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I-Ching Hexagram · 臨 · Lín
19. Approach
A favourable wave approaches. Use this spring wisely — the season will shift.
Keywords
Advance · Good Influence · Spring
The field
Approach is the early thaw. Earth lies above the lake, the ground softens, and the strong young lines press up from below. A door has opened that was closed last season — a person becomes available, an idea finds traction, a body of work warms under your hand. The hexagram is generous and unsentimental at once. Spring is real and limited. What you plant now has time to root, and what you postpone will be harder later because the season turns. Approach also describes a way of meeting a moment: come close enough to be useful, not so close that you crowd what is just beginning. The mood is wide, mild, attentive. The window is small enough to honour and large enough to act inside.
Stance
Move while the ground is soft. Begin the conversation you have been circling. Plant the small thing, write the first page, send the message — the response rate is high right now in a way it will not stay. Stay warm and unhurried in your approach; warmth opens doors that pressure closes. Mark in your calendar that the season will turn, and start the work that needs the long arc.
Shadow
The shadow is greed dressed as enthusiasm. You take the open door as confirmation that the world owes you everything behind it, and you push past what was offered. Or you freeze in the warm window — afraid to start in case you spoil it. Both squander the season. Receive the favour without inflating it.
Changing lines
Changing lines say the warmth is already shifting toward its peak — or someone outside the picture is about to alter how the door stays open. The advice firms: do the rooting now, not later. What you commit to during this window will hold when the air cools.
Line pattern
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