judging the whole relationship through your own narrow concern. Open the door before you conclude anything about it. Full love reading
Through the Crack of the Door
Hexagram 20 · Line 2 meaning
"Contemplation through the crack of the door — enough for one who keeps within, but narrow."
Kuan is the hexagram of the view from above — and of being viewed. Its shape is a tower: the vantage point from which one contemplates the whole, and the landmark that all below contemplate in turn. To see clearly and to be worth seeing are the hexagram's two faces, and they depend on each other.
Hexagram 20 line 2 means you are peering at the world through a slit — reading the whole by the sliver visible from where you stand. It is enough for private, inward life, but far too narrow to judge by. From behind such a door, progress looks absent and effort wasted. Trust that correct work goes on where the crack shows nothing.
Line 2 is normally the balanced inner place, and here that inwardness is both its strength and its trap. Keeping within is fine for someone tending their own quiet ground; it becomes a limitation the moment they mistake the narrow view for the full one. The door left barely open is a precise image of subjectivity — everything filtered through the frame of personal concern. What lies beyond the slit is not nothing; it is simply the part of the Creative's work that no crack ever reveals, unfolding on a scale the peephole cannot show.
Open the door before you conclude anything. Notice where you are judging a whole person, situation, or season by the fraction you happen to see, and go looking for the rest of the picture. When results seem absent, don't read that as failure — much of what matters is moving out of sight. Keep a patient, impersonal attitude toward setbacks and other people's insensitivity, and hold to correct work even when it shows no immediate return.
The change toward Hexagram 59
When this line moves, the situation travels toward Hexagram 59, Dispersion — wind over water, dissolving what has hardened. The connection is the cure for a narrow view: the crack-of-the-door outlook is a kind of frozen position, and Dispersion melts exactly that. Gentleness, not force, does the melting — so widen the frame patiently rather than wrenching it. As the rigidity thaws, the sliver opens into a whole again, and what was scattered by private concern reunites at a higher, freer level.
reading a whole situation through the slit of your own concerns. Widen the view before you decide what it means. Full career reading
too narrow to act on — you are judging by a sliver. Widen the view, and trust that slow, unseen progress is still progress. Full timing reading
What am I judging by the fraction I can see from where I happen to stand?
Where am I reading "no visible result" as failure when the work is simply out of sight?
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 2 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
A Child's View
"Contemplation like a boy's. For the small, no blame; for the superior person, humiliation."
Hexagram 20 line 1 means you are seeing only the surface of things — the shallow glance that takes the visible for the whole. In a beginner this is natural and carries no blame. But if you should know better, resting at the child's view is a humiliation. The instruction is to deepen your own sight, not to look down on anyone else's.
Through the Crack of the Door
"Contemplation through the crack of the door — enough for one who keeps within, but narrow."
Hexagram 20 line 2 means you are peering at the world through a slit — reading the whole by the sliver visible from where you stand. It is enough for private, inward life, but far too narrow to judge by. From behind such a door, progress looks absent and effort wasted. Trust that correct work goes on where the crack shows nothing.
Contemplating My Own Life
"Contemplation of my own life decides between advancing and retreating."
Hexagram 20 line 3 is the turning point where the gaze comes home. Not the world, not other people — your own thoughts, actions, and effects become what you study, and from that honest self-knowledge the practical decision flows: advance or withdraw. This is not brooding self-absorption. It is an audit, and what you actually are decides the direction.
The Light of the Kingdom
"Contemplating the light of the kingdom. It is favourable to exert influence as the guest of a king."
Hexagram 20 line 4 means your view has widened to what is genuinely admirable in the world — and to your own place of influence within it. Where you understand a realm's true excellence, you should work. But work there as a *guest*: honoured, contributing, never grasping at ownership. Lead with gentleness and respect, and the influence lasts.
My Life, Examined
"Contemplation of my life. The superior person is without blame."
Hexagram 20 line 5 means self-examination has become a duty, because your position affects many. The measure is not your intentions but your effects — the fruits your presence actually produces in others. Meditate honestly on those, correct what the mirror shows, and blamelessness follows: not sinlessness, but the state of one who keeps reviewing and rectifying without pause.
Contemplation Beyond the Self
"Contemplating life itself, beyond one's own. The superior person is without blame."
Hexagram 20 line 6 is the final and clearest view — one freed of the ego entirely. Life is contemplated as a whole, your own included but no longer at the centre. From here it is plain that force applied to externals corrects nothing. Turn inward, rectify yourself, and by that self-surrender you gain the very thing striving could not reach.
Read this hexagram in context
Step back and truly see this connection before acting on it.
Step back and see the whole picture before you act.
Survey the whole venture clearly before you commit to any move.
See the household clearly first — and know you're watched too.
See the whole financial picture clearly before you move a pound.
Climb the tower and look longest at yourself.
Step back and see the whole subject before grinding on.
Step back and truly see the work before touching it.
Climb the tower and look before you move.
The view from above — see the whole, and longest, see yourself.
See your circle clearly, and know you're seen too.
Climb the tower and see the whole change before acting.
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 20 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.