comparing your bond, or your single life, to everyone else's abandons the sufficiency you arrived with. Come back from the drooping mouth before it sours the love you actually have. Full love reading
Letting the Magic Tortoise Go
Hexagram 27 · Line 1 meaning
"You let your magic tortoise go, and eye me with drooping mouth. Misfortune."
I is the hexagram of the open mouth — its very shape, two firm lips enclosing space — and it concerns everything that passes in and out of us: food, words, thoughts, influences. What we take in becomes what we are; what we give out nourishes or poisons those around us. The Judgment therefore offers its double diagnostic: to know anyone, watch what they feed on, and what they feed to others.
Hexagram 27 line 1 means you've let go of your own inner sufficiency and turned to eye what someone else is being fed. The envy is the problem, not the portion. Misfortune follows the drooping mouth. Recover your equanimity, sit in stillness, and stop measuring your plate against your neighbour's.
The magic tortoise is the creature that lives on air, needing nothing from outside — the picture of a self-contained inner life. To abandon it and gaze at another's bowl with a slackening mouth is to trade sufficiency for a hunger you didn't have before. As the first line, this is where a whole pattern begins: envy caught at the root is a passing mood; left to set, it becomes the foundation everything else grows from. The drooping mouth is the tell — appetite turned outward, downward, and sour.
Do come back to your own ground. Name what you actually have and can feed yourself with — the interests, the steadiness, the wings you owned before you compared. Sit in stillness until the craving quiets. Don't act while the mouth is drooping: any move made from envy is a move to seize someone else's portion, which was never yours to be fed by. Stop the comparison first; decide from sufficiency, not from lack.
The change toward Hexagram 23
When this line moves, the situation travels toward Hexagram 23, Splitting Apart. Envy left to feed on itself is corrosive: it strips your own base one covetous glance at a time, until the ground you stand on is eaten from beneath. Splitting Apart's counsel is to undertake nothing while the tide runs — and that is precisely the discipline here. Don't act to grab what you envy; hold still, let the discontent exhaust itself, and protect the last of your own sufficiency from being split away.
measuring your role against colleagues' breeds self-pity, not progress. Recover your own footing — you had wings before you envied theirs. Full career reading
you're deciding from envy. Restore equanimity first; a choice made to match someone else's portion belongs to them, not you. Full timing reading
Whose plate have I been watching instead of tending my own?
What did I feed myself with before I started comparing?
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
Letting the Magic Tortoise Go
"You let your magic tortoise go, and eye me with drooping mouth. Misfortune."
Hexagram 27 line 1 means you've let go of your own inner sufficiency and turned to eye what someone else is being fed. The envy is the problem, not the portion. Misfortune follows the drooping mouth. Recover your equanimity, sit in stillness, and stop measuring your plate against your neighbour's.
Deviating for Nourishment
"Seeking nourishment from the summit, straying from the path to beg at the hill. Persisting so brings misfortune."
Hexagram 27 line 2 means you're reaching for support in the wrong direction — leaning where you have no right to lean, begging where you should be standing. Nourishment taken by deviation costs more than it feeds. Persisting brings misfortune. Return to earning what you need by the proper path, however much longer it takes.
Nourishment That Does Not Nourish
"Turning away from true nourishment. Persistence in this brings misfortune. Ten years of it — nothing furthers."
Hexagram 27 line 3 means you're feeding on what cannot feed you — pleasure, sensation, recognition, emotional dependency, all promising fulfilment and delivering craving. The line is blunt: persist and a decade vanishes, nothing furthered. Stop chasing perfect security and easy gratification; take up the real challenge in front of you instead.
The Tiger's Watchfulness
"Turning to the summit for nourishment: good fortune. Watching with a tiger's sharp, unresting eyes. No blame."
Hexagram 27 line 4 means hunger turned noble: your whole appetite redirected upward, toward the highest source and toward mastering your own weaknesses. Wanting more was never the fault — wanting the wrong things was. Watch with a tiger's sharp, unresting focus, aim the ferocity high, and it becomes blameless, drawing the helpers your task needs.
Aware of What Is Lacking
"Turning from the accustomed path. Remaining steadfast brings good fortune. But do not cross the great water."
Hexagram 27 line 5 means you honestly lack the strength the task demands — and you're wise enough to know it. That awareness is itself good nourishment. Stay steadfast in the corrective work, seek counsel from those further along, root out the weak element first. But do not attempt anything great yet: the crossing waits until the vessel is sound.
The Source of Nourishment
"The source from which others are nourished. Awareness of the danger brings good fortune. It is favourable to cross the great water."
Hexagram 27 line 6 means you've become a source others feed from — a position of real influence and its real dangers. Stay aware of them: the provider's complacency, the forgetting of your own dependence on higher guidance. Held with humility and continued self-discipline, the position licenses the greatest undertakings. The great water now furthers, because what crosses it nourishes everyone beyond.
Read this hexagram in context
Watch what feeds this love — and what you feed it.
Watch what feeds your work — and what your work feeds you.
Watch what feeds the venture — and what the venture feeds others.
Watch what feeds this family — and what you feed it.
Watch what feeds your wealth — and what your money feeds.
Mind what you feed on — it becomes who you are.
Mind your mental diet — feed on real substance, not junk.
Watch what feeds your work — and what your work feeds others.
Feed the decision well before you make it.
Mind the mouth both ways: feed on stillness and truth, not junk.
Watch what your circle feeds you — and what you feed it.
Mind what feeds you through the change — in both directions.
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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 27 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.