Hexagram 11 of 64 · Earth over Heaven
Peace
泰 · Tài
The rare moment when momentum and receptivity align — and the rarer skill of not wrecking it.
The Judgment
The small departs, the great approaches. Good fortune. Success.
The Image
Heaven and earth unite: the image of Peace. Thus the ruler divides and completes the course of heaven and earth; he furthers and regulates the gifts of heaven and earth, and so aids the people.
What this hexagram is really saying
Peace is the most misunderstood hexagram in the book.
People draw it and think: good, finally a break. That is not what it says. Tài is heaven below, earth above — the lighter, expansive force underneath the heavier, receptive one. Read the image: heaven is rising; earth is descending; they meet in the middle. That meeting is the moment. Not a state. A meeting.
The ancient text calls it the small departing and the great approaching. The translation that lands in modern terms: the small, contracting, defensive things in your life are losing their grip, and something larger — a project, a relationship, a version of yourself you have been quietly assembling — is finally moving toward you. The conditions are good. The wind is at your back. The people are ready.
Here is the part most people miss. Peace is the eleventh hexagram. The twelfth — Pǐ, Standstill — is its exact inverse. Heaven above, earth below. The two forces no longer meet; they drift in opposite directions. The I Ching arranges them this way on purpose. Peace contains its own undoing. The expansive moment, if you grasp at it, becomes the moment things stop touching.
So when you draw Tài, the question is not am I lucky? The question is what do I do with luck I did not earn? The text answers: regulate. Distribute. Aid the people. The peace is real, and it is yours, and it is not a possession. It is a season, and seasons end, and the way you spend the good ones determines what the next one looks like.
Don't squander it on relief. Build something.
Questions that tend to get this hexagram
- “Things are finally going well — what am I supposed to do with it?”
- “I have momentum on this project. Where do I direct it before I lose it?”
- “Why does this feel too easy?”
- “Is this the right moment to commit to her?”
- “I got the offer I wanted. What am I not seeing?”
When the lines change
A six or a nine in any of the six positions transforms this hexagram into another — that second hexagram describes where your situation is heading. The text of each changing line is its own micro-reading. More on reading changing lines →
Related hexagrams
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