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I-Ching Hexagram · 同人 · Tóng Rén
13. Fellowship
Gather under an open, common cause — not a secret clique. Honest alliance crosses great waters.
Keywords
Brotherhood · Open cause · Shared vision
The field
Fire under heaven, light rising into the open. Fellowship is the hexagram of public alliance, the kind of bond that does not need to hide. Wilhelm-Baynes is exact about the difference between this hexagram and a private circle: the strength of fellowship is that anyone of true heart can join, and its weakness is that secrecy will rot it from the inside. You are being asked to gather around a cause that can be named without embarrassment, that holds together not because of who is excluded but because of what is shared. The atmosphere is bright, slightly formal, slightly demanding. Friendship here is not warmth alone; it is a working agreement about which direction the light is facing. Real fellowship can cross great waters because nobody is hiding the map.
Stance
Speak the cause out loud, in plain words, where the people you want at the table can hear it. Test the alliance early on something small enough to recover from. Notice who shows up before they are asked twice. Do not soften the cause to keep someone who would not have stayed for the real version anyway. Open ground, public banner, named purpose. The work you do under those three is the work that lasts.
Shadow
The shadow is the cause that has become a clique. The original purpose dissolved into the pleasure of being inside, and now the group spends most of its energy maintaining the membrane between itself and everyone else. Or the inverse: a fellowship that demands so much purity from members that it cannot grow, and slowly burns its own people for failing the test of total agreement. Both shadows trade the openness that gave the hexagram its strength for the small comfort of being right together.
Changing lines
When fellowship changes, the alliance has either deepened into a working body or revealed itself as a dinner party. A line moves and the resulting hexagram tells you which. Pay attention to whether the change asks for a vow, a constitution, or simply a clearer membership; sometimes the move is from informal to formal, sometimes the opposite. The light has not gone down; it is being asked to choose a lamp.
Line pattern
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