Hexagram 63 of 64 · Water over Fire
After Completion
既濟 · Jì Jì
The thing you wanted is done. This is the dangerous moment — when finishing becomes complacency, and disorder sneaks in.
The Judgment
Success in small matters. Perseverance furthers. At the beginning, good fortune; at the end, disorder.
The Image
Water over fire: the image of the condition in After Completion. Thus the superior man takes thought of misfortune and arms himself against it in advance.
What this hexagram is really saying
Jì Jì is the hexagram of completion — and the warning that comes with it. The judgment is unusually layered: "success in small matters. Perseverance furthers. At the beginning, good fortune; at the end, disorder."
Most people draw this hexagram and feel pleased. Something they were working on has come together. The project shipped. The wedding happened. The acquisition closed. The book was published. The I Ching's response is congratulations — and then, almost immediately, caution. "At the end, disorder." Completion contains the seeds of its own undoing.
Why? Because at the moment of completion, people relax. They stop the disciplines that got them there. They stop watching for problems because the thing they were watching for has been resolved. They take their eye off the ball. Maintenance modes get abandoned. Quality drifts. The team that just shipped the great product fails to ship the next one. The marriage that just reached its big anniversary stops being attentive. The company at IPO becomes the company that's calcified.
The Wilhelm image is the antidote: "takes thought of misfortune and arms himself against it in advance." Plan for the next phase while you are celebrating this one. Identify the disciplines that got you here and recommit to them. The completion is real. So is the danger of treating it as a stopping point. Jì Jì is the hexagram of people who, having won, immediately start preparing for the next thing.
Questions that tend to get this hexagram
- “I just finished a big thing. Why do I feel uneasy?”
- “How do I avoid the post-launch collapse?”
- “What disciplines that got me here am I about to stop doing?”
- “What's the next phase of this — and am I planning for it yet?”
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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