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Hexagram 30 of 64 · Fire over Fire

The Clinging Fire

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Brightness depends on what it clings to. Choose what feeds your fire — because you do not burn on your own.

The Judgment

Perseverance furthers. Success. Caring for the cow brings good fortune.

The Image

That which is bright rises twice: the image of Fire. Thus the great man, by perpetuating this brightness, illumines the four quarters of the world.

What this hexagram is really saying

Lí is the hexagram of brightness, clarity, and the thing it depends on. The Chinese character means "to cling" — and that is the hidden teaching. Fire is one of the most powerful forces in nature, but unlike water or earth or stone, fire cannot exist independently. It must cling to fuel. Without something to burn, it goes out.

This is a hexagram about dependency, and it doesn't make dependency shameful. The clear-burning person — the brilliant artist, the great teacher, the focused entrepreneur — is sustained by something. A community. A practice. A mentor. A discipline. A relationship. A body that gets sleep. The Wilhelm judgment says "caring for the cow brings good fortune." The cow is the docile, sustaining thing in your life. Take care of it.

What people do wrong with Lí: they focus on the brightness and ignore the fuel. They are proud of their fire and forget that it requires wood. Then the wood runs out and they wonder why they crashed. The discipline of Lí is in the maintenance work — the quiet daily care of the things that keep you lit. The journaling, the relationships, the practice, the sleep.

Ask: what is my fire clinging to? Is it healthy? Am I tending it? If the answer is no, the brightness you've been outputting is borrowed time. Tend the cow.

Questions that tend to get this hexagram

  • What am I clinging to that's keeping me burning — and is it healthy?
  • Why am I suddenly running out of energy I used to have?
  • What's the docile, daily thing I've been neglecting?
  • How do I keep my best work going without burning out?

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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