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I-Ching Hexagram · 噬嗑 · Shì Kè
21. Biting Through
Something blocks the mouth. Bite through the obstacle firmly and justly — half-measures fail.
Keywords
Decisive action · Obstacle · Justice
The field
Biting Through is a hexagram of the obstacle that has to be removed before anything else can move. Thunder below, fire above — the energy is bright and decisive, the kind that closes a court case rather than opens one. Something is between the upper and lower jaw of the situation: a person who keeps obstructing, a habit that intercepts every plan, a fact nobody is willing to name. The remedy is not patience and it is not violence. It is firm, well-aimed pressure, applied once, with full consciousness of why. Justice in this hexagram does not mean punishment; it means restoring the conditions under which life can pass through. The bite is unsentimental and proportionate, and the relief afterwards is immediate.
Stance
Name the obstacle out loud and to its face. Choose the action that will actually remove it — not the one that comforts you, not the one that punishes. Apply it once, fully, then stop. Document what you did and why so you can answer for it. Rights and rules are tools here; let them carry the weight your emotion does not need to.
Shadow
The shadow is the bite that becomes biting. You take a real grievance and turn it into a hunting season — every conversation an indictment, every disagreement evidence. Or you avoid the bite entirely and call it kindness while the obstruction quietly poisons everyone behind you. Justice without proportion stops being justice.
Changing lines
Changing lines mean the action is happening or its consequences are arriving. The obstruction will not stay where you found it. Pay attention to who else moves once it is removed — that motion shows you the actual shape of the situation you have been inside.
Line pattern
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