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Hexagram 47 of 64 · Lake over Water

Oppression

· Kùn

Exhausted, constrained, words not believed. You're not crazy — the situation actually is this hard. Inner clarity holds.

The Judgment

Success. Perseverance. The great person brings good fortune. Words are not believed.

The Image

The lake without water: the image of Exhaustion. Thus the superior man stakes his life on following his will.

What this hexagram is really saying

Kùn is one of the most realistic hexagrams in the book about how bad things actually get. The image is a lake that has run dry. There is no water. There is no nourishment. And — the part that hurts most — "words are not believed."

This is the hexagram of being misunderstood while exhausted. You are trying to explain your situation to people who should understand it, and they don't. You are out of fuel. You feel like nothing you say lands. The I Ching does not pretend this is fine. It calls it Oppression and means it.

What the hexagram does say is that the inner work continues. The judgment ends with "success, perseverance" — not because the external situation will magically resolve, but because the depth of the difficulty is producing something in you. The Wilhelm comment is uncharacteristically blunt: "stakes his life on following his will." In oppression, you find out what you actually care about. Everything inessential gets stripped away. What remains is the core.

Do not try to convince anyone right now. Do not waste your last bits of energy explaining yourself to people who can't hear you. Conserve. Stay close to the few people who do understand. And know that the silence and exhaustion is producing something — a clarity about what matters that you couldn't have reached any other way.

The lake will refill. Not today. But the path here is the path.

Questions that tend to get this hexagram

  • I'm exhausted and nobody understands. What do I do?
  • Should I keep explaining myself, or stop?
  • Why am I so depleted right now, and is something coming from it?
  • Who are the few people I should stay close to during this?

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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