you feel unsupported and alone in the bond; stubbornly pressing your case now deepens the danger. Stay soft and adaptable. Full love reading
Split at the Edge
Hexagram 23 · Line 2 meaning
"The bed splits at its edge. Those who persist are destroyed. Misfortune."
Po is the hexagram of collapse in progress: five dark lines have risen, and the last light line at the top is about to be split away. Autumn deepening toward winter; the inferior in the ascendant; a structure eaten from beneath. The Judgment's counsel is absolute and brief — undertake nothing, go nowhere. This is not cowardice but the reading of the season: against a tide of this kind, action of any sort only feeds what it opposes.
Hexagram 23 line 2 means the damage has climbed a step. Support is falling away, and no help is in sight. This line warns that stubbornness now — the refusal to yield, the itch to improve things — walks you straight into open danger. Stay neutral, adapt, and wait; adaptation is not weakness here, it is the only footing left.
The second line should be the inner strength of the lower trigram, the steady official in the field — but in Splitting Apart even that place is being eaten. The bed splits at its edge now, closer to the sleeper: the erosion has passed the leg and reached the frame. "Those who persist are destroyed" repeats the first line's warning with the danger nearer. Isolation is the real test here — no allies, no rescue — and the temptation is to break that isolation by acting. That is precisely the trap.
Do stay disengaged and patient; keep the attitude neutral while support drops away around you. Practise the self-control the moment demands and wait for the Creative's assistance rather than manufacturing your own. Don't dig in, don't stiffen into stubborn resistance, and don't mistake the urge to fix for strength. When you are surrounded and alone, bending is not caving — it is how you keep any ground at all.
The change toward Hexagram 4
Take the counsel and the situation moves toward Hexagram 4, Youthful Folly — the beginner's hexagram, where a spring rises at the mountain's foot not yet knowing its course. The move is humbling by design: it asks you to admit you don't have the answer and to receive guidance instead of forcing your own way. Guidance comes to the sincere, open questioner and withdraws from the one who keeps demanding a more agreeable reply. Adapt, ask once, and listen.
your backing has fallen away and no help is arriving; dig-in resistance carries you into open danger. Adapt and wait. Full career reading
keep waiting. Support is thin and the season still hostile — hold patience and neutrality rather than forcing a move. Full timing reading
Where am I calling stubbornness "strength" while it walks me toward danger?
Whose guidance could I receive if I admitted I don't have the answer?
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
The Bed's Leg Is Split
"The leg of the bed splits. Those who persist are destroyed. Misfortune."
Hexagram 23 line 1 means the undermining has started quietly, at the base of things — beneath the place of rest, before it shows. Doubt and fear are pushing you to force a conclusion or press a grievance the ego insists must be settled. The verdict is stern: persisting in that inner fight is destruction. Relinquish it.
Split at the Edge
"The bed splits at its edge. Those who persist are destroyed. Misfortune."
Hexagram 23 line 2 means the damage has climbed a step. Support is falling away, and no help is in sight. This line warns that stubbornness now — the refusal to yield, the itch to improve things — walks you straight into open danger. Stay neutral, adapt, and wait; adaptation is not weakness here, it is the only footing left.
Splitting with Them
"He splits with them. No blame."
Hexagram 23 line 3 is the one bright line in the descent: separation used rightly. Surrounded by what degrades you, you break with it — leaving the toxic tie, cutting loose from a corrosive pattern, siding inwardly with the light rather than what presses around you. No blame attaches to this severance, and none needs assigning. Simply break away.
Split to the Skin
"The bed is split up to the skin. Misfortune."
Hexagram 23 line 4 means the collapse has reached you personally — no longer the structure but the self, and no evasion is left. Fate has run its course and the damage touches its peak. This line offers no technique, only conduct: do not resist, do not dwell, and do not add self-destruction to destruction. Accept it fully, and let the worst pass through.
A Shoal of Fishes
"A shoal of fishes, led in a line. Favour comes through the court ladies. Everything acts to further."
Hexagram 23 line 5 is the turn: darkness itself changes nature. Like a shoal of fish wheeling in unison with the current, the once-hostile forces fall into line and yield — not because you fought them, but because you never resisted them into enmity. Surrender the urge to control, move with the subtle current, and everything, suddenly, furthers.
The Large Fruit Uneaten
"A great fruit remains uneaten. The superior person receives a carriage; the inferior man's house is split apart."
Hexagram 23 line 6 is the last line of light, and it does not fall. Every winter leaves a seed, and the goodness you carried intact through the whole collapse now bears its fruit. The one who held to neutrality and starved the darkness receives the carriage; the one who fed on fear watches his own roof split. Your preserved integrity is spring's entire inventory.
Read this hexagram in context
Something is eroding — don't fight the season; guard the seed.
A declining season — don't fight it; hold still and guard the seed.
Something is failing — don't fight the tide; guard the core.
Something is eroding — don't fight the season; guard the seed.
Something is eroding financially — don't force it; protect the seed.
Old structures are falling — hold still and guard the seed.
Motivation or method is collapsing — don't force it; guard the core.
Something is falling apart — don't force it; guard the seed.
Undertake nothing — let the collapse finish, guard the seed.
A stripping season — undertake nothing, guard the seed of integrity.
A bond is eroding — don't fight the season; guard the seed.
A chapter is collapsing — don't fight it; guard the seed.
Related guides for this line
These guides add method support around Hexagram 23, changing lines, and the larger interpretation sequence behind this line page.
Understanding the 64 I Ching hexagrams
Get a practical overview of the 64 I Ching hexagrams, how they are structured, and how to study the full set without memorizing everything at once.
How the I Ching applies to modern life
See how the I Ching can be used in modern life for decision-making, relationships, timing, reflection, and personal growth without reducing it to fortune-telling.
How to read changing lines in the I Ching
Understand what changing lines mean in the I Ching and how to read them with the main hexagram and transformed hexagram in the right order.
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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 23 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.