the spell was fantasy — and it's breaking. Wake up without shame: correcting course after the delusion carries no blame at all. Full love reading
Deluded Enthusiasm
Hexagram 16 · Line 6 meaning
"Deluded enthusiasm. But if one awakens after the fact and changes, there is no blame."
Yü is the hexagram of movement that meets with devotion: thunder rising out of the willing earth. When action follows the natural inclination of those it moves — when a leader's direction matches what people were already ready to give — resistance vanishes and everything becomes easy. Ease is achieved through the absence of resistance; a well-placed passion unlocks every opportunity.
Hexagram 16 line 6 is the final warning: enthusiasm revealed as delusion — an excitement that served fear, vanity, or false ambition rather than truth. Even here the door stands open: if, when the delusion completes itself, you wake and change course, no blame remains. Examine your motives honestly, abandon the inferior means, and correct what was wrong. It's never too late to trade a deluded enthusiasm for a true one.
The sixth line is the end, the place where an enthusiasm has run its full course — and here what it reveals is that the excitement was delusion all along, fuelled by fear, vanity, or false ambition rather than by anything true. That's the sobering part. But the line is unusually merciful about it: "if one awakens after the fact and changes, there is no blame." The delusion completing itself is precisely what makes the waking possible — you can finally see what the enthusiasm was actually serving. The line refuses to trap you in the mistake. What matters isn't that you were deluded; it's whether, seeing it, you correct. Examine the real motives honestly, drop the inferior means the delusion relied on, and change course. It's genuinely never too late to swap a false enthusiasm for a true one.
Do wake up without shame and change course. If the excitement has revealed itself as delusion — something that was serving fear, vanity, or false ambition rather than truth — don't sink into self-reproach; the line explicitly clears you of blame the moment you correct. Examine your actual motives honestly: what was this enthusiasm really for? Then abandon the inferior means it relied on and set the wrong thing right. Don't cling to the delusion to avoid admitting it, and don't conclude it's too late — it isn't. The whole point of this line is that the door stays open at the very end. Trade the false enthusiasm for a true one, aimed at something real, and move on cleanly.
The change toward Hexagram 35
When this line moves, the situation travels toward Hexagram 35, Progress — easy advance, the sun climbing clear of the horizon, where how far you rise depends on how far you distance yourself from what dims you. The link is the correction this line calls for: the deluded enthusiasm is exactly what dims you, and dropping it is what lets the sun climb. The change tells you that waking and changing course isn't just damage control — it opens genuine progress. Distance yourself from the false excitement, aim a true one at something real, and the way clears into steady advance. Trade the delusion for truth, and what felt like a dead end becomes the horizon the sun rises over.
a project or ambition you were excited about proves hollow. Admit it without shame, drop it, and redirect toward something real — the way opens. Full career reading
if the enthusiasm driving this was delusion, change course now. Correcting carries no blame, and it clears the path to real progress. Full timing reading
What was this enthusiasm actually serving — fear, vanity, ambition, or truth?
What would it take to wake, drop the delusion, and aim at something real?
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
Boastful Enthusiasm
"Enthusiasm that trumpets itself brings misfortune."
Hexagram 16 line 1 means enthusiasm displayed — boasting of connections, achievements, favoured status — presumes on what hasn't been earned and awakens resistance in everyone who hears it. Don't assume that incorrect thoughts and actions will carry no consequences. Remain humble, recognise your limitations, observe others' mistakes and quietly disengage rather than parading your feelings. Arrogance here leads directly to a fall; the cure is modesty and reconnection with what's genuinely above you.
Firm as a Rock
"Firm as a rock — not for a whole day. Steadfastness brings good fortune."
Hexagram 16 line 2 is the one wholly favourable line: the person who sees the seeds of things. While others are swept up in the mounting excitement, this one stays firm as rock, catching the earliest signs of emotional entanglement — restlessness, discontent, the first tug of the crowd — and acting before they grow, not waiting even a full day. Know the seeds. Watchfulness at the very beginning preserves the balance and independence the enthusiasm of the moment would otherwise carry away.
Enthusiasm That Looks Upward
"Enthusiasm that gazes upward, waiting, breeds remorse. Hesitation breeds remorse."
Hexagram 16 line 3 means enthusiasm has become dependence: looking up to others — or to fate — to supply the resolution you should generate yourself. Waiting for external rescue, you hesitate past the moment for action, and regret follows. Don't exacerbate the conflict with negative brooding, and don't outsource your direction. Take hold of your own conduct; rely on inner strength and moral clarity to carry you through, even when that's not the easiest path.
The Source of Enthusiasm
"The source of enthusiasm: great things are achieved. Doubt not. Friends gather around you as a clasp gathers the hair."
Hexagram 16 line 4 is the hexagram's centre: the person whose confidence is so free of doubt that it becomes a rallying point, drawing others together the way a clasp gathers hair. This certainty isn't positive thinking — it's the settled assurance of one who acts from deep conviction of what's right. Doubt is the one thing that breaks the spell: self-distrust can't inspire trust. Know your values, live by them visibly, and the fellowship and aid this line promises assemble on their own.
Persistently Ill, Yet Not Dying
"Constantly beset by illness — and still one does not die."
Hexagram 16 line 5 means enthusiasm blocked: constant pressure, chronic obstruction, a situation that oppresses without destroying. The strange mercy of this line is that the illness preserves — the ongoing difficulty prevents the complacency and excess that free rein would have brought. Examine what in your own attitude sustains the pressure; release resistance and ego-driven demands, and the trial becomes the instrument of transformation. You're being kept alive by what seems to be killing you.
Deluded Enthusiasm
"Deluded enthusiasm. But if one awakens after the fact and changes, there is no blame."
Hexagram 16 line 6 is the final warning: enthusiasm revealed as delusion — an excitement that served fear, vanity, or false ambition rather than truth. Even here the door stands open: if, when the delusion completes itself, you wake and change course, no blame remains. Examine your motives honestly, abandon the inferior means, and correct what was wrong. It's never too late to trade a deluded enthusiasm for a true one.
Read this hexagram in context
Joyful momentum — check the spark's source before riding it.
Momentum that rallies people — check the source before you ride it.
Momentum that rallies people — check the source before you ride it.
Joyful momentum moves the home — check its source first.
Financial momentum — check the excitement's source before you ride it.
Passion moves you easily — test its source before trusting it.
Motivation is carrying your study — check its source, then ride it.
Joyful momentum is moving the work — check its source first.
Momentum is with you — but check the source before riding it.
Devotion in joyful motion — test the source before you ride it.
Shared momentum rallies the group — check its source first.
Real momentum for the change — check its source before riding it.
Two free I Ching books
Enter your email and I'll send you a free I Ching companion guide and my visual Tao Te Ching,See · Feel · Tao — both yours to download and keep.
No spam — just the occasional quiet note. Unsubscribe anytime.
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 16 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.