I Ching Oracle Result: Transformation from Hexagram 43 with Changing Lines 1, 3, 4, 6 to Hexagram 59
Yì Jīng’s Response: Hexagram 43.1.3.4.6 -> 59
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
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.)
"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
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.)
"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.
Line 1 Changing
壯于前趾,往不勝為咎。
(Zhuàng yú qián zhǐ, wǎng bù shèng wéi jiù.)
"Force is applied prematurely. Advancing without capacity leads to error."
Initial momentum appears before sufficient strength is established.
Acting too early leads to failure. Timing must match actual capability.
Line 3 Changing
壯于頄,有凶。君子夬夬,獨行遇雨,若濡有慍,無咎。
(Zhuàng yú kuí, yǒu xiōng. Jūn zǐ guài guài, dú xíng yù yǔ, ruò rú yǒu yùn, wú jiù.)
"Force becomes excessive: unfavorable outcome. The superior person remains decisively resolute. Walking alone, one meets rain and is dampened with irritation, yet there is no error."
Overextension creates instability, yet action still must be taken.
Proceeding alone through adverse conditions may cause friction, but the action remains correct.
Line 4 Changing
臀无膚,其行次且,牽羊悔亡,聞言不信。
(Tún wú fū, qí xíng cì qiě, qiān yáng huǐ wáng, wén yán bù xìn.)
"Movement is hindered and uncomfortable. Drawing the sheep along, regret resolves. Guidance is heard but not trusted."
The system struggles to proceed due to internal resistance.
Corrective action is available, but failure to trust input delays resolution.
Line 6 Changing
无號,終有凶。
(Wú hào, zhōng yǒu xiōng.)
"Failure to declare or signal leads to unfavorable outcome."
If the necessary resolution is not communicated, pressure remains unresolved.
Suppression instead of expression leads to eventual failure.
Changing to:
59. Dissolution (渙 Huàn)
Trigrams
- Above
- ☴ Xùn (Wind) — 風 · Penetrating
- Below
- ☵ Kǎn (Water) — 水 · Depth
The Symbolism of Hexagram 59
Hexagram 渙 (Huàn) describes the dispersal of what has become fixed, congested, or divided. Structures loosen, boundaries open, and what was held together begins to spread outward. This is not simple loss—it is a release of tension that allows movement to resume.
Wind moving over water illustrates how influence travels across a fluid medium, breaking up concentration and carrying elements apart. In human terms, this reflects the dissolution of rigid patterns, emotional distance, or social fragmentation. When handled correctly, dispersion restores circulation and reconnects what had become isolated. When mishandled, it leads to scattering without cohesion.
The core dynamic is the restoration of flow through the release of blockage. A new center must emerge, not through force, but through shared meaning and alignment.
Hexagram 59 Judgment
渙,亨。王假有廟,利涉大川,利貞。
(Huàn, hēng. Wáng jiǎ yǒu miào, lì shè dà chuān, lì zhēn.)
"Dissolution. Smooth progress. The governing authority approaches the ancestral temple. It is favorable to undertake a major transition. It is favorable to remain correctly aligned."
This judgment describes a condition in which cohesion has broken down and must be consciously restored. The image of the ruler entering the ancestral temple points to re-centering around shared origin, purpose, or meaning. Only through this return to a common foundation can dispersion be gathered into coherence again.
The mention of crossing a great river indicates that this is not a minor adjustment, but a significant transition requiring commitment. Success comes not from forcing unity, but from re-establishing a center that others naturally align with. Steadiness ensures that this restored cohesion does not dissolve again.
Hexagram 59 Image
風行水上,渙。先王以享于帝立廟。
(Fēng xíng shuǐ shàng, huàn. Xiān wáng yǐ xiǎng yú dì lì miào.)
"Wind moves across the water: dissolution. The prior governing system offered to the Highest and established temples."
Wind sweeping over water breaks up its surface, dispersing what had settled into stillness. This image shows how influence can penetrate and spread, dissolving rigid formations and restoring movement.
The response is not to resist dispersion, but to anchor it. By establishing places of shared meaning—symbolized by offerings and temples—the rulers created centers that gathered people together again. The lesson is that after dispersion, cohesion must be rebuilt through alignment of purpose, not imposed structure.
Peace and wisdom on your journey!
With gratitude,
The I Ching Team