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I-Ching Hexagram · 訟 · Sòng
6. Conflict
A dispute is rising. Stop halfway, seek mediation — victory at all costs will cost too much.
Keywords
Dispute · Caution · Mediation
The field
Heaven moves up, water moves down; they are pulling apart. The hexagram of conflict names the moment you and another are no longer drawing from the same source, and both of you can feel it. Wilhelm-Baynes is unusually direct here: even a just cause does not justify pursuing the dispute to the end. Conflict in the I Ching is rarely about who is right. It is about the cost of being right at this particular table on this particular day. There is honesty in your position, and it is being heard wrongly. The atmosphere is sharp, the words have started to mean things they did not mean a week ago, and someone is keeping score. The hexagram is asking whether the score is worth the room.
Stance
Stop halfway. Bring in a third pair of eyes you both trust. Write down what you actually want, not what would humiliate the other side; the gap between those two is where your real position is hiding. If you cannot bring a mediator, lower your voice and slow your pace. The dispute that wins everything in week one tends to lose everything in year three.
Shadow
The shadow is the addiction to being right. Conflict held wrongly turns into a personality, then into a strategy, then into a way of life that no longer remembers what it was originally defending. People win the argument and lose the marriage, win the lawsuit and lose the company. There is a particular kind of clarity that arrives the morning after, when the room is empty and the position you fought for no longer wants what it was fighting toward. This hexagram is asking you to skip that morning.
Changing lines
When conflict changes, something has stopped being symmetrical. A line moves, and either you have stepped back from the brink or the other party has, or a third figure has arrived to absorb the heat. Read the resulting hexagram as the shape of the relationship after the heat drops. Notice especially whether the new picture asks for repair or simple distance; both are honest endings, and they are not the same.
Line pattern
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