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I-Ching Hexagram · 睽 · Kuí
38. Opposition
People pull in different directions. Do not try to unify everything — small shared actions build bridges.
Keywords
Difference · Misunderstanding · Small deeds
The field
Fire above, lake below — they share a place and look in opposite directions. Two people, two factions, two halves of the same plan are facing away from each other. Wilhelm is unromantic about this. He does not ask you to fuse them. He asks you to do small shared things while the difference stays. You eat at the same table without agreeing on the meal. You finish a project together while disagreeing about its meaning. The misunderstanding is not the problem to be solved. The problem is the urge to force a reconciliation that the situation cannot yet bear. What looks like distance from one angle is actually the room two distinct things need to keep their shape.
Stance
Choose tasks small enough that disagreement does not break them. A meal, a walk, a single decision with a clear edge. Stop trying to get the other side to see it your way. Stay friendly on the practical surface and accurate underneath. Difference, named without alarm, becomes liveable. Forced unity becomes a wound that takes longer.
Shadow
The shadow either pretends the gap is not there and grows resentful, or widens it into a feud out of pride. The cold reading of the other side hardens into a story you cannot give up because it would mean admitting you were partly wrong. Watch the moment you start enjoying the opposition more than the work. That is the rot.
Changing lines
When lines move, the small shared deeds quietly remake the relationship. You did not unify the views — and yet something between you has shifted. People who have argued cleanly often build truer ground than people who agreed too quickly. Take the new common surface seriously. It was built by repetition, not by miracle, and that is why it can hold.
Line pattern
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