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I-Ching Hexagram · 大過 · Dà Guò
28. Great Excess
The ridgepole bends. Extraordinary times demand extraordinary action — but do not collapse yourself.
Keywords
Overload · Crisis · Extraordinary measures
The field
Great Excess is the ridgepole bending under more weight than the house was built for. The lake has risen above the trees — too much yang in the middle, too little support at the ends. The hexagram describes a load-bearing moment: a relationship strained past its design, a body run beyond its rest, a project carrying obligations it never intended. Ordinary measures will not save it. The remedy is unusual, decisive and personal — you cross the river alone if you must. The hexagram is not catastrophic, but it is uncompromising. It asks you to do the one large thing that actually relieves the strain, and to be honest about which beam in your life is bending. Heroism here is structural, not theatrical.
Stance
Name the load. Choose the one structural change that takes weight off the bending beam — leave the role, end the agreement, redistribute the work, sleep for a week. Do it cleanly even if it is unpopular. Reinforce the ends: the people, habits and resources at the edges of your life that have been neglected while the centre overheated.
Shadow
The shadow is heroism that breaks the carrier instead of the load. You take pride in how much you can hold and refuse to let any beam crack on your watch, until you do. Or the opposite — you drop everything in a public collapse rather than name the specific obligation that is unsustainable. Both confuse drama with answer.
Changing lines
Changing lines mean the strain is being relieved or the structure is changing under the pressure. The decisive move is happening, or its consequences are arriving. Conserve yourself for the period right after — that is when the new shape settles and your steadiness matters most.
Line pattern
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