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Hexagram 12 of 64 · Heaven over Earth

Standstill

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The conditions are wrong and you can feel it. The right move is patience, not heroics.

The Judgment

Evil people do not further the persevering of the superior person. The great departs.

The Image

Heaven and earth do not unite: the image of Standstill. Thus the superior man falls back upon his inner worth in order to escape the difficulties.

What this hexagram is really saying

Pǐ is the exact inverse of Tài (Peace). Where Tài had heaven below and earth above, with the two forces meeting in the middle, Pǐ has heaven rising away from earth that's sinking. Nothing meets. Nothing aligns. The conditions for movement are not there.

This is the hexagram people draw when they suspect, correctly, that the timing is wrong. The plan is good. The intention is good. The conditions are not. The Wilhelm text is unusually direct: "Evil people do not further the persevering of the superior person. The great departs; the small approaches." In modern terms, the expansive opportunities are receding and the constricted ones are pressing in. You feel surrounded by small concerns and small people. You are not imagining it.

The mistake people make in Pǐ is heroics. They try to make the thing happen anyway. They override their gut. They push the launch through the bad quarter. They marry into the in-laws they don't trust. They take the job they can already feel is wrong. Pǐ is the hexagram saying don't. Withdraw. Conserve. Strengthen what is internal — your skills, your relationships, your savings, your clarity — while the external situation is hostile.

The storm will pass. They always do. The question is what shape you're in when it does.

Questions that tend to get this hexagram

  • Everything feels wrong but I can't pinpoint why. Should I trust that?
  • Should I push this launch through the bad timing, or wait?
  • Why do I feel surrounded by small people and small problems?
  • What should I be building privately while the public situation is bad?

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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