Situational readings
I Ching for life decisions
Categories of question the I Ching handles well — and the framing that makes the readings actually useful. No platitudes. No woo. Just the decision archetypes the Book of Changes has been mapping for 3,000 years.
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I Ching for career decisions
Career questions are the most common reason people consult the I Ching today. Not because the I Ching predicts career outcomes — it doesn't — but because the questions force you to confront what you've been avoiding about your situation.
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I Ching for relationships and love
Relationships are the second most common reason people consult the I Ching, and they are where the framework most rewards honest questions. The I Ching cannot tell you what another person is thinking. It can tell you what you've been hiding from yourself about the relationship.
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Should I quit my job? — what the I Ching actually says
The "should I quit my job?" question is one of the most common reasons people consult the I Ching — and one of the questions the framework is least built for. The I Ching does not give yes/no verdicts. But it does name the situation you are in with unusual precision.
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I Ching for big life changes
Major life changes — moving cities, marriage, divorce, leaving a career to start something new, deciding to have a child — are where the I Ching's 3,000-year-old archetypes are most useful. Not because the framework predicts how the change will go, but because it names the kind of change you're inside.
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I Ching for creative blocks
Creative blocks are one of the most underrated uses of the I Ching. The framework was used by Philip K. Dick to plot The Man in the High Castle. John Cage used it to compose. The reason: when you're inside a creative block, you don't need an answer — you need a frame your conscious mind would not have chosen.
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Don’t see your situation?
Cast a hexagram with your own question.
The I Ching handles ambiguity better than category pages. Type your specific question and let the cast respond to it.
Cast a Hexagram →