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Hexagram 36 of 64 · Earth over Fire

Darkening of the Light

明夷 · Míng Yí

The light is being dimmed. Hide your brightness. Survive this. The sun will rise again.

The Judgment

In adversity, perseverance furthers.

The Image

The light has sunk into the earth: the image of the Darkening of the Light. Thus the superior man lives with the great mass: he veils his light, yet still shines.

What this hexagram is really saying

Míng Yí is the hexagram of being right in a wrong environment. The light (fire below) has been hidden by the earth above. The intelligent, capable, well-intentioned person finds themselves in a context that doesn't reward those qualities — and may actively punish them.

This is a hexagram about politics in the original sense: how to maintain your integrity when the people in power around you don't share your values. Maybe you're working under a boss who undermines competence. Maybe you're in a culture that punishes truth-telling. Maybe you're in a relationship where your insight is treated as a threat. The I Ching's advice is unusually concrete: dim your light. Survive. Don't try to enlighten the room when the room would rather have you punished.

The Wilhelm text uses the historical figure of Prince Chi, who feigned madness to survive a hostile court. Not the heroic path. But the surviving path. There is a kind of moral courage in continuing to know what you know while not making yourself a target for it. The light is not extinguished — it is only veiled. You preserve your inner clarity. You wait.

If you drew Míng Yí, do not be a martyr. Do not call out the king. Keep your head down, keep your soul intact, and keep moving toward the time when the light can come out again. Survival is not the same as compromise.

Questions that tend to get this hexagram

  • I'm right and everyone here is wrong. What do I do?
  • Should I leave this toxic situation or play along to survive it?
  • How do I keep my integrity without being a target?
  • What's the difference between hiding my light and selling 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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