vaken

Hexagram 21 of 64 · Fire over Thunder

Biting Through

噬嗑 · Shì Kè

There's an obstruction between you and what should be working. Name it. Then bite through.

The Judgment

Success. Letting justice be administered furthers.

The Image

Thunder and lightning: the image of Biting Through. Thus the kings of former times made firm the laws through clearly defined penalties.

What this hexagram is really saying

Shì Kè is the hexagram of breaking through a specific, named obstruction. The image: you have something stuck between your teeth. You cannot eat around it. You cannot pretend it's not there. You have to bite through.

The Wilhelm text says "letting justice be administered furthers." This is one of the few hexagrams in the book that calls for direct confrontation. There is an issue in your situation — a person who is a problem, a policy that is wrong, a behavior pattern that is poisoning the rest of the work. You've been working around it. Working around it isn't working anymore.

The interesting thing about Shì Kè is the structure of the hexagram. Fire above and thunder below — clarity and force together. You need both. Pure force without clarity is wreckage; you'll have a fight without knowing why you're fighting. Pure clarity without force is impotence; you'll keep analyzing the obstruction while it grows. Shì Kè asks for the combination: see exactly what the problem is, name it precisely, and then act with appropriate energy.

In practical terms: fire the person, end the relationship, kill the project, have the hard conversation. The reason this is on your plate is that there is no clean path around it. The biting through is the path.

Questions that tend to get this hexagram

  • I keep working around this. Should I just confront it?
  • Who or what is the actual obstruction here?
  • What conversation am I avoiding because it would be ugly?
  • Is this the moment to fire someone / end this / draw the line?

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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