vaken

Hexagram 48 of 64 · Water over Wind

The Well

· Jǐng

The well is the underlying resource that doesn't move when everything else does. Find yours. Maintain yours.

The Judgment

The town may change but the well does not. Nothing is lost or gained.

The Image

Water over wood: the image of the Well. Thus the superior man encourages the people at their work, and exhorts them to help one another.

What this hexagram is really saying

Jǐng is one of the most beautiful hexagrams in the book. The well is the thing that doesn't change when everything around it does. "The town may change but the well does not. Nothing is lost or gained." People come and go. Empires rise and fall. The well — the underlying source — keeps producing water.

In modern terms, this is the hexagram of your foundational resources — the skills, relationships, values, or practices that have been with you through every season. Your craft. Your home. Your closest friendships. Your daily writing. The early-morning quiet. The body. The thing that, no matter what else is happening, you can return to and find still working.

The Wilhelm text warns about wells that have fallen into disuse. The well has to be maintained or it silts up. You have to draw from it, or the water stagnates. The rope has to be long enough to reach the water. If any of those things fail, you have a well in name only.

If you drew Jǐng, the question is: what is your well? And are you maintaining it? Many people in their forties realize they've stopped drawing from theirs — they've been so busy with the surface activity of life that the deep source has gone dry. The hexagram is the gentle reminder: go back. Clean the well. Drink from it. Let others drink from it too. This is the resource that holds when everything else is in motion.

Questions that tend to get this hexagram

  • What is the deep source I've been neglecting?
  • Why do I feel disconnected from what used to sustain me?
  • What practice should I return to that I let slide?
  • What in my life is permanent enough to organize around?

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 →