vaken

Hexagram 40 of 64 · Thunder over Water

Deliverance

· Xiè

The tension just broke. The relief is real. Now don't make the mistake of either gloating or relitigating.

The Judgment

Southwest furthers. If there is nowhere to go, return brings good fortune.

The Image

Thunder and rain set in: the image of Deliverance. Thus the superior man pardons mistakes and forgives misdeeds.

What this hexagram is really saying

Xiè is the moment the storm breaks. The pressure you've been carrying has been released. Something has resolved — a fight ended, a decision finally made, a stuck negotiation finally moved. The Wilhelm text says "if there is nowhere to go, return brings good fortune."

In modern terms: the crisis is over. Don't keep fighting it. The two most common mistakes after deliverance: gloating and relitigating. Gloating is the impulse to make sure the other party knows they were wrong, that you were right, that the resolution was the one you predicted. Relitigating is the impulse to go back over the conflict, re-explaining yourself, re-establishing your case, making sure all the receipts are filed. Both impulses are post-stress reactions, not strategic moves. Both ruin the deliverance.

The Wilhelm image is precise: "pardons mistakes and forgives misdeeds." After a storm passes, the work is to clear the wreckage and move on. People made errors during the conflict — including you. The relief of resolution is also the moment of generosity. Let things drop. Let the other party save face. Let yourself stop carrying it.

The text also says "if there is nowhere to go, return brings good fortune." When a long stress ends, the right move is often to return — return home, return to routine, return to baseline. Don't try to immediately convert deliverance into the next big move. Land first.

Questions that tend to get this hexagram

  • The conflict is over. How do I not blow it now?
  • Why do I want to keep relitigating what just resolved?
  • Should I gloat or stay quiet?
  • What's the move right after a long stress finally breaks?

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

Ask the oracle about your situation

Don’t read about it. Cast it.

You read this far for a reason. The hexagram you actually need is the one your own coins throw.

Ask the Oracle →