Hexagram 62 of 64 · Thunder over Mountain
Small Exceeding
小過 · Xiǎo Guò
Right now, do the small thing. Not the grand thing. The small thing precisely, attentively, and well.
The Judgment
Success. Perseverance furthers. Small things may be done; great should not.
The Image
Thunder on the mountain: the image of Preponderance of the Small. Thus the superior man is exceedingly conscientious in his daily conduct.
What this hexagram is really saying
Xiǎo Guò is the hexagram of small things done well. The judgment is striking and specific: "success. Perseverance furthers. Small things may be done; great should not." The I Ching is, for once, giving you a direct sizing instruction.
This is the hexagram of seasons in life when grandeur is not available, and trying to force it produces failure. You are not at the right moment for the big launch, the big move, the big public statement. You are at the moment for the small thing — the careful email, the daily walk, the modest improvement, the kind small gesture. The text is reassuring that this is sufficient: success comes through it. But also limiting: the great does not.
In modern terms: there are weeks, months, or whole seasons when the right strategy is excellence at the small scale. Don't pitch the round; just make the next sales call. Don't write the book; write the email well. Don't try to redefine the marriage; just be present at dinner. The temptation in such a season is to despair — to think that because grand things aren't possible, nothing matters. The I Ching disagrees. The cumulative effect of small things done well is greater than the average grand gesture.
The Wilhelm image is the operational rule: "exceedingly conscientious in his daily conduct." Do the small thing carefully. Right now, that is the work.
Questions that tend to get this hexagram
- “I want to do something big but it isn't landing. Why?”
- “What small, daily thing should I be doing better?”
- “Why does the I Ching tell me to be small right now?”
- “How do I respect the small without giving up on the eventual big?”
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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