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I-Ching Hexagram · 剝 · Bō
23. Splitting Apart
The structure crumbles from below. Do not fight it — preserve the seed for the next cycle.
Keywords
Erosion · Decline · Waiting
The field
Splitting Apart names a phase you cannot fight successfully. Mountain rests on earth, but the ground beneath is wearing through — yin lines press up and the last yang line at the top is alone. Something in your life has lost its supporting structure: a project, a position, a way of relating, a version of yourself you outgrew without permission. The hexagram does not ask you to rescue what is dissolving. It asks you to step back, protect the seed inside the fruit, and keep your inner life intact while the outer scaffolding comes down. Quiet work matters more than visible work now. Generosity matters more than argument. What is collapsing was time-bound, and the next cycle begins from what you keep alive in this one.
Stance
Stop trying to hold the structure up. Choose what you are carrying into the next cycle and protect it: a relationship, a practice, a piece of integrity. Be quietly generous with people whose own ground is also moving. Save your energy for the seed, not the falling fruit. Keep records, settle accounts cleanly, and wait without bitterness.
Shadow
The shadow is panic. You scramble to prop up what is already gone and exhaust the resources you would need for the next chapter. Or the opposite cruelty — you accelerate the collapse on others, mistaking destruction for clarity. The hexagram does not ask for either rescue or revenge. It asks for stewardship through a low season.
Changing lines
Changing lines mean the bottom is near or already turning. The hardest part of the dissolution is moving past, and the seed for the next cycle is becoming visible. Watch what survives without your effort — that is what the new ground will hold.
Line pattern
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