I Ching Oracle Result: Transformation from Hexagram 44 with Changing Lines 4, 6 to Hexagram 48

Yin Yang symbol, representing balance

Yì Jīng’s Response: Hexagram 44.4.6 -> 48

44. Encounter (姤 Gòu)

Trigrams

Above
☰ Qián (Heaven) — 天 · Creative
Below
☴ Xùn (Wind) — 風 · Penetrating

The Symbolism of Hexagram 44

Hexagram 姤 (Gòu) describes encounter—an unexpected element enters the system and makes contact with what is established. The issue is not simple union, but how a sudden influence is handled before it spreads too far.

Wind below heaven shows penetration entering from beneath a strong structure. What arrives is subtle but capable of far-reaching effect if not recognized early.

Hexagram 44 Judgment

The Judgment reads:
Original Chinese:
姤,女壯,勿用取女。
(Gòu, nǚ zhuàng, wù yòng qǔ nǚ.)
English Translation:
"Encounter. A newly entering force is strong. Do not engage in taking this woman."

This hexagram describes the arrival of a potent element that enters suddenly and can influence the whole system. It emphasizes the risk of forming immediate attachment to what has just appeared.

Early contact requires caution. What is strong and newly arrived should be observed and managed before being integrated.

Hexagram 44 Image

The Image reads:
Original Chinese:
天下有風,姤。後以施命誥四方。
(Tiān xià yǒu fēng, gòu. Hòu yǐ shī mìng gào sì fāng.)
English Translation:
"Wind moves beneath heaven: encounter. The sovereign issues commands and proclaims them to the four directions."

Wind moving under heaven suggests influence traveling widely once it gains entry. A small point of contact can become system-wide if left undefined.

The proper response is clarity of response and scope. Once the new element appears, the system must state how it will be handled.

Line 4 Changing

This line reads:
Original Chinese:
包無魚,起凶。
(Bāo wú yú, qǐ xiōng.)
English Translation:
"Containment is empty. Unfavorable outcome arises."

The expected object of control is no longer there, or control was assumed where none existed. The system acts on an absence.

Because the real point of encounter has been missed, disorder begins to emerge. Misfortune comes from failure to contain what mattered.

Line 6 Changing

This line reads:
Original Chinese:
姤其角,吝,無咎。
(Gòu qí jiǎo, lìn, wú jiù.)
English Translation:
"The encounter becomes hard and pointed. There is a constrained outcome, but no error."

What enters is now met at its most forceful edge. The contact is no longer subtle and produces friction.

Even so, there is no fault in recognizing and meeting the situation as it is. The difficulty comes from the nature of the encounter itself.

Changing to:

48. The Well (井 Jǐng)

Trigrams

Above
☵ Kǎn (Water) — 水 · Depth
Below
☴ Xùn (Wind) — 風 · Penetrating

The Symbolism of Hexagram 48

Hexagram 井 (Jǐng) describes a shared resource structure that remains constant regardless of external change. The well does not change—only access to it does.

Water above wood shows resource brought upward through a structured channel. The system depends not on the existence of the resource, but on the ability to draw from it.

Hexagram 48 Judgment

The Judgment reads:
Original Chinese:
井,改邑不改井,无喪无得。往來井井,汔至亦未繘井,羸其瓶,凶。
(Jǐng, gǎi yì bù gǎi jǐng, wú sàng wú dé. Wǎng lái jǐng jǐng, qì zhì yì wèi yù jǐng, léi qí píng, xiōng.)
English Translation:
"The Well. Structures may change, but the source remains. It neither diminishes nor increases. Movement occurs around it. If access fails, or the vessel is inadequate, unfavorable outcome."

This hexagram describes a stable underlying resource that persists independent of circumstance. What changes is not the resource, but the system used to access it.

Failure occurs not from absence, but from inability to draw from what is already present. Proper access and functional tools are essential.

Hexagram 48 Image

The Image reads:
Original Chinese:
木上有水,井。君子以勞民勸相。
(Mù shàng yǒu shuǐ, jǐng. Jūn zǐ yǐ láo mín quàn xiāng.)
English Translation:
"Wood draws water upward: the well. The superior person labors for the people and encourages mutual support."

The well is not self-operating—it requires effort, structure, and participation.

Sustained access depends on maintaining both the system and the process by which the resource is shared.

Peace and wisdom on your journey!

With gratitude,
The I Ching Team