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I-Ching Hexagram · 節 · Jié
60. Limitation
Accept wise limits. Freedom lives inside the frame — limitless is only scattered.
Keywords
Boundaries · Measure · Moderation
The field
Lake under water — a vessel holding what would otherwise scatter. Wilhelm makes the bamboo joints the central image: each joint is a limit, and without joints the bamboo cannot stand. Limitation in this hexagram is not punishment. It is the geometry that lets life carry weight. Hours that are bounded become hours that count. Money inside a budget becomes money that builds. A relationship with agreements becomes a relationship that lasts. The work is to choose limits that fit — not so tight they choke, not so loose they leak. And then to honour them. Most freedom problems are limit problems pretending to be philosophy.
Stance
Pick three limits this week and write them where you will see them. Make each one specific: an hour you stop, a number you do not exceed, a sentence you do not say. Treat the limit as kindness to yourself, not deprivation. When you bend one, notice — limits broken silently turn into resentment later. Adjust the frame if it truly does not fit; do not abandon framing.
Shadow
The shadow is limit as cruelty — rules carved so tight that life cannot breathe inside them, virtue worn as a hair shirt. Or the inverse, the proud refusal of all limits, called freedom but lived as exhaustion. Both miss the joint of the bamboo. A limit you cannot soften is a cage; a limit you will not honour is a leak.
Changing lines
Forward, Limitation opens into Inner Truth — the frame you accepted creates space for honesty. With the leaks closed, the centre can finally speak. People feel the difference; they trust someone whose limits are visible. The next stage is not more rules but the truth those rules made room for.
Line pattern
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