A small wrong caught early — one careless habit, one crossed line. Name it and mend it now, while a light touch still fixes it. Full love reading
Feet in the Stocks
Hexagram 21 · Line 1 meaning
"His feet are fastened in the stocks, hiding his toes. No blame."
Shih Ho is the hexagram of the obstacle between the teeth: something has come between what belongs together, and the jaws must close through it. An obstruction — a lie, a wrong, a usurpation, a slanderer between two people — blocks union, and gentleness alone will not remove it. The bite must be decisive: thunder's shock and lightning's clarity acting as one.
Hexagram 21 line 1 means a fault has been caught at its very first step, and the restriction you feel is the cheapest lesson you will ever be offered. This is correction as mercy, not punishment. Take the check to your movement, learn from it now, and walk on — before a small slip hardens into a habit.
The stocks close on the feet — the part that carries you forward — and hide only the toes: the smallest possible hold, the mildest possible penalty. As the bottom line, this is the beginning of everything, where a wrong is still tiny and its correction still gentle. Feet fastened early cannot walk deeper into trouble. The image is almost kind: consequences arriving while the cost is nothing, a stumble named before it becomes a fall. What stops your step here is not a jailer but the structure of things teaching you cheaply.
Do treat the setback as instruction, not injustice — the restriction is telling you where you strayed, and it is telling you softly. Adjust the specific behaviour now, while one correction is enough. Don't sulk, don't protest that it's unfair, and don't wave it off as too small to matter; that dismissal is exactly how a first mistake grows into a pattern that later earns a real verdict. Own the misstep plainly, absorb the lesson, and let your feet learn the boundary.
The change toward Hexagram 35
When this line moves, the situation travels toward Hexagram 35, Progress — the sun clearing the horizon, advance that comes easily once whatever dims you is set aside. The link is exact: the small correction accepted here removes the very thing that would have blocked your climb. Learn the cheap lesson and the road opens; the stocks come off and your feet, now pointed right, carry you upward. Refuse it, and you stall at the first step while the light rises without you.
A minor slip has drawn its first consequence. Take the correction as tuition, adjust quietly, and don't let pride turn a footnote into a file. Full career reading
Act early and act small. A minor course-correction now costs almost nothing; deferred, it hardens into a decision you won't enjoy making. Full timing reading
What small misstep is this restriction actually pointing at?
Am I willing to learn it now while it's cheap, or will I make myself pay full price later?
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 1 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
Feet in the Stocks
"His feet are fastened in the stocks, hiding his toes. No blame."
Hexagram 21 line 1 means a fault has been caught at its very first step, and the restriction you feel is the cheapest lesson you will ever be offered. This is correction as mercy, not punishment. Take the check to your movement, learn from it now, and walk on — before a small slip hardens into a habit.
Biting Through Tender Meat
"Biting through tender flesh, so deep the nose disappears. No blame."
Hexagram 21 line 2 means the wrong in front of you is obvious and the fix is easy — the meat is tender, the bite goes straight in. That is not the risk. The risk is the force behind it: righteous anger driving your correction far deeper than the case requires. Deal with the fault, but keep your response proportionate.
Biting on Old Dried Meat
"Biting on old dried meat and striking something poisonous. Slight humiliation. No blame."
Hexagram 21 line 3 means you are trying to correct an old, hardened wrong — and it fights back with poison. This is a grievance long preserved, one where your own footing is shaky. Biting down brings a bitter taste and endless resistance. The counsel is to stop chewing: seek release, not retribution, and swallow the small humiliation of letting go.
Dried Gristly Meat
"Biting on dried gristly meat, one receives metal arrows. It is favourable to remember the difficulty and stay steadfast. Good fortune."
Hexagram 21 line 4 means the hardest bite of all — real opposition, a genuinely tough case — but this time the fight is right and you are equipped for it. Metal arrows: straightness and strength are yours, and progress is being made. Keep the difficulty firmly in mind, stay disciplined through the resistance, and good fortune follows.
Yellow Gold
"Biting on dried lean meat, one receives yellow gold. Steadfastly aware of danger. No blame."
Hexagram 21 line 5 means the case is clear and the authority to judge is yours — so judge like gold: true, impartial, unbending. Yellow is the colour of the middle way; gold is what does not corrode. Stay alert to the danger, resist premature leniency, help only those correcting themselves, and the verdict stands without blame.
The Cangue
"His neck is locked in the wooden cangue, hiding his ears. Misfortune."
Hexagram 21 line 6 is the dark verdict of the hexagram: misfortune. Every warning was ignored until the consequences closed around the neck. The ears vanish because the refusal to hear has finally earned its own deafness. If this is you, there is still an exit — humble, gradual, one step back toward the right path. If it is another, believe the pattern.
Read this hexagram in context
Something stands between you — address it cleanly and completely.
An obstacle must be dealt with — decisively, fairly, no cruelty.
An obstacle blocks the venture — cut through it cleanly and fairly.
Something sits between you — address it cleanly, fairly, and stop.
Deal with the money blockage decisively — fairly, cleanly, no delay.
Something blocks you from within — bite through it cleanly.
An obstacle blocks progress — bite through it decisively and cleanly.
Something blocks the work — cut through it cleanly and completely.
There's an obstacle — bite through it cleanly, then stop.
An obstacle blocks alignment — bite through it cleanly, justly, without hatred.
Something's come between you — address it cleanly, then stop.
Something blocks the change — bite through it cleanly and completely.
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 21 in mind
If Line 1 is active in your reading, use the oracle to revisit the full pattern and any additional changing lines in your live situation.