I ching hexagram 4 Youthful Folly (méng) .  Hexagram 4 means you will come to peace of mind at this moment in time by communicating with your environment, use their advice, mentors and leaders will help you take important steps towards your goal. All the best in your life is… Continue Reading i ching hexagram 4:career, love, health and advice

I ching hexagram 3 Initial Difficulty (Zhun), In the coming period, you don’t need to start new things, put everything off until better times, but you shouldn’t be upset about this temporary phenomenon, after a short period of time your business will go uphill, but for now, just take a… Continue Reading i ching hexagram 3 : love, career, health and advice

I ching hexagram 2 Receptivity (Kun) .Hexagram 2 in the I Ching is represented onlу bу broken lines. The dotted lines represent the dark and malleable power of Yin. An attribute is devotion with an image in the form of the earth. This is a great addition to creativitу. Displaуs… Continue Reading i ching 2 – Receptivity : love, career, health and advice

Hexagram 1 is one of the 64 hexagrams mentioned in the ancient I Ching. It is composed of six straight horizontal lines and holds both positive and negative meanings.  The six horizontal lines in Hexagram 1 are closely associated with the Chinese dragon which is honored for its incredible feats… Continue Reading i ching hexagram 1 love readings,What Is 1 i ching for love?

Hexagram 59:Above Sun the Gentle, Wind   Below K’an the abysmal, Water Wind blowing over water disperses it, dissolving it into foam and mist. This suggests that when a man’s vital energy is dammed up within him (indicated as a danger by the attribute of the lower trigram), gentleness serves… Continue Reading IChing hexagram 59 divination: Dispersion (Dissolution) explained

Hexagram 58 : Above Tui the Joyous, Lake   Below Tui the Joyous, Lake This hexagram, like sun, is one of the eight formed by doubling of a trigram. The trigram Tui denotes the youngest daughter; it is symbolized by the smiling lake, and its attribute is joyousness. Contrary to… Continue Reading Meaning of IChing Hexagram 58: Tui / The Joyous, Lake

Hexagram 49: Above Tui the Joyous, Lake   Below Li the Clinging, Fire The Chinese character for this hexagram means in its original sense an animal’s pelt, which is changed in the course of the year by molting. From this word is carried over to apply to the ‘moltings’ in… Continue Reading IChing hexagram 49 divination: Revolution (Molting) explained

I Ching Hexagram 48: Above K’an the abysmal, Water   Below Sun the Gentle, Wind Wood is below, water above. The wood goes down into the earth to bring up water. The image derives from the pole-and-bucket well of ancient China. The wood represents not the buckets, which in ancient… Continue Reading Exploring Hexagram 48: The Well Meaning and Interpretation

Hexagram 47:Above Tui the Joyous, Lake   Below K’an the abysmal, Water The lake is above, water below; the lake is empty, dried up. Exhaustion is expressed in yet another way: at the top, a dark line is holding down two light line; below, a light line is hemmed in… Continue Reading iChing 47: Oppression (Exhaustion) -Meaning and Interpretation

Hexagram 46:Above K’un the Receptive, Earth   Below Sun the Gentle, Wind, Wood. The lower trigram, Sun, represents wood, and the upper, K’un, means the earth. Linked with this is the idea that wood in the earth grows upward. In contrast to the meaning of Chin, Progress (35), this pushing… Continue Reading IChing Hexagram 46 Pushing Upward:Meaning and Interpretation