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Hexagram 22 of 64 · Mountain over Fire

Grace

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Form matters here, but only in the small things. The big things demand substance — and grace can't substitute for it.

The Judgment

Success. In small matters it furthers to undertake something.

The Image

Fire at the foot of the mountain: the image of Grace. Thus the superior man proceeds delicately in matters of present concern, but does not decide weighty questions in that way.

What this hexagram is really saying

Bì is the hexagram of form, presentation, polish. The fire at the foot of the mountain casts light on the rocks — shaping how they look, not what they are. The Wilhelm judgment is precise: "in small matters it furthers to undertake something." Not big matters. Small.

This is the hexagram of design, branding, writing, performance, aesthetics — all the things that make something land well. And the I Ching is, surprisingly, in favor of them. Grace matters. The pitch lands better when it's well-rehearsed. The proposal closes more deals when the deck looks good. The product wins when the packaging is right. None of this is fluff. Form is a way of respecting the person on the receiving end.

The catch — and this is the part most people miss — is in the second half of the image: "does not decide weighty questions in that way." When the question is large (Should I marry her? Should I close the company? Is this person honest?), grace cannot help you. Polish can mislead you into mistaking presentation for substance. The form-over-substance failure mode is one of the most common in modern life. Bì warns you against it.

So: polish the email, dress for the meeting, sharpen the deck. And then, when the moment arrives that actually matters, drop all that and look at what's there.

Questions that tend to get this hexagram

  • Am I obsessing over polish on something that doesn't matter?
  • Should I invest in branding/design now, or focus on substance?
  • Has form started masking the fact that I haven't decided the big question?
  • Where does my presentation need work — and where is it a distraction?

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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