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I-Ching Hexagram · 蹇 · Jiǎn
39. Obstruction
A barrier blocks the direct way. Turn inward, seek wise counsel — the detour is the path.
Keywords
Obstacle · Pause · Counsel
The field
Water on the mountain — the way you came expecting to walk is now broken. Wilhelm draws the figure of the lame person who must take a different route, and the route is the teacher. The obstruction is real. It is not a test of will, and you cannot push through it by working harder. The hexagram tells you to stop, turn inward, look at what you brought to the situation, and reach for counsel from someone who can see angles you cannot. The strange dignity here is that the detour you take to get around the block becomes the part of the journey that grows you. Direct paths build only the muscles you already had.
Stance
Stop pushing. Sit with the wall for a day. Ask one person whose judgement you respect — not whose agreement you crave — what they see. Take their answer in fully before reacting. Look honestly at how much of the obstacle you helped build. Then choose the longer route on purpose, with steady feet.
Shadow
The shadow keeps ramming the wall and calls it perseverance. Or it builds a story in which the obstacle is entirely someone else, refuses counsel, and finds a new wall on the next road. Watch for the version of you that prefers the drama of the block to the work of the detour. That version will arrange another block soon.
Changing lines
When lines move, the obstruction begins to thin. You will not get back the original road — but the new one you have learned to walk now opens. People you met on the detour stay relevant. Take what the slow road taught you into the speed that returns: the patience, the borrowed eyes, the willingness to stop being the one who knows.
Line pattern
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