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Hexagram 22 · Line 1

Leaving the Carriage

Hexagram 22 · Line 1 meaning

"He lends grace to his own feet, leaves the carriage, and walks."
Parent hexagram
22

Pi is the hexagram of beauty and form: firelight at the mountain's base, gilding everything it touches. Grace — adornment, style, the pleasing arrangement of things — brings genuine success, but of a bounded kind. The Judgment's restraint is the whole point: *in small matters*. Form beautifies life and smooths its daily workings; it must never be allowed to decide its great questions, which belong to substance alone.

Direct answer

Hexagram 22 line 1 means refuse the easy ride. At the very start, you are offered a shortcut — a borrowed advantage, a clever contrivance that would carry you where your own feet should take you. Step down and walk. It is slower and truer. Begin plainly and humbly, without claiming entitlements you haven't earned, and let honest effort show the way.

The image explained

The carriage is convenience and borrowed status — arriving without walking. Lending grace to your own feet means the opposite: dignifying the plain, self-made way over the impressive shortcut. As the first line, the beginning, this sets the tone for everything that follows — and it chooses foot over wheel from the outset. Grace here is not ornament added on; it is the quiet integrity of going under your own power. The one who could ride and chooses to walk keeps something the passenger loses: the truth of having actually made the journey.

What to do now

Do begin on foot — decline the shortcut, the leg-up, the brilliant device that would spare you the honest steps. Start with humility, without assuming privileges from your role or forcing solutions from what you presume to know. Stay open and unguarded, so that inner truth can surface and guide you. Don't grab the borrowed advantage merely because it is faster; what you would gain in speed you would lose in grounding, and this early choice shapes all the rest.

Transformation

The change toward Hexagram 52

When this line moves, it travels toward Hexagram 52, Keeping Still — the mountain doubled, thoughts held within the situation you are actually in. The link is quiet and exact: choosing to walk rather than ride is already a refusal to let ambition run ahead of reality. Kên stills the restless referencing of self and others; leaving the carriage stills the craving for the quick, impressive arrival. Both bring you back to the ground under your feet. Walk your own path plainly and you arrive at stillness — present where you are, not straining toward where you'd rather be.

This line in context
In love

Begin without borrowed glamour or games. Show up plainly and walk in on your own feet; dignity here outshines any dazzle. Full love reading

In career

Turn down the slick shortcut or unearned leg-up. Build it yourself, step by step; the plain start holds where the borrowed one slips. Full career reading

For a decision

Refuse the shortcut. Take the slower, truer route on your own steps, and don't buy the clever contrivance that skips the real work. Full timing reading

Reflection

Which carriage am I being tempted to ride instead of walking?

What would it look like to begin this plainly, on my own feet?

Read this line well

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.

1. Start with Hexagram 22

Read the parent hexagram first so Line 1 stays anchored in the actual situation rather than floating as a detached slogan.

2. Stay with Line 1

Let this line show where the pressure, correction, or opening is most active right now. It is usually the sharpest instruction in the cast.

3. Then read the direction of change

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.

All six lines

Read the full line sequence

Line 1

Leaving the Carriage

"He lends grace to his own feet, leaves the carriage, and walks."

Hexagram 22 line 1 means refuse the easy ride. At the very start, you are offered a shortcut — a borrowed advantage, a clever contrivance that would carry you where your own feet should take you. Step down and walk. It is slower and truer. Begin plainly and humbly, without claiming entitlements you haven't earned, and let honest effort show the way.

Current line
Line 2

Adorning the Beard

"He lends grace to the beard on his chin."

Hexagram 22 line 2 means you are grooming the beard while forgetting the chin. Effort is going into appearance — the surface that only moves because something real beneath it moves. That is the warning: don't lavish care on decoration while the substance it depends on goes untended. Return your attention to essentials, and judge others by the same test.

Read line 2 in full
Line 3

Graceful and Glistening

"Grace, moist and shining. Constant steadfastness brings good fortune."

Hexagram 22 line 3 means the moment gleams — beauty at its fullest, ease everywhere — and that very loveliness is the danger. Comfort tempts you to drop your guard, let discipline melt into enjoyment, and assume the smiling faces have truly changed toward you. Enjoy the shining hour, but stay steadfast inside it. Grace kept upright by constancy is good fortune.

Read line 3 in full
Line 4

The White Horse

"Grace — or simplicity? A white horse comes as if on wings. Not a robber: a suitor, in due time."

Hexagram 22 line 4 is the crossroads of the whole hexagram: adornment or plainness? Choosing simplicity can feel like losing something — the sparkle, the leverage, the protective polish. But what arrives on the white horse is not a robber come to take; it is truth come to court you. Don't fear the loss of your gloss. Follow the good without needing to look good.

Read line 4 in full
Line 5

The Meagre Roll of Silk

"Grace in the hills and gardens. The gift of silk is small and thin. Humiliation — but good fortune in the end."

Hexagram 22 line 5 means turning from society's glitter toward the quiet hills, and coming to what truly matters bearing only a modest gift — then feeling ashamed of its smallness. Don't be. Sincerity outweighs splendour everywhere that counts. The one who matters honours the genuine effort, not the size of the offering. The embarrassment passes; the good fortune stays.

Read line 5 in full
Line 6

Simple Grace

"White, unadorned grace. No blame."

Hexagram 22 line 6 is the summit of the hexagram: grace perfected into transparency. Every ornament set aside, every leverage relinquished, the ego's decorations silenced — and what is left is not bareness but the highest beauty, substance showing itself exactly as it is. Serenity, sincerity, and simplicity surpass every display of brilliance. Accept things as they are, and stand without blame.

Read line 6 in full
Situation meanings

Read this hexagram in context

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Return to steadiness

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.

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Oracle

Consult the I Ching with Hexagram 22 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.