movement is simply impossible right now; accept the halt without grinding against it — the delay is storing exactly what you'll need. Full love reading
The Axletrees Removed
Hexagram 26 · Line 2 meaning
"The axletrees are taken from the wagon."
Ta Ch'u is the hexagram of great power held: heaven itself contained inside a mountain. Where the Taming Power of the Small restrained through gentleness, here immense creative energy is stored, disciplined, and charged by firm stillness — power under such mastery that great undertakings (public service, the crossing of great waters) become possible.
Hexagram 26 line 2 means movement is simply impossible right now — so the wise driver removes the axles himself rather than grinding the wheels against a road that won't give. Accept the halt instead of fighting it. Frustration pressed forward breeds only setbacks, while composed acceptance converts the delay into stored force. The wagon will roll again, stronger for the rest.
Line two holds the inner centre of the lower trigram — the balanced, self-possessed place from which the right response comes easily. Here the response is counterintuitive: the driver doesn't just stop, he takes the axletrees off the wagon, making the halt deliberate and complete. That is the difference between being stuck and choosing stillness. To keep straining the wheels against an immovable road wears out the cart; to disable it on purpose turns a forced stop into disciplined rest. The creative energy that cannot move is not lost — it is quietly accumulating for the moment it can.
Do accept the stop fully and make it your own — set down the effort, stop struggling against a situation that genuinely won't move. Don't grind forward out of frustration or pride; pressing a jammed wagon only breaks parts and multiplies setbacks. Treat the delay as investment rather than defeat: this is the discipline that banks strength for later. Rest the horses, mend what needs mending, and trust the halt. What cannot move now is charging for when it can.
The change toward Hexagram 22
Accept the halt and the situation turns toward Hexagram 22, Grace — firelight at the mountain's foot, the beauty of small things well attended. A forced pause is exactly when you tend the form and detail that motion leaves no time for: the true grace of an unhurried, self-aware stillness. Grace favours small matters, not great crossings — which is the right scale for a halted wagon. Use the stop to make what is near at hand clear and orderly, and the standstill becomes quietly beautiful rather than merely stuck.
progress is genuinely impossible now; take the stop without fighting it — the wait banks precisely what you'll draw on later. Full career reading
accept the halt — composed acceptance converts the delay into stored force, and the wagon rolls again stronger. Full timing reading
Where am I grinding the wheels against a road that simply won't move?
What could this halt store for me if I stopped resenting it?
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
Danger: Desist
"Danger is at hand. It is favourable to stop."
Hexagram 26 line 1 means your energy is surging to charge — straight into a superior obstruction that would only worsen things. Emotions are high and the false dragon of fear urges the very action that harms. Step back and keep still: regain composure, centre the energy, and let those responsible for the difficulty correct themselves in the space your restraint creates.
The Axletrees Removed
"The axletrees are taken from the wagon."
Hexagram 26 line 2 means movement is simply impossible right now — so the wise driver removes the axles himself rather than grinding the wheels against a road that won't give. Accept the halt instead of fighting it. Frustration pressed forward breeds only setbacks, while composed acceptance converts the delay into stored force. The wagon will roll again, stronger for the rest.
The Good Horse
"A good horse, following others. Awareness of danger and steadfastness further. Practice chariot-driving and defence daily. It is favourable to have somewhere to go."
Hexagram 26 line 3 means the way finally opens — and the temptation is to gallop off alone. Advance instead like the good horse: swift but responsive, willing to be led, matching pace with what guides you. Keep drilling daily, stay alert to danger, hold a clear direction. Progress with vigilance and discipline together makes the gains steady and keeps them.
The Headboard on the Young Bull
"A headboard fitted to the young bull, before its horns grow. Great good fortune."
Hexagram 26 line 4 means the wisest taming: restraint applied early, before the wild force can do harm. Fit the headboard to your own surging emotions — desire, fear, anger — before they press outward onto others who would only harden against them. Stilled early, the energy stays available and doors open of themselves. Prevention at the root is why this line carries great good fortune.
The Boar's Tusk
"The tusk of a gelded boar. Good fortune."
Hexagram 26 line 5 means a subtler taming than force: the boar's tusk remains, but the fury behind it is gone. Restrain desire not by battling each craving at its point, but by draining the compulsion that drives them at its source. What remains is capacity without violence — self-mastery that yields inner freedom and a clear head, because you are no longer at war with yourself.
The Way of Heaven
"One attains the way of heaven. Success."
Hexagram 26 line 6 means the containment has completed its work: the obstructions clear, the long-held charge releases, and the stored energy pours out as achievement. Everything the stillness gathered — character, clarity, creative force — now moves freely, as if the sky itself had opened a road. This is the promise the whole hexagram was keeping. Power tamed was never power lost.
Read this hexagram in context
Strong feelings, held and matured — restraint now deepens everything.
Store your power and study — great undertakings need a full charge.
Store the venture's power, then release it into the great crossing.
Hold the strong feeling; tame it early, firmly and gently.
Gather and hold your resources before you spend them.
Gather your strength; hold it in the mountain before spending.
Store knowledge daily; hold your power until you're ready to use it.
Gather the force; hold it in the mountain until it's ready.
Gather strength and hold it — release when the hour comes.
Power stored and disciplined; release it in season.
Hold the strong feeling; let the bond charge before spending it.
Gather your strength in stillness before the great crossing.
Related guides for this line
These guides add method support around Hexagram 26, changing lines, and the larger interpretation sequence behind this line page.
How does the I Ching work?
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How to read changing lines in the I Ching
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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 26 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.