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I-Ching Hexagram · 艮 · Gèn
52. Mountain / Keeping Still
Stop where you are. Inner stillness dissolves what outer effort cannot.
Keywords
Stillness · Meditation · Boundaries
The field
Mountain over mountain — Wilhelm calls this Keeping Still. Not laziness, not retreat. The image is a back so settled that the front does not see itself, a body so at home in stillness that thought stops chewing on its tail. Most of what feels like crisis is unrest looking for a new task. The hexagram says: stop looking. The thing you were going to chase will return on its own, or it will not be needed. There is a kind of work that happens only when you do nothing, the way water clears only when the jar is set down. Set the jar down.
Stance
Sit. Not for an hour of meditation as a project — for a long evening with no plan. Let the body remember what unhurried feels like. Speak less; the words you do not say now save you weeks of cleanup later. Let questions stay questions. Trust that the right move will rise like a fish to the surface when the water is calm.
Shadow
The shadow is stillness as hiding. Mountain becomes a wall around an old wound, and you call it boundaries. Or stillness as numb — refusing to feel because feeling moved badly last time. Real keeping-still is alive; you can be reached, you just are not chasing. If your stillness feels like a closed door, it is not this hexagram, it is fear in good clothing.
Changing lines
Forward, Mountain opens into Gradual Progress — the tree begins to root into the cliff. The stillness was not the end; it was the soil. Now the smallest formal step is taken, then the next, then the next. Do not skip stages. What grows from this stillness lasts because nothing about it was rushed.
Line pattern
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