Back to I-Ching
I-Ching Hexagram · 小過 · Xiǎo Guò
62. Small Excess
Attend to small, humble actions. Grand gestures miss the mark now — detail wins.
Keywords
Humility · Minor deeds · Details
The field
Thunder on the mountain — the sound large but the figure small. Wilhelm reads Xiao Guo as the season of small things done well. Big projects, big claims, big trips will overshoot now; they need a different sky. What works in this hexagram is the modest action, repeated with care: the careful email, the quiet apology, the meal cooked instead of ordered, the route a little longer because the small road is safer. The bird does not fly high; it returns to its nest. Authority is exercised lightly, in plain clothes. People who insist on grandeur in this season look ridiculous to the very audience they want to impress.
Stance
Choose smaller targets than your ambition wants. Do them thoroughly. Apologise quickly when needed; explain less. Wear what does not draw attention. Listen more than you speak in meetings, and answer in fewer words than expected. The accumulated weight of small care is, in this season, larger than any one bold move.
Shadow
The shadow is grandiosity in a small season — the bird flying up when it should fly down, the speech given when a note would do. Or the inverse: smallness as cowardice, hiding behind humility to avoid the modest action that is actually required. The hexagram does not bless invisibility; it asks for accuracy at a small scale.
Changing lines
Forward, Small Excess turns into After Completion — the patient accumulation of careful small acts crosses the river. The shore you reach is real, not imagined. Now the season changes again; the next work is to keep the achievement steady. Small care does not stop just because the crossing is done.
Line pattern
▬▬ ▬▬
▬▬ ▬▬
▬▬▬▬▬
▬▬▬▬▬
▬▬ ▬▬
▬▬ ▬▬