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I-Ching Hexagram · 豐 · Fēng
55. Abundance
A peak moment — honour it without clinging. The sun at noon already inclines.
Keywords
Peak · Brief summit · Don't grieve
The field
Thunder and fire together — the festival hexagram. Wilhelm reads it as the noon of a life: harvest in, lights up, the people you love at the same table for a few rare hours. Abundance is not endless. It is a height, and heights are by nature short. The work here is to be present without grasping. Eat with the people who came. Notice the warmth on the back of your neck. Take the photograph or do not. The peak is already inclining as you stand on it. Grief at the inclination is the surest way to miss the peak itself. Be in the noon while it is noon. The shadow grows long quickly enough.
Stance
Light the rooms, set the table, invite the right few. Do the small ritual that marks the moment — toast, photograph, written note. Spend the harvest now on what will not keep: time with people, rest, generosity. Save little. The peak does not credit hoarders. When the light begins to slant, walk back to ordinary work without complaint.
Shadow
The shadow is clinging — extending the festival past its hour, drinking the last warmth flat, photographing instead of being there. Or the inverse: refusing to enjoy the peak because you already mourn its end. Both forms turn the noon into a problem. The hexagram is not asking you to last; it is asking you to be lit while the light is on you.
Changing lines
Forward, Abundance moves into The Wanderer — the festival ends, the table is cleared, you take the road. The riches do not vanish; they change form. Carry only what fits in one bag. The next stretch is travel, and travel rewards lightness, not nostalgia.
Line pattern
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