I Ching Oracle Result: Transformation from Hexagram 41 with Changing Lines 1, 2, 3 to Hexagram 52

Yin Yang symbol, representing balance

Yì Jīng’s Response: Hexagram 41.1.2.3 -> 52

41. Decrease (損 Sǔn)

Trigrams

Above
☶ Gèn (Mountain)
Below
☱ Duì (Lake)

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. With sincerity, the result is favorable. No fault. Stability is possible. Movement is beneficial. 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:
"A lake beneath the mountain: decrease. Excess is constrained and reduced."

The mountain limits the lake, preventing overflow. This is controlled reduction.

The system improves by removing excess pressure and unnecessary expansion. Reduction restores stability.

Line 1 Changing

This line reads:
Original Chinese:
巳事遄往,無咎,酌損之。
(Sì shì chuán wǎng, wú jiù, zhuó sǔn zhī.)
English Translation:
"What is completed should be concluded quickly. No fault. Reduction is applied with care."

Once a process is finished, it should not be prolonged. Delay creates unnecessary excess.

Reduction here is deliberate and measured. The system trims what is no longer needed.

Line 2 Changing

This line reads:
Original Chinese:
利貞,征凶,弗損,益之。
(Lì zhēn, zhēng xiōng, fú sǔn, yì zhī.)
English Translation:
"Stability is favorable. Advancing leads to difficulty. If reduction is not applied, imbalance increases."

This line warns against unnecessary forward movement. The system does not need expansion—it needs correction.

If reduction is avoided, imbalance grows. Restraint preserves stability.

Line 3 Changing

This line reads:
Original Chinese:
三人行,則損一人。一人行,則得其友。
(Sān rén xíng, zé sǔn yī rén. Yī rén xíng, zé dé qí yǒu.)
English Translation:
"When multiple elements move together, one is reduced. When operating alone, connection is gained."

Excess within a group requires reduction. Not all components are necessary.

By simplifying structure, more effective alignment becomes possible. Reduction creates clearer relationships.

Changing to:

52. Stillness (艮 Gèn)

Trigrams

Above
☶ Gèn (Mountain)
Below
☶ Gèn (Mountain)

The Symbolism of Hexagram 52

Hexagram 艮 (Gèn) represents controlled stillness—stopping movement at the correct point. It is not passivity, but the deliberate halting of activity before it exceeds proper limits. Stillness here is active awareness, not absence of motion.

The image of two mountains, one resting upon another, suggests layered containment. Each level holds its own position, preventing movement from cascading outward. This creates stability through structure, where boundaries are recognized and respected. In human terms, it reflects the ability to stop—physically, mentally, and emotionally—before imbalance develops.

Hexagram 52 Judgment

The Judgment reads:
Original Chinese:
艮其背,不獲其身,行其庭,不見其人,无咎。
(Gèn qí bèi, bù huò qí shēn, xíng qí tíng, bù jiàn qí rén, wú jiù.)
English Translation:
"Stillness at the back—one does not grasp the body. Moving through the courtyard, one does not see the person. No blame."

This describes a state where awareness withdraws from entanglement. By turning away from what would normally engage attention, one avoids being pulled into reaction. The image of not seeing the person, even while moving through their space, points to detachment rather than ignorance.

The system halts internal identification before external movement creates consequence. Because engagement is cut off at the right point, action proceeds without disturbance. This is not avoidance, but precise non-involvement, which prevents error from arising.

Hexagram 52 Image

The Image reads:
Original Chinese:
兼山,艮。君子以思不出其位。
(Jiān shān, gèn. Jūn zǐ yǐ sī bù chū qí wèi.)
English Translation:
"Mountains layered together: stillness. The superior person keeps thought from going beyond its place."

The doubling of the mountain creates a structure of mutual containment. Each layer holds firm, preventing movement from extending beyond its boundary. This reflects a system in which stability is maintained through clearly defined limits.

The corresponding human response is to regulate thought itself. When thinking does not wander beyond its proper scope, unnecessary disturbance is avoided. By keeping both action and thought within their place, the system remains stable and self-contained.

Peace and wisdom on your journey!

With gratitude,
The I Ching Team