follow what is genuinely excellent in your partner and your bond. Constancy toward the good is this line's whole fortune. Full love reading
Sincere Toward the Good
Hexagram 17 · Line 5 meaning
"Sincere in following the good. Good fortune."
Sui is the hexagram of following — and of being followed. Thunder, the strong and arousing, has placed itself beneath the joyous lake: the strong yielding to the gentle, movement adapting itself to the time. This is the whole secret of leadership and of service alike. Whoever would lead must first learn to follow; whoever would be followed must serve those who follow them, for adherence is only ever won by joyous consent, never demanded.
Hexagram 17 line 5 is the simplest and highest line: constancy toward what's genuinely good, held in the heart and followed in action. Keep your aim on the excellent — not the comfortable, not the impressive — and be vigilant in thoughts, actions, and relationships. Every step taken in this sincerity meets the assent of the Cosmos; the good fortune isn't a reward appended to the path but the nature of the path itself.
The fifth line is the ruler's place, and here it holds the whole hexagram's purpose in its plainest form: sincere in following the good. There's nothing clever about it, which is exactly the point — after all the lines about false attachments and corrupting followers, the summit is simple constancy toward what's genuinely excellent. The line distinguishes the good from its two great impostors: the comfortable (which the little boy offers) and the impressive (which the entourage offers). Neither is the target; the genuinely good is. And it asks for vigilance across the whole life — thoughts, actions, relationships all aimed the same way. The most beautiful thing the line says is about the reward: the good fortune isn't a prize handed out at the end of the good path, it's the very nature of walking it. Every sincere step already has the Cosmos's assent.
Do keep your aim fixed on what's genuinely good, and follow it with constancy. Distinguish it clearly from its impostors — not the comfortable thing, not the impressive thing, but the actually excellent — and hold that aim in your heart while acting on it. Be vigilant across the whole of your life: let your thoughts, your actions, and your relationships all point the same direction, so the sincerity is whole rather than partial. Don't strain toward some future reward; the good fortune is in the walking itself, and every sincere step already meets the Cosmos's assent. This is the simplest instruction in the hexagram and the highest — follow the good, steadily, and let that be enough. It is.
The change toward Hexagram 51
When this line moves, the situation travels toward Hexagram 51, The Arousing, Shock — thunder doubled, the sudden event that splits an ordinary life, whose central image is the priest mid-offering who does not spill the sacrificial spoon though the thunder terrifies for a hundred miles. The link is exact: sincerity toward the good so constant that it holds your centre when shock arrives. The change tells you this steady devotion is precisely what keeps you unshaken through sudden upheaval — terror felt fully, spoon held level, centre intact. Constancy toward the good is the ballast. When the thunderclap comes, the one who has been sincerely following the good keeps their feet, and even laughs on the far side.
aim steadily at genuine excellence rather than the comfortable or the impressive. Sincere constancy toward the good is itself the good fortune. Full career reading
choose by what's genuinely good, not what's easy or flashy. Every step in that sincerity already has the Cosmos's assent. Full timing reading
Am I following the good, or one of its impostors — the comfortable or the impressive?
Is my sincerity whole — thoughts, actions, relationships all aimed the same way?
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 5 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
The Standard Changes
"What was authoritative is changing. Steadfastness brings good fortune. Going out the door to mix with others accomplishes things."
Hexagram 17 line 1 means circumstances shift, and with them the standards that guided you — hold to your principles, but go out among people. Stay open to the perspectives of those you hope to influence; listen for truth even from unexpected sources, and engage without argument or divisive debate over trivia. Quiet confidence that truth will emerge, joined with real willingness to hear others, is what makes impact possible in a changing time.
Clinging to the Little Boy
"Clinging to the little boy, one loses the strong man."
Hexagram 17 line 2 means a choice of attachments: hold to what's small — petty desires, impulsive comforts, the whims of the inner child — and the connection to what's great is forfeited. You can't keep both. Release the inferior attachment, whatever it costs in immediate comfort; the path to greatness requires exactly that sacrifice. What you follow shapes what you become, and the little boy leads only in circles.
Clinging to the Strong Man
"Clinging to the strong man, one loses the little boy. Through following, one finds what one seeks. Steadfastness rewards."
Hexagram 17 line 3 means the same choice as before, rightly made: attaching to what's worthy, and feeling the real loss of what must be given up — ease, familiar company, a flattering self-image. The line is honest about the cost and clear about the reward: through this following, you find what you truly seek. Self-esteem can't be manufactured; it accrues from hard choices made for the good, even when they bring loneliness. Stay steadfast in the choice once made.
Followed for the Wrong Reasons
"Following brings success — but steadfastness in it brings misfortune. To walk one's way in sincerity brings clarity. How could there be blame in that?"
Hexagram 17 line 4 means success attracts followers, and their flattery is the danger: adherents drawn to your influence rather than to the truth, and the ego's pleasure in them. To persist in enjoying this kind of following corrupts. The remedy is to keep walking your own way in sincerity — serving the good rather than cultivating the entourage — and to see people's motives clearly without bitterness. Sincerity restores clarity, and clarity is blameless.
Sincere Toward the Good
"Sincere in following the good. Good fortune."
Hexagram 17 line 5 is the simplest and highest line: constancy toward what's genuinely good, held in the heart and followed in action. Keep your aim on the excellent — not the comfortable, not the impressive — and be vigilant in thoughts, actions, and relationships. Every step taken in this sincerity meets the assent of the Cosmos; the good fortune isn't a reward appended to the path but the nature of the path itself.
Bound to the Western Mountain
"He meets with firm allegiance and is bound still further. The king presents him at the Western Mountain."
Hexagram 17 line 6 means following completed becomes something followed: a person so proven in devotion to truth that others bind themselves to them, and the highest honours them in the holy place. Having been guided, you become a source of guidance — open and accessible to those in need, a vessel for something greater than yourself. This is the end of true following: not servitude, but such alignment with the way that the way itself confirms you.
Read this hexagram in context
Adapt with joy — but choose carefully what you follow.
Adapt to the moment — but choose carefully what you follow.
Adapt to the time — and lead by serving what you lead.
Adapt with grace — but choose carefully what the home follows.
Adapt to conditions — but choose carefully what you follow.
You become what you follow — choose the worthy, and rest.
Follow the right teacher and method — and remember to rest.
Follow where the work wants to go — choose influences well.
Adapt to the time — and follow only what deserves it.
Align with the truth — you become what you follow.
Adapt with the group — but choose what you follow carefully.
Adapt to the change with grace — and rest through the passage.
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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 17 in mind
If Line 5 is active in your reading, use the oracle to revisit the full pattern and any additional changing lines in your live situation.