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I-Ching Hexagram · 姤 · Gòu
44. Coming to Meet
A seductive or small element arrives. Stay alert — do not bind yourself casually.
Keywords
Encounter · Temptation · Vigilance
The field
Five strong lines and a single soft one entering at the bottom — Wilhelm reads it as the inferior element returning, often charming, often presented as harmless. The encounter looks small. A little flirt, a tempting offer, a project that asks for only a sliver of you, a person who comes back through the door promising they have changed. The hexagram is not paranoid; it is observant. What enters now grows fast if it is fed. The wisdom is in not binding yourself casually. You can meet the new arrival with courtesy. You do not need to take it home. The single yielding line at the foot is exactly the place to keep your eyes.
Stance
Be courteous and slow. Do not sign, do not promise, do not let the encounter into the part of your life that decides things — at least not on the first meeting. Ask what this person or offer wants, plainly, in your own head. If you cannot say it back to yourself, you do not understand it well enough yet to commit.
Shadow
The shadow flatters itself that it can handle the small thing and lets it grow. The little arrangement becomes a lock on the calendar; the harmless flirt becomes the affair; the modest favour becomes the obligation that runs your year. Watch for the certainty that you are too smart to be drawn in. That certainty is exactly the door that opens.
Changing lines
When lines move, the encounter either becomes a clean acquaintance held at the right distance, or it begins to expand into something with a real shape. Be honest about which way it is going. If the answer is expansion, choose the form on purpose, with terms — not by drift. What you commit to with eyes open belongs to you. What grew because you did not look becomes the master.
Line pattern
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