vaken

Hexagram 52 of 64 · Mountain over Mountain

Keeping Still

· Gèn

Stop. Genuinely stop — not pause-and-keep-thinking, actually stop. The stillness is doing the work.

The Judgment

Keeping still. No blame.

The Image

Mountains standing close together: the image of Keeping Still. Thus the superior man does not permit his thoughts to go beyond his situation.

What this hexagram is really saying

Gèn is the doubled mountain trigram. The image is two mountains — solid, immovable, present. The judgment is the shortest in the book: "keeping still. No blame."

The difficulty of this hexagram is how hard it is in modern life to genuinely stop. People meditate while planning their day. People take vacations while answering email. People sit on the couch with a phone in their hand. The I Ching is pointing at a stillness that is more total than any of these — a stillness in which the mind is also still, not just the body.

The Wilhelm image gives the key: "does not permit his thoughts to go beyond his situation." The mind that wanders to the next thing — the next meeting, the next deal, the next year — is not still. Stillness is being right here, in this room, with this breath, not chasing the future or replaying the past. It is harder than it sounds.

Why now? Because something in your situation requires a non-doing. Most of life's problems are made worse by additional activity. A grief, a decision, a relationship that needs to settle, a body that needs to recover — these don't respond to more work. They respond to stillness. Gèn is the hexagram saying: do nothing. Sit with it. Let the situation reveal itself to a mind that is finally quiet enough to hear it. The stillness is the work.

Questions that tend to get this hexagram

  • Why does the I Ching want me to stop doing things?
  • What is my mind chasing that I should let go of right now?
  • What would change if I just sat with this for a week without acting?
  • Am I confusing pausing with actually stopping?

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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