I Ching Oracle Result: Transformation from Hexagram 9 with Changing Lines 3, 6 to Hexagram 60
Yì Jīng’s Response: Hexagram 9.3.6 -> 60
9. The Taming Power of the Small (小畜 Xiǎo Chù)
Trigrams
- Above
- ☴ Xùn (Wind) — 風 · Penetrating
- Below
- ☰ Qián (Heaven) — 天 · Creative
The Symbolism of Hexagram 9
Hexagram 小畜 (Xiǎo Chù) describes the restraining and accumulating of small forces. Progress is present, but it is limited in scale. Influence works through subtlety, gradual shaping, and attention to minor conditions rather than decisive action.
Hexagram 9 Judgment
小畜,亨。密云不雨,自我西郊。
(Xiǎo chù, hēng. Mì yún bù yǔ, zì wǒ xī jiāo.)
"Small restraint brings smooth progress. Thick clouds gather, yet no rain falls; they arise from the western outskirts."
This describes a situation where conditions are forming but not yet releasing into full effect. There is movement and accumulation, but not culmination.
The presence of clouds suggests potential, yet the absence of rain indicates that the moment has not fully matured. Progress depends on patience and careful containment rather than forceful advance.
Hexagram 9 Image
风行天上,小畜。君子以懿文德。
(Fēng xíng tiān shàng, xiǎo chù. Jūn zǐ yǐ yì wén dé.)
"Wind moves across heaven: the taming power of the small. The superior person refines cultivated expression."
The wind moves lightly across the sky, shaping without force. This reflects influence that operates through subtle refinement rather than direct imposition.
The image shows a situation in which order is developed through pattern, expression, and disciplined shaping. Small forces work gradually, but they still alter the whole.
Line 3 Changing
舆说辐,夫妻反目。
(Yú shuō fú, fū qī fǎn mù.)
"The carriage comes apart at the spokes; husband and wife turn their gaze away from each other."
This line depicts structural breakdown. What should move smoothly instead falls into disconnection.
The image extends to relationship: misalignment leads to separation. The warning is that pressure without cohesion results in rupture.
Line 6 Changing
既雨既处,尚德载,妇贞厉。月几望,君子征凶。
(Jì yǔ jì chù, shàng dé zài, fù zhēn lì. Yuè jī wàng, jūn zǐ zhēng xiōng.)
"The rain has fallen and there is settling. Esteemed virtue carries weight. A woman's alignment under constraint indicates risk. As the moon nears fullness, the superior person who sets out meets an unfavorable outcome."
This line marks a point of completion or near-completion. What was restrained has now been released.
The warning is against continuing beyond the proper limit. When something approaches fullness, further movement disrupts balance and leads to unfavorable results.
Changing to:
60. Limitation (節 Jié)
Trigrams
- Above
- ☵ Kǎn (Water) — 水 · Depth
- Below
- ☱ Duì (Lake) — 澤 · Open
The Symbolism of Hexagram 60
Hexagram 節 (Jié) describes the establishment of boundaries that regulate flow and make activity sustainable. It is not restriction for its own sake, but the shaping of limits that allow energy, resources, and behavior to function in a stable and effective way.
The image of water held within a lake shows contained capacity. Without boundaries, water spreads and loses usefulness; with proper containment, it becomes a reservoir that can support life and activity. In human terms, this hexagram speaks to discipline, moderation, and the calibration of limits—knowing how much is enough, and where to stop.
The essential dynamic is balance. Too little constraint leads to dissipation and disorder, while too much creates rigidity and breakdown. Effective structure lies in setting limits that are clear, appropriate, and adaptable to conditions.
Hexagram 60 Judgment
節,亨。苦節,不可貞。
(Jié, hēng. Kǔ jié, bù kě zhēn.)
"Constraint. Smooth progress. Bitter or excessive limitation cannot be maintained."
This judgment describes the role of limits in restoring order and enabling function. When boundaries are properly established, movement becomes coherent and sustainable, allowing progress to unfold.
However, constraint must remain proportionate. When limits become too severe or inflexible, they create strain and cannot endure over time. The system then reacts against them, leading to breakdown.
The principle is measured regulation. Success comes from applying limits that guide behavior without suffocating it, maintaining both structure and vitality.
Hexagram 60 Image
澤上有水,節。君子以制數度,議德行。
(Zé shàng yǒu shuǐ, jié. Jūn zǐ yǐ zhì shù dù, yì dé xíng.)
"Water rests upon the lake: limitation. The superior person establishes measures and standards and evaluates behavior against them."
Water contained within the lake illustrates capacity defined by boundaries. The containment does not suppress the water—it gives it form and usefulness. Without such limits, the water would disperse and lose coherence.
The superior person responds by creating systems of measure—standards, rhythms, and guidelines that regulate activity. These are not arbitrary rules, but calibrated structures aligned with what is appropriate.
Through this, behavior is refined. By examining conduct against clear measures, one maintains balance and prevents excess or deficiency.
Peace and wisdom on your journey!
With gratitude,
The I Ching Team