companionship without deep union yet — shared ground, goodwill, no remorse. Honest partial closeness is still a good place to stand. Full love reading
Fellowship in the Meadow
Hexagram 13 · Line 6 meaning
"Fellowship in the open meadow. No remorse."
T'ung Jên is the hexagram of true fellowship: fire blazing upward toward heaven, many flames with one direction. It concerns the bonds that make great undertakings possible — the crossing of great waters that no one crosses alone.
Hexagram 13 line 6 means fellowship without intimacy: shared ground, goodwill, but not yet the deep union of hearts. This isn't failure — there's no remorse in it. Release your remaining doubts, embrace the path as far as it goes, and find peace in connection at whatever depth the time allows. Even the outer meadow of fellowship, honestly kept, is a good place to stand — and from it, deeper union remains possible.
The sixth line is the end, and it settles for something honest and partial: fellowship out in the open meadow — companionship, common cause, genuine goodwill — but not the deep merging of hearts. The meadow is spacious and pleasant and real, and it's also not the inner chamber. The line's gift is its verdict: "no remorse." This isn't a relationship that failed to go deep; it's one that has reached the depth this time allows, and there's no fault in that. The temptation at the end is to grieve the intimacy you didn't get, or to force a closeness the conditions don't support. The line declines both. Release the leftover doubts, accept the connection at its actual depth, and stand in the meadow without apology — knowing that shared ground honestly kept can still, in time, open toward more.
Do accept the connection at the depth it actually has, without either forcing it deeper or grieving that it isn't. This is a real fellowship — shared ground, goodwill, common direction — and it's enough as it is; the line's whole verdict is "no remorse." Release the residual doubts and the wish that it were more intimate than the time allows. Embrace the path as far as it genuinely goes, and find your peace there rather than in a closeness you'd have to manufacture. Stand in the meadow honestly. Don't force the inner union, but don't foreclose it either — outer fellowship faithfully kept is good ground in itself, and it leaves the door to deeper union open for a riper moment.
The change toward Hexagram 49
When this line moves, the situation travels toward Hexagram 49, Revolution — radical change, the creature shedding a worn skin because a new one has grown beneath, transformation that succeeds only at the ripe moment and on genuine trust. The link is the meadow's open possibility: honest partial fellowship can, when the time is truly ripe, transform into something deeper. The change tells you not to force it now, but to know that on its own day — when trust has grown and the moment is ready — the outer fellowship can shed its distance for a new closeness. Revolution removes only what a completed inner growth has already replaced. Keep the meadow honestly, and let the deeper union arrive as a change whose season has come.
a cordial working fellowship that isn't deep partnership — and that's fine. Value the shared ground; deeper alliance can come when it's ripe. Full career reading
accept the connection at its real depth rather than forcing more. Honest partial fellowship is sound ground, and change can deepen it in time. Full timing reading
Can I accept this connection at its actual depth, without forcing it or grieving it?
What would let deeper union arrive in its own ripe time rather than by force?
Keep the line inside the full reading
A changing line becomes useful when you read it in the right order and keep it tied to the wider hexagram pattern.
Read the parent hexagram first so Line 6 stays anchored in the actual situation rather than floating as a detached slogan.
Let this line show where the pressure, correction, or opening is most active right now. It is usually the sharpest instruction in the cast.
Only after that should you compare the transformed figure and decide what movement this changing line is pointing toward.
If you want the wider method behind this sequence, read how to consult the I Ching or go deeper with the changing-lines guide.
Read the full line sequence
Fellowship at the Gate
"Fellowship begins at the gate, in the open. No blame."
Hexagram 13 line 1 means union starts on the doorstep, in full view, before anything has been assumed. Examine the foundations early: unstated conditions, hidden presumptions, unspoken expectations on either side — these must be brought into the light now, while it's easy. Approach without secret aims, hold to what's correct, and if you're not met with receptiveness, remain reserved rather than forcing your views. Care at the threshold spares the whole relationship.
Fellowship in the Clan
"Fellowship confined to one's own clan: humiliation."
Hexagram 13 line 2 is the warning against faction. Aligning only with your own kind — by interest, habit, family, or flattery — feels comfortable and costs you the larger truth. Cliques breed self-serving habits and contempt for outsiders, and factional thinking ends in the humiliation of a bond that stood for nothing universal. Correct your behaviour, put aside petty differences, and measure every alliance against what's universally sound rather than what merely serves the group.
Weapons in the Thicket
"He hides weapons in the thicket and climbs the high hill to watch. For three years he does not rise up."
Hexagram 13 line 3 means distrust armed and waiting: motives concealed, defences prepared, the other party surveilled from a height. Where suspicion hides weapons, genuine meeting becomes impossible for years at a time. Inwardly, this is the ego fortifying its doubts — convinced betrayal is coming, unable to commit to openness, mistaking vigilance for wisdom. The stalemate can't be attacked; it can only be dissolved, by patiently abandoning the hidden arsenal and returning to sincerity.
On the Wall, Unable to Attack
"He climbs his wall but cannot bring himself to attack. Good fortune."
Hexagram 13 line 4 means estrangement — but with conscience intact. Separation and misunderstanding have raised walls, yet something in you refuses to press the quarrel, and that refusal is the good fortune. The inability to attack is the beginning of reconciliation: difficulties work on both parties, softening positions. Hold your principles, don't abandon the relationship, and let the deadlock do its quiet work of turning both sides back toward union.
First Weeping, Then Laughter
"Those bound in fellowship first weep and lament — afterward they laugh. After great struggle, they succeed in meeting."
Hexagram 13 line 5 means two people who belong together are separated by life's obstacles, and the separation is real grief. But a bond rooted in inner truth outlasts every obstacle: the reunion comes, and the weeping turns to laughter. Be patient; hold no one as an adversary; abandon defensive attitudes and keep a fair, generous view of the other's shortcomings. What's genuinely united cannot be kept apart — the struggle is part of the meeting.
Fellowship in the Meadow
"Fellowship in the open meadow. No remorse."
Hexagram 13 line 6 means fellowship without intimacy: shared ground, goodwill, but not yet the deep union of hearts. This isn't failure — there's no remorse in it. Release your remaining doubts, embrace the path as far as it goes, and find peace in connection at whatever depth the time allows. Even the outer meadow of fellowship, honestly kept, is a good place to stand — and from it, deeper union remains possible.
Read this hexagram in context
Love in the open — no hidden agendas, no secret reservations.
Collaborate in the open — shared purpose beats the clique every time.
Partnerships built in the open — no hidden agendas, no cliques.
Family works in the open — shared purpose, no hidden factions.
Money ventures thrive in the open — no hidden terms.
You grow through open bonds — no hidden agendas, one aim.
Learn in the open — shared purpose beats studying in corners.
Make it in the open — real collaborators, no hidden agendas.
Act in the open, with the right people — not alone.
Community of practice in the open — no factions, no hidden terms.
Real fellowship is open and principled — never a clique.
No one crosses alone — make the passage in the open.
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A quiet place to keep returning
Beyond a single reading: True Essence is a daily pause to steady the mind and return to clearer judgement — a seven-day return, free to begin, then a practice that continues day by day.
Begin the 7-day return →Consult the I Ching with Hexagram 13 in mind
If Line 6 is active in your reading, use the oracle to revisit the full pattern and any additional changing lines in your live situation.