to move toward further blockage. It is favorable to engage a person of great capacity. Correct alignment leads to a favorable outcome."

The system has reached conditions that resist direct continuation. Progress depends on changing direction toward what is receptive and workable, rather than pressing into greater resistance.

Outside guidance or larger perspective becomes useful here. Stability allows the obstruction to be handled without compounding it.

Hexagram 39 Image

The Image reads:
Original Chinese:
山上有水,蹇。君子以反身修德。
(Shān shàng yǒu shuǐ, jiǎn. Jūn zǐ yǐ fǎn shēn xiū dé.)
English Translation:
"Water rests upon the mountain: impediment. The superior person turns back and cultivates virtue."

Flow is blocked by elevation, so outward movement cannot proceed normally. The appropriate response is not force, but re-examination.

When the environment resists passage, the system benefits from self-correction. Internal adjustment restores capacity for later movement.

Line 1 Changing

This line reads:
Original Chinese:
往蹇來譽。
(Wǎng jiǎn, lái yù.)
English Translation:
"Going forward brings impediment. Returning brings approval."

The present direction is blocked. Continuing only deepens the difficulty.

Turning back is the correct adjustment. Recognition comes from not forcing movement where passage is not available.

Line 2 Changing

This line reads:
Original Chinese:
王臣蹇蹇,匪躬之故。
(Wáng chén jiǎn jiǎn, fěi gōng zhī gù.)
English Translation:
"The governing authority's servant faces repeated impediment. It is not due to personal failure."

The obstruction is real, but it does not arise from internal defect alone. The system is entangled in conditions larger than itself.

This line distinguishes structural difficulty from personal error. It suggests endurance without self-blame.

Line 3 Changing

This line reads:
Original Chinese:
往蹇來反。
(Wǎng jiǎn, lái fǎn.)
English Translation:
"Going forward brings impediment. Returning brings reversal."

Direct motion fails, but withdrawal changes the condition. Turning back allows the system to reverse its orientation.

This is more than retreat. It is a necessary reconfiguration.

Line 5 Changing

This line reads:
Original Chinese:
大蹇,朋來。
(Dà jiǎn, péng lái.)
English Translation:
"Great impediment. Companions arrive."

The obstruction is substantial and cannot be handled alone. At this scale, support becomes part of the solution.

The arrival of others indicates that shared effort can succeed where isolated action cannot. The system regains capacity through alliance.

Line 6 Changing

This line reads:
Original Chinese:
往蹇來碩,吉。利見大人。
(Wǎng jiǎn, lái shuò, jí. Lì jiàn dà rén.)
English Translation:
"Going forward brings impediment. Returning brings enlargement. Favorable outcome. It is favorable to engage a person of great capacity."

The obstructed direction remains impassable, but turning back opens into something larger and more substantial.

Through this reversal, the system gains access to broader support and clearer perspective. That is why the outcome becomes favorable.

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

The Judgment reads:
Original Chinese:
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.)
English Translation:
"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

The Image reads:
Original Chinese:
山下有澤,損。君子以懲忿窒欲。
(Shān xià yǒu zé, sǔn. Jūn zǐ yǐ chéng fèn zhì yù.)
English Translation:
"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