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I-Ching Hexagram · 兌 · Duì
58. The Joyous Lake
True joy is shared and sincere. Speak encouragement — empty flattery drains everyone.
Keywords
Joy · Speech · Encouragement
The field
Two lakes meeting — water sharing water. Wilhelm calls Dui the Joyous, and his commentary is firm: real joy in this hexagram is not entertainment. It is the gladness that arises when sincere people speak honestly with each other. The lake gives without losing; what flows from one to the other returns. The work is to keep the speech clean — encouragement that means it, criticism delivered as care, jokes that bring people up rather than at someone's expense. The trigram's open top line is the open mouth, and an open mouth is power. Used well, it heals tables. Used loosely, it floods them.
Stance
Speak what is true and warm in the same sentence. Praise specifically, not vaguely; the specific praise lands and stays. When something is wrong, name it once, kindly, and stop. Laugh easily but not at people. Sit with friends who do not need a performance from you. Quiet joy travels further than loud joy.
Shadow
The shadow is flattery — words that look like joy but are actually trade. Or laughter as armour, deflecting every real moment with a quip. Or the gossip-lake, two open mouths feeding on a third absent person. None of these refill anyone. Joy that drains the room is the wrong hexagram in costume.
Changing lines
Forward, the Joyous becomes Dispersion — shared honest gladness melts the rigidity around the table, and what was held tight begins to flow. People who were estranged speak again. Use the thaw quickly; not every winter ends twice. A simple ritual — a meal, a written thanks — anchors the dissolution into something warmer.
Line pattern
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