Sunday, March 21. 2010
- If you receive the same hexagram three times you have three different answers.
The meanings of the hexagrams are not fixed, they change according to your situation. Hexagram 3 can mean that you are experiencing initial difficulties, but it can also mean that initial difficulties elsewhere have to be addressed. A friend of mine was asked to give a beginners course at the upcoming Yijing Symposium in Ruigoord. He asked the Yijing whether this was a good idea, and he received hexagram 3 (5th line moving). You could see this as a difficult start, leading to a troubled course, and be tempted not to do it. But who were the targets of the course? Indeed, those people who experience difficulties when starting to use the Yijing. Therefore, "if you receive the same hexagram three times you have three different answers".
- Moving lines do not move.
Many users have the habit of immediately changing the moving lines in the received hexagram to generate a second hexagram. Apart from the fact that moving lines were probably a later invention and not used in the early days of Yijing practice (Rutt, p. 154-155; Nielsen, p. 22), the habit of generating a second hexagram makes it tempting to bypass the original answer of the Yijing if the second hexagram is more to your liking. But you do not receive the second hexagram as answer from the Yijing, you receive the first hexagram. And that's the hexagram you have to deal with. An example from Clarity's forum:
I got 39.3>8. Then, my I Ching book asks me to throw again when I receive hexa 8, so I asked for clarity and I got 37 "Family". The querent seems to skip hexagram 39 completely, going right over to hexagram 37 which could be called the third hexagram. But that is not the initial answer that she got from the Yijing and that she should have started with. Therefore, "moving lines do not move".
- Bent Nielsen, A companion to Yi jing numerology and cosmology
- Richard Rutt, Zhou Yi - the Book of Changes
- Too much is less than enough.
Can I expect any positive movement from P's corner in the next couple of months?" I got Hex 10 unchanging. I get a sense that 10 means moving with caution. So I asked ..... "Why would he hesitate or cautiously?" I got 53.1.4 > 13 which I assume is about wanting to make gradual progress the natural proper way but I've seen various interpretations of this line so I'm not going to try to work this one out.......any help is appreciated. I also asked "Do I need to do anything more at this stage or should I just wait?" I got Hex 13.3.6 changing to 17. 13 & 17 often confuse me!
Asking many questions to the Yijing is most often not very helpful and does not bring any positive progress to your situation. If you don't give yourself the time to understand the first answer from the Yi, then there is no use in asking again - and again - and again. If the root is not properly planted the tree will not grow. The same goes for all the systems that can be applied to extract meaning from the answer, adding information to information. They also form a terrific fire exit if you don't (want to) understand the first answer. But it doesn't make the answer go away, it only obfuscates it. Therefore, "too much is less than enough".
- When you cling to your question you will lose the answer.
This Law is similar to what I talked about in another article: questions can be misleading and drive you away from what you actually need. Asking questions to the Yijing is not bad, as long as you take care not to frame your question in such a way that the answer that you need can not be given. Questions are a very subjective matter, and questions like "is he the right guy for me" make it easy to ignore your own responsibility. Don't be afraid not to ask questions, the answer from the Yi can be more encompassing if you leave out your own limited understanding of the situation. Therefore, "if you cling to your question you will lose the answer".
- If you cling to the answer you will lose the solution.
The symbolic replies from the Yijing can invite you to endless lingering in the field of metaphors, chewing on every possible piece of information that might or might not be meaningful to you. Many users are afraid that they might overlook something in the answer, as if under each insight another insight is hidden which they must uncover. There is no use in wrenching the answer of the Yijing. Once you have what you need you have to decide your next step and move on. Therefore, "if you cling to the answer you will lose the solution".
- There is no text in the Yijing.
The words are not important, and although it can be very rewarding to look at the original Chinese text from a historical and philological point of view, you should not be carried away by the endless sea of possibilities that such an undertaking can give. What the Yijing gives you when you use the book are images, an overview, a situation, an idea - not words. Therefore, "there is no text in the Yijing".
- When you read the text of the Yijing: read the text of the Yijing.
Many times when I ask one of my students to cite a text from the Yijing they do not give me the text from the Yijing but the commentary from the translator. Most people do not work with the Yijing, they work with the translator's explanation of the Yijing. I find this a strange practice - it's like driving a car but having Hyacinth Bucket - excuse me, Bouquet - sitting next to you giving you directions while you are perfectly capable of driving yourself. I was very surprised when I heard someone say that beginners should start with the translator's commentary, after all, he said, that's what all beginners do. I would say, only read the commentary once you have grasped the meaning of the text yourself. If you make it a habit to immediately go to the commentary, instead of contemplating on the actual text of the Yijing you will never learn to appreciate the direct and illuminating answers that the book can give you. The commentary is just what it says: commentary. It does not hold the answer of the Yijing, and many times the commentary can clash with your actual situation, leaving you more baffled than if you would have taken the time to listen to what the Yi has to say. Therefore, "when you read the text of the Yijing: read the text of the Yijing".
- If you want change nothing will change.
Often the Yijing is consulted when a situation is not as we desire it to be. We want change, we want things to be different. But this need can conflict with what the situation, or yourself, really needs. When you consult the Yijing and have interpreted the answer, the need for change should be gone: instead, you should be aware of the necessity of change, or the want of it, and how it can be accomplished in the most natural way, without forcing it. If you need change you will most likely not be willing to wait for it and let it flow into your circumstances. If you can accept your current situation and if you can see how you got there, change will not be a necessity but a simple part of the flow you are in. Therefore, "if you want change nothing will change".
- The Yijing does not solve your problems.
I think this is an obvious one. "I have consulted the Yijing and the answer was great. I really understood it. But nothing has changed!" Of course not. The process of change only starts with the Yijing, it will not be accomplished by the Yijing. Using the Yijing means hard work and put in a lot of honesty. So kick your butt and live the answer of the Yi. The Yijing is only a book. Therefore, "the Yijing does not solve your problems".
- The Yijing exists to make itself unneeded.
The Yijing is not only a book, it is also a principle. What it shows you is like the air that you are breathing: you are in it, you use it, you need it, but most of the time you cannot see it. Once you are aware of the principle you don't need a tool to make it visible anymore: when you know how to operate the TV you will hardly consult the manual anymore. The Yijing is a learning aid to help you see the underlying principle that weaves the chaotic structure that we experience. But learning aids are not meant to be used all the time. When you have learned the principle you can discard the tool. Therefore, "the Yijing exists to make itself unneeded".
Saturday, March 20. 2010
This is a teaser; the explanations will follow later, although some of the Laws are obvious, in my opinion.
1. If you receive the same hexagram three times you have three different answers.
2. Moving lines do not move.
3. Too much is less than enough.
4. When you cling to your question you will lose the answer.
5. If you cling to the answer you will lose the solution.
6. There is no text in the Yijing.
7. When you read the text of the Yijing: read the text of the Yijing.
8. If you want change nothing will change.
9. The Yijing does not solve your problems.
10. The Yijing exists to make itself unneeded.
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