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I-Ching Hexagram · 升 · Shēng
46. Pushing Upward
Growth rises like a seedling — small, steady, unstoppable. Seek out those above you.
Keywords
Ascent · Persistence · Small steps
The field
Wood pushes up through earth — slow, modest, unspectacular and unstoppable. Wilhelm gives this hexagram the quietest of the ascent images: the seedling, the steady inch, the work that does not look like work to a watcher. The hour favours small consistent moves and discourages bursts. The other quality of this rise is that it benefits from people above you who already know the route. Seek them out. The right teacher, mentor, or older colleague at this stage will save you years. Not because they push you up, but because they describe the slope. You will still climb yourself. You will simply climb on a path with fewer false summits.
Stance
Pick a small daily move and protect it from your moods. Reach toward one person whose work is two stages ahead of yours and ask a specific question. Resist the urge to leap. The seedling that breaks through asphalt does it by repetition, not by force. Track the climb monthly, not hourly. Speed will come back later when the trunk is thick enough to bear it.
Shadow
The shadow despairs at the slowness and quits, then claims the path was not for them. Or it tries to manufacture the look of growth without the inches — the talk, the title, the picture without the work. Watch for the day you measure your climb against someone whose stem is older than yours. That comparison is the one that thins your roots fastest.
Changing lines
When lines move, the seedling has reached the height where wind starts to matter. The careful early discipline pays out — and now the work is to keep the same modest stride at a more visible scale. People will assume you arrived suddenly. You did not. Continue the small daily move you protected. It is the only thing that built this and the only thing that holds it.
Line pattern
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