the mending is working — the pattern named, the break made, the renewal real. Even partial repair of an old decay earns genuine honour. Full love reading
Praise for the Repair
Hexagram 18 · Line 5 meaning
"Setting right what has been spoiled. One meets with praise."
Ku is the hexagram of decay — and of its repair. The old character shows a bowl in which worms breed: corruption that did not fall from the sky but grew from human neglect, indifference, and inherited habit. Because people caused it, people can mend it; that is why this dark-sounding hexagram promises supreme success.
Hexagram 18 line 5 means the correction is underway and succeeding — perhaps not a total transformation, but a real renewal of the inner attitude and an honest break with the old faults. Acknowledge what was wrong, disengage from false obligations that held it in place, and hold firmly to ethical principle. This line confirms the path resumed: the universe supports the turn, and even partial mending of an old decay earns genuine honour.
The fifth line is the ruler's place, and here it marks the repair succeeding. The praise it names isn't hollow flattery; it's the recognition that a genuine turn has been made. The line is honest about scope — this may not be a total transformation, and it doesn't need to be. What's happened is real: a renewal of the inner attitude, an honest break with the old faults, the pattern named and the direction changed. Three things hold the repair in place: acknowledging clearly what was wrong (no fudging the diagnosis), disengaging from the false obligations that kept the decay propped up, and holding firmly to ethical principle as the new footing. The line's reassurance is that the universe backs this turn — even a partial mending of a long-standing decay earns honour, because breaking with an old fault at all is the hard and honourable thing.
Do keep going — the repair is working, and this line confirms it. Acknowledge plainly what was wrong; don't soften the diagnosis now that things are improving, because clear naming is part of what holds the turn. Disengage from the false obligations that kept the old pattern propped up — the loyalties, arrangements, and habits that quietly required the decay to continue. And anchor the renewal in firm ethical principle rather than mood or momentum, so it has something solid to rest on. Don't demand of yourself a total transformation; a real renewal of inner attitude and an honest break with the fault is genuine success and earns real honour. The universe supports this turn, so accept the praise, stay the course, and let the mending deepen.
The change toward Hexagram 57
When this line moves, the situation travels toward Hexagram 57, The Gentle — wind doubled, the power that moves everything by persistence rather than force, consistent correct influence penetrating where no single push could. The link is the nature of a succeeding repair that's real but not total: it deepens the wind's way, through steady, penetrating renewal rather than one dramatic fix. The change tells you to let the praised repair continue as gentle, persistent penetration — consistent correct inner attitude, applied day after day, reshaping the decay gradually and durably. Wind that blows the same direction wears down mountains; keep the renewal steady and directional, and the partial mending becomes a lasting one.
your fix is succeeding — a real, if partial, renewal. Acknowledge the old fault, drop the arrangements that propped it up, and hold principle. Full career reading
the corrective course is working — stay on it. Name what was wrong, disengage from false obligations, and let steady principle carry the repair. Full timing reading
What false obligation is still quietly propping up the old pattern?
Can I let this repair deepen gently and steadily rather than demanding a total fix?
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
What the Father Spoiled
"Setting right what the father spoiled. If there is a capable son, no blame rests on the departed. Danger — but good fortune in the end."
Hexagram 18 line 1 means the decay is inherited: rigid tradition, financial recklessness, prejudice, manipulative patterns handed down as normal. Breaking from them takes courage, for they wear the authority of the past — yet the one who corrects an inherited fault redeems the very source it came from. Where the line points to another's inherited decadence, trust their capacity to grow rather than doubting them. The work is dangerous, and it ends well.
What the Mother Spoiled
"Setting right what the mother spoiled. One must not be too rigorous."
Hexagram 18 line 2 means the decay here is woven of fears — deep-seated anxieties from childhood or belief, invisible to the one who carries them yet governing thought and action. Such spoilage can't be blasted out; harshness only drives it deeper. Work with persistence and gentleness together: understand where the fears come from, give the release time, and be patient with others in their grip, remembering that what looks like stubbornness is usually old terror.
A Little Too Vigorous
"Setting right what was spoiled — somewhat too energetically. A little remorse; no great blame."
Hexagram 18 line 3 means the opposite excess from over-gentleness: correction pressed too hard, too fast. Some friction and regret follow — but the I Ching judges this fault mildly, for in rooting out decay a little too much energy beats too little. Absorb the lesson, moderate the force, and continue; balance in the repair matters, but momentum matters more.
Tolerating the Decay
"Tolerating what has been spoiled. Continuing this way, one meets humiliation."
Hexagram 18 line 4 is the one line without remedy in it: drift. Corruption known, and accommodated — out of weakness, comfort, or dread of the disruption honesty would cause. Every day of tolerance compounds the eventual cost and erodes self-respect from beneath. Act with conviction, guided by a clear sense of right and wrong, without fear of the outcome; conforming to a spoiled status quo purchases peace today with shame tomorrow.
Praise for the Repair
"Setting right what has been spoiled. One meets with praise."
Hexagram 18 line 5 means the correction is underway and succeeding — perhaps not a total transformation, but a real renewal of the inner attitude and an honest break with the old faults. Acknowledge what was wrong, disengage from false obligations that held it in place, and hold firmly to ethical principle. This line confirms the path resumed: the universe supports the turn, and even partial mending of an old decay earns genuine honour.
Higher Goals
"He does not serve kings and princes; he sets himself higher goals."
Hexagram 18 line 6 means beyond the repair of affairs lies another calling: withdrawal from the spoiled machinery altogether, to work instead on what's timeless — your own development, and the goods that outlast any regime. This isn't renunciation of duty or contempt for the world; the solitary work of self-perfection is itself a service, and its fruits return to others in time. Don't fear the temporary isolation; a life set on higher goals mends more than it leaves.
Read this hexagram in context
Something has decayed through neglect — and it can be repaired.
Something has decayed through neglect — and it can be repaired.
Something has decayed through neglect — and it can be repaired.
Neglect has spoiled something at home — and it can be repaired.
Finances have decayed through neglect — and can be repaired.
What neglect spoiled, you can mend — find it, fix it.
Bad habits or shaky foundations have spoiled things — repair them.
Something's decayed through neglect — and it can be repaired.
Act to repair the decay — diagnose, mend, then guard.
Repair the inner decay — diagnose, mend decisively, guard the relapse.
Something has decayed through neglect — and it can be mended.
Clear what decayed before you move on — then it won't follow you.
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 18 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.