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I-Ching Hexagram · 未濟 · Wèi Jì
64. Before Completion
You are in the last stretch — the river is half-crossed. Focus now or begin over.
Keywords
Almost there · Care · Final stretch
The field
Fire over water — the flame above the river, the lines all in the wrong places. Wilhelm reads Wei Ji as the young fox crossing the ice: almost across, tail wet, one wrong step from soaking. The work is unfinished; the goal is in sight; the temptation to celebrate early is strongest exactly here. The hexagram closes the Yi not with completion but with this — because life does not end, it always opens another bank. Care now is more important than any care so far. The last quarter of a crossing decides the whole. Eyes on the ice. Weight light. Breath slow. The other shore exists; you have not reached it yet.
Stance
Slow down precisely when you most want to sprint. Make the last steps the careful ones. Re-check the small things you assumed were handled. Tell no one yet that you are nearly there; the announcement burns the breath you need. Keep moving, foot by foot. The other shore does not get closer through wishing — it gets closer through the next step.
Shadow
The shadow is the early celebration — claiming the crossing while the tail is still in water, then explaining the soaking later. Or the inverse: paralysis at the last quarter, treating "almost" as too dangerous to finish, retreating to the bank you started on. Both refuse the simple discipline the fox knows. Place the foot. Then the next.
Changing lines
Forward, Before Completion turns into After Completion — the careful last steps land you on solid ground, every line falling into its correct place. The cycle closes. Rest a moment, then look up. There is always another river, and the discipline that brought you across this one is now part of you. Do not boast of it. Carry it.
Line pattern
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