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I-Ching Hexagram · 觀 · Guān
20. Contemplation
Step back and look from above. Your conduct is being observed — let it be worth copying.
Keywords
Observation · Example · Perspective
The field
Contemplation places wind above earth: it moves over everything without forcing anything. The hexagram describes a pause in which seeing becomes the work. You are both the observer and the observed — a tower visible from below, a person looking down at the pattern they are inside. The mood is washed before sacrifice, the mind quiet enough to read what action would interrupt. Real contemplation is not detachment; it is the kind of attention that changes the watcher. You notice your own conduct as someone living near you would notice it. You notice how the situation actually moves when no one is pushing it. From here decisions stop being arguments and become responses to what is actually there.
Stance
Stop performing for a day. Sit at the height the situation requires and look — at your work, at the people in it, at yourself behaving. Notice without commenting. When you must show up for others, be the version that would still be worth watching when no one is. The seeing is doing enough for now.
Shadow
The shadow is the watchtower used as a hiding place. You climb up to look and never come down — observation becomes a way of withholding yourself from anything that could implicate you. Or you flip it and curate every move for the audience you imagine watching. Both replace contemplation with surveillance.
Changing lines
Changing lines mean the long look is ending and a quiet shift in conduct is about to follow. Something you have been seeing without acting on is asking for your stance. The next move is small but visible — others read it as a signal, and so should you.
Line pattern
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