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I-Ching Hexagram · 大畜 · Dà Xù
26. Great Taming
Great strength restrained becomes greater still. Study, save and sharpen — release at the right hour.
Keywords
Accumulation · Self-discipline · Power Held
The field
Great Taming holds heaven inside the mountain — vast force contained by a calm boundary. The hexagram is about strength that has chosen to wait. You have something powerful in your hands: a project, a talent, a piece of leverage. The wisdom now is not how loudly to use it but how patiently to build the structure that can carry it. Daily practice. Quiet study. Resources accumulated rather than spent. The image is the well-fed bull whose horns have been padded — not to weaken him, but to prevent the wrong release. When the right moment arrives, the restrained force becomes useful precisely because it was held. The mood is disciplined, almost monastic, and surprisingly cheerful — there is real pleasure in keeping faith with something larger than today.
Stance
Build the routine that makes the big move possible later. Read the difficult book. Save the resource you would normally spend. Accept a smaller stage now in exchange for the deeper foundation. Refuse the early reward that drains the strength you are storing. When you act, act once and decisively from the accumulated mass.
Shadow
The shadow is hoarding without purpose. You keep accumulating — credentials, savings, unused projects — and never let the force out, because release would expose you. Or the inverse: you cannot stand the discipline and squander the reserve in a flashy gesture that proves nothing. The hexagram is not asceticism. It is timing.
Changing lines
Changing lines mean the holding period is shifting toward release, or the structure that contains the force is being upgraded. Watch for the first legitimate request — large, public, properly framed — that asks the strength to come forward. The window for the long-prepared move is opening.
Line pattern
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