Hexagram 8 of 64 · Water over Earth
Holding Together
比 · Bǐ
The moment to commit to the alliance — or to admit you've already been late to it.
The Judgment
Good fortune. Inquire of the oracle once more. Latecomers meet misfortune.
The Image
On the earth is water: the image of Holding Together. Thus the kings of antiquity bestowed the different states as fiefs and cultivated friendly relations.
What this hexagram is really saying
Bǐ is the hexagram of choosing your people — and the cost of waiting too long to do it. The water on top of the earth is a single yang line surrounded by yin: a center that everything else organizes around. There is something or someone in your situation right now that other things are gathering toward. The question is whether you are gathering with them, or hesitating.
The Wilhelm text contains one of the most pointed warnings in the book: "Latecomers meet misfortune." Most alliances close. The friend group forms in week one of school. The founding team commits before the round closes. The community of practice consolidates around its first ten members. If you wait past the moment to join, you're not joining what you saw — you're trying to join something that has already moved on.
It's also a warning to the center. If you're the one others are gathering around, you owe them a clear shape. People can't hold onto something that keeps shifting. Bǐ asks you to be specific — about who you are, what you stand for, who belongs and who doesn't. Vagueness in the center scatters the periphery.
Decide. Then commit. The window is shorter than you think.
Questions that tend to get this hexagram
- “I keep half-joining this community. Should I commit, or move on?”
- “Am I the center of this thing — and if so, am I being clear enough?”
- “Who are my actual people, and have I told them so?”
- “Why does it feel late, and is it actually late?”
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.
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