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Hexagram 14 · Line 2

The Big Wagon

Hexagram 14 · Line 2 meaning

"A great wagon for loading. One may undertake something. No blame."
Parent hexagram
14

Ta Yu is the hexagram of abundance possessed: fire blazing high in heaven, its light reaching everything. Strength within, clarity without — power joined to lucidity. The Judgment is among the shortest and most unreserved in the whole book: supreme success.

Direct answer

Hexagram 14 line 2 means the abundance is sound enough to move: strong-axled, well-built, able to carry weight over distance. Inner peace, humility, and self-reliance have made your position stable, and new undertakings can now be ventured with confidence — mistakes will be corrected along the way by forces you can't see but can trust. Load the wagon; possession that can travel is possession worth having.

The image explained

The second line is the inner-centre place, and its stability is what the wagon image celebrates: not just riches, but riches with a strong enough structure to be moved and used. A great wagon has heavy axles and a sound frame; it can be loaded and driven over distance without breaking down. What built that soundness wasn't luck — it was inner peace, humility, and self-reliance, the qualities that make abundance load-bearing rather than fragile. And there's a quiet reassurance in the line: you can undertake now with confidence, because errors along the road will be corrected by forces you can't see but can trust. Possession that just sits is a museum piece; possession that can travel is the kind worth having.

What to do now

Do load the wagon and set out — this is a green light for a real undertaking, the move, the venture, the commitment that requires a sound base under it. Trust that your position is genuinely stable; the inner peace, humility, and self-reliance you've built are the strong axles that will carry the weight. Don't hoard the abundance in place out of caution; its value is in being used and moved. Venture with confidence rather than anxiously pre-solving every problem — mistakes made in motion will be corrected by forces beyond your sight, and you can trust that. Put the fullness to work on something worth carrying it toward, and go.

Transformation

The change toward Hexagram 30

When this line moves, the situation travels toward Hexagram 30, The Clinging, Fire — flame that has no body of its own and lives by clinging to what sustains it, clarity kept alight by devotion to the inexhaustible. The link is what keeps the loaded wagon safe on its journey: the Clinging teaches that what endures does so by staying attached to a sound, inexhaustible source. The change tells you to keep clinging to what makes the undertaking stable — your principles, the trustworthy unseen forces, the inner base — as you travel. Feed that flame with careful devotion. The abundance moves well only while it stays bound to what sustains it; cling to the sound source, and the journey holds.

This line in context
In love

the bond is sturdy enough for a real undertaking — the move, the commitment, the journey. Load it and go. Full love reading

In career

your position is stable enough to venture something bigger. Take the undertaking on with confidence; the base will carry it. Full career reading

For a decision

you have the solid footing to act — undertake it. Trust the stable base, and let unseen corrections handle the mistakes en route. Full timing reading

Reflection

What undertaking is my base now solid enough to carry?

What sound source do I need to keep clinging to as I move?

Read this line well

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.

1. Start with Hexagram 14

Read the parent hexagram first so Line 2 stays anchored in the actual situation rather than floating as a detached slogan.

2. Stay with Line 2

Let this line show where the pressure, correction, or opening is most active right now. It is usually the sharpest instruction in the cast.

3. Then read the direction of change

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.

All six lines

Read the full line sequence

Line 1

No Contact with the Harmful

"No dealings yet with what is harmful — no blame in this. Remain conscious of the difficulty, and you stay free of blame."

Hexagram 14 line 1 means possession is new and no damage has yet been done — keep it that way. Remain humble, detached, and alert to the negative influences that abundance draws. Don't stop to bask: joy grasped at is joy lost, while joy received as a gift and released makes room for more. Stay conscious that great possession is difficult to carry, and the consciousness itself protects you.

Read line 1 in full
Line 2

The Big Wagon

"A great wagon for loading. One may undertake something. No blame."

Hexagram 14 line 2 means the abundance is sound enough to move: strong-axled, well-built, able to carry weight over distance. Inner peace, humility, and self-reliance have made your position stable, and new undertakings can now be ventured with confidence — mistakes will be corrected along the way by forces you can't see but can trust. Load the wagon; possession that can travel is possession worth having.

Current line
Line 3

The Prince's Offering

"A prince offers his abundance to the Son of Heaven. A small-minded man cannot do this."

Hexagram 14 line 3 means the test of great possession: can it be given? The prince dedicates his wealth to what's above him — to the common good, to the forces of good themselves — understanding that such riches are held in trust. The petty man cannot; private hoarding is all he knows, and it shrinks him. Sacrifice here isn't loss but enlargement: releasing attachment to possession frees you from the ego's limits. What's offered upward isn't spent — it's transformed.

Read line 3 in full
Line 4

Distinguishing Oneself from the Neighbour

"He makes a distinction between himself and his powerful neighbour. No blame."

Hexagram 14 line 4 means that standing near others of great wealth or influence, the temptation is rivalry — comparing, competing, envying. Decline the contest. Distinguish yourself not by outdoing your neighbour but by walking your own path: trust your inner guidance, hold to your own values, and let go of measuring. True elevation comes from embracing what's genuinely yours, and the one who doesn't compete cannot be defeated.

Read line 4 in full
Line 5

Truth Accessible, Yet Dignified

"One whose sincerity is accessible, yet dignified, has good fortune."

Hexagram 14 line 5 means the character that abundance requires: open-hearted sincerity that draws others in, joined to a dignity that can't be presumed upon. Unbending truthfulness without warmth repels; friendliness without gravity invites insolence and gets taken advantage of. Share your truth modestly and genuinely with those who truly seek it, and keep the quiet reserve that commands respect. Approachable and unshakeable together — this is the good fortune.

Read line 5 in full
Line 6

Blessed by Heaven

"He is blessed by heaven: good fortune. Nothing that does not further."

Hexagram 14 line 6 is the rare summit at which even the top line — usually the place of excess — is wholly fortunate. Abundance held with humility to the very end draws heaven's open blessing: honouring what's above, remaining conscientious, giving the wise their due. Devotion carried through without arrogance keeps negativity and doubt away entirely, and everything undertaken furthers. This is the reward of a life aligned with the greater good — the whole hexagram, fulfilled.

Read line 6 in full
Situation meanings

Read this hexagram in context

Go deeper

Related guides for this line

These guides add method support around Hexagram 14, changing lines, and the larger interpretation sequence behind this line page.

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Oracle

Consult the I Ching with Hexagram 14 in mind

If Line 2 is active in your reading, use the oracle to revisit the full pattern and any additional changing lines in your live situation.