I Ching Oracle Result: Transformation from Hexagram 62 with Changing Lines 1, 2, 6 to Hexagram 14

Yin Yang symbol, representing balance

Yì Jīng’s Response: Hexagram 62.1.2.6 -> 14

62. Small Adjustment (小過 Xiǎo Guò)

Trigrams

Above
☳ Zhèn (Thunder) — 雷 · Arousing
Below
☶ Gèn (Mountain) — 山 · Stillness

The Symbolism of Hexagram 62

Hexagram 小過 (Xiǎo Guò) describes a condition in which the system is stable but highly sensitive, requiring only small, precise adjustments. It is a state where minor deviations have amplified effects, and therefore action must be measured, localized, and carefully scaled.

Thunder above the mountain suggests movement occurring over a stable base. The mountain does not move, but the thunder introduces disturbance at the surface level. This creates a dynamic where change is possible, but only in limited scope. Large actions would destabilize the structure, while subtle corrections can restore balance.

The governing principle is proportionality. When conditions are delicate, success comes from restraint, precision, and attention to detail. Exceeding the appropriate scale—even slightly—can lead to disproportionate consequences.

Hexagram 62 Judgment

The Judgment reads:
Original Chinese:
小過,亨。利貞。可小事,不可大事。飛鳥遺之音,不宜上,宜下,大吉。
(Xiǎo guò, hēng. Lì zhēn. Kě xiǎo shì, bù kě dà shì. Fēi niǎo yí zhī yīn, bù yí shàng, yí xià, dà jí.)
English Translation:
"Small exceeding. Smooth progress. It is favorable to remain correctly aligned. Small matters are workable; great matters are not. The bird flies low, leaving its call—do not ascend; it is favorable to remain below. Strong favorable outcome."

This judgment defines the limits of action within a sensitive system. Function is possible, but only when actions remain within a small and controlled scope. Attempting large-scale change exceeds the system’s tolerance and leads to instability.

The image of the flying bird emphasizes proper altitude. To rise too high is to lose contact with the structure below; staying low maintains connection and control. The 'call left behind' suggests subtle influence rather than overt force.

Success comes through disciplined restraint. By focusing on small, precise actions and avoiding escalation, the system can be guided without disruption.

Hexagram 62 Image

The Image reads:
Original Chinese:
山上有雷,小過。君子以行過乎恭,喪過乎哀,用過乎儉。
(Shān shàng yǒu léi, xiǎo guò. Jūn zǐ yǐ xíng guò hū gōng, sàng guò hū āi, yòng guò hū jiǎn.)
English Translation:
"Thunder rumbles above the mountain: small adjustment. The superior person goes beyond in humility, in mourning, and in frugality."

Thunder above the mountain indicates movement that does not penetrate deeply but still affects the surface. This reflects a condition where adjustments must remain subtle and controlled.

The superior person responds by leaning slightly beyond the norm in restrained qualities—humility, grief, and economy. These are not excesses of force, but calibrated deviations that maintain balance without destabilizing the system.

This illustrates the correct use of 'small exceeding': not escalation, but fine-tuning. By adjusting behavior in measured ways, one preserves stability while allowing necessary correction.

Line 1 Changing

This line reads:
Original Chinese:
飛鳥以凶。
(Fēi niǎo yǐ xiōng.)
English Translation:
"The bird flies upward—unfavorable outcome."

At the beginning, the system is highly sensitive and not yet stabilized. Premature or excessive movement disrupts the delicate balance.

The upward flight symbolizes overreaching—acting beyond what the situation can support. This breaks alignment and leads to failure.

The lesson is restraint. Remaining within proper limits preserves stability at this early stage.

Line 2 Changing

This line reads:
Original Chinese:
過其祖,遇其妣。不及其君,遇其臣,无咎。
(Guò qí zǔ, yù qí bǐ. Bù jí qí jūn, yù qí chén, wú jiù.)
English Translation:
"Passing the grandfather, meeting the grandmother. Not reaching the ruler, meeting the minister. No error."

This line describes appropriate scaling of interaction. Rather than engaging at the highest level, connection is made at a closer, more accessible level.

This reflects the principle of small adjustment—working within local or intermediate structures rather than escalating unnecessarily.

Because the action is proportionate and contained, there is no fault. Alignment is maintained without overextension.

Line 6 Changing

This line reads:
Original Chinese:
弗遇過之,飛鳥離之,凶,是謂災眚。
(Fú yù guò zhī, fēi niǎo lí zhī, xiōng, shì wèi zāi shěng.)
English Translation:
"Not meeting the situation, one exceeds it. The bird flies away. Unfavorable outcome—this is called calamity."

At the extreme, action loses alignment with the situation entirely. Instead of meeting conditions directly, one overshoots or bypasses them.

The departing bird represents loss of connection. Control is lost because the system no longer responds to its own conditions.

This leads to breakdown. When limits are exceeded and alignment is abandoned, the result is systemic failure.

Changing to:

14. Great Possession (大有 Dà Yǒu)

Trigrams

Above
☲ Lí (Fire) — 火 · Radiance
Below
☰ Qián (Heaven) — 天 · Creative

The Symbolism of Hexagram 14

Hexagram 大有 (Dà Yǒu) describes a condition in which what is central holds and illuminates what is strong. Clarity governs power, and what is gathered is directed rather than scattered.

Hexagram 14 Judgment

The Judgment reads:
Original Chinese:
大有,元亨。
(Dà yǒu, yuán hēng.)
English Translation:
"Great possession. Origin and smooth progress."

This describes a state in which much is held together under a unifying clarity. It is not accumulation alone, but the ability to direct what has been gathered.

Because the center is clear and properly positioned, movement proceeds without obstruction. What is held does not disperse.

Hexagram 14 Image

The Image reads:
Original Chinese:
火在天上,大有。君子以遏恶扬善,顺天休命。
(Huǒ zài tiān shàng, dà yǒu. Jūn zǐ yǐ è è yáng shàn, shùn tiān xiū mìng.)
English Translation:
"Fire shines in heaven: great possession. The superior person restrains what disrupts and brings forward what accords, following the larger pattern of what is established."

Fire above heaven illuminates what is below, making everything visible. Possession here comes through clarity, not force.

The superior person does not impose control arbitrarily, but regulates what is present—checking what disturbs alignment and advancing what sustains it.

Peace and wisdom on your journey!

With gratitude,
The I Ching Team