Hexagram 5
I.The Oracle
A. Hexagram 5 is named Xu, or Attending. Further variations are Arriving, Waiting or Moistened. The lower trigram is Qian: force or heaven, and the upper trigram is Kan: gorge or water.
B. The Judgment
1. Waiting. If you are sincere,
You have light and success.
2. Perseverance brings good fortune.
3. It furthers one to cross the great water.
C. The Image
1. Clouds rise up to heaven:
The image of Waiting.
2. Thus the superior man eats and drinks,
And is joyous and of good cheer.
II. My interpretation
A. “Waiting”
Now is a good time to just “kick-back”, and dwell on inactivity, for the moment. For now, stay out of the mainstream of things. This hexagram
warns us to wait until success is a sure thing. Three people come uninvited,
treat them with due reverence and this act alone should also strengthen your
position.
warns us to wait until success is a sure thing. Three people come uninvited,
treat them with due reverence and this act alone should also strengthen your
position.
I also see one who is waiting on the banks of the great
river or sea, but now he is standing on sand, now if he was to be standing on mud
he would surely become bogged down and not meet his quota of eventually
crossing the great stream. Let your waiting be of fair judgment and on a good foundation, thereby avoiding all injury and bad-mouthing due to unrealized results, which is somewhat subdued.
river or sea, but now he is standing on sand, now if he was to be standing on mud
he would surely become bogged down and not meet his quota of eventually
crossing the great stream. Let your waiting be of fair judgment and on a good foundation, thereby avoiding all injury and bad-mouthing due to unrealized results, which is somewhat subdued.
For now be willing to
wait things out, do not let your hopes, expectations, and fears consume the reality
of the successful and overdue outcomes. Eat and be merry, but live in the moment.
wait things out, do not let your hopes, expectations, and fears consume the reality
of the successful and overdue outcomes. Eat and be merry, but live in the moment.
References
Byrd, James (2018) “The Future”
Huang, Kerson, and Rosemary (1987). I Ching
Karcher, S. and Ritesema, R. (1995). I Ching: The Classic Chinese Oracle of Change [The First Complete Translation with Concordance]
Legge, James (2012). The I Ching: The Book of Changes (Sacred Books of China: The Book of Changes)
Reifler, S. (1974) I Ching: The World’s Oldest and Most Revered System of Fortune Telling
Van Over, R. (1971), I Ching
Wilhelm, R., and Baynes. C.F. (1967). The I Ching, or, Book of Changes (Bollingen Series XIX)
Wilhelm, Hellmut and Richard Wilhelm (1995). Understanding the I Ching
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