genuine weeping at what you finally see clearly — and it's blessed. Real contrition clears the hearth; peace follows the honest tears. Full love reading
Tears in Floods
Hexagram 30 · Line 5 meaning
"Tears in floods, sighing and lamenting — and good fortune."
Li is fire doubled — and fire's secret is dependence. Flame has no body of its own: it clings to what it burns, and lives exactly as long as its fuel. So too the light of the mind. Clarity is not self-sustaining; it persists only by clinging to something inexhaustible — higher truth, correct principle — and consumes itself when it clings to what runs out.
Hexagram 30 line 5 is the one place the I Ching blesses weeping. These are the tears of genuine contrition — the change of heart that arrives at the height of clarity, when you finally see your condition truly. Not despair but its opposite: vanity and fear breaking open, pretence abandoned, sincerity restored. Let the tears do their honest work; peace waits on their far side.
Line 5 is the ruler's place, the summit of the hexagram — and its mastery is not triumph but tears. At the height of clarity you see yourself clearly for the first time, and the sight breaks something false open: the fear of ageing, of being alone, of what others think, the artificial manoeuvres you'd been running. The flood is the fuel of vanity finally burning off. That is why weeping here is blessed where elsewhere it isn't — these tears aren't the fire failing but the hearth being cleaned.
Do let the tears come and let them be honest — this is contrition, not collapse, and resisting it only keeps the old pretence alight. Do abandon the manoeuvres you now see clearly: the posture, the vanity, the fear-driven front. Don't mistake this for despair and try to cheer yourself out of it; the humility on its far side is exactly the peace you're after. Weep the honest weeping, and let sincerity be restored.
The change toward Hexagram 13
When this line moves, the situation travels toward Hexagram 13, Fellowship with Others. The cleared hearth opens onto true fellowship — fire rising to meet heaven, many flames with one direction. The contrition matters here: fellowship succeeds only "in the open," free of hidden reservations, and the tears are precisely what burn those reservations away. Sincerity restored, you can bond around what is true rather than around advantage. Cry the honest tears, drop the front, and the way to real, open connection opens with them.
an honest reckoning with what you finally see plainly — and it's a good thing. Contrition clears the ground for steadier work. Full career reading
don't decide against the change of heart that's arriving. The humility on its far side is where good judgment sits. Full timing reading
What have I finally seen clearly that I've been keeping myself from feeling?
What pretence is ready to burn off, if I let the honest tears come?
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 5 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
Footprints Running Crisscross
"The footprints run crisscross. With serious intent, no blame."
Hexagram 30 line 1 is morning: impressions rush in from every direction and the tracks of possibility cross confusingly underfoot. Everything depends on composure at the start. Pause, collect yourself, and ground the first step in principle rather than the bustle. Seriousness of intent in the opening hour sets a tone that spares the whole day.
Yellow Light
"Yellow light. Supreme good fortune."
Hexagram 30 line 2 is the noon of the hexagram: yellow light, the colour of the middle way — clarity at perfect moderation, neither glaring nor guttering. Hold your responses at the same even temperature: not carried away by good times, not consumed by bad ones. This balanced flame penetrates deepest and lasts longest, and the line grants it the highest fortune in the whole reading.
The Setting Sun
"In the light of the setting sun, men beat the pot and sing, or loudly lament the coming of age. Misfortune either way."
Hexagram 30 line 3 is evening: something is undeniably passing, and both frantic merriment and loud lament are the same mistake — clinging to what is going instead of to what does not go. Misfortune either way. Release your grip on timeframes and outcomes; be present to what is, and the inner light no sunset touches stays lit.
The Sudden Blaze
"Its coming is sudden: it flames up, dies down, is thrown away."
Hexagram 30 line 4 is fire's cautionary portrait: the meteoric flare — excitement, agitation, worry — that consumes its fuel all at once and leaves nothing. Inwardly it's obsessive preoccupation, doubt and complaint feeding on the mind's reserves. Extinguish that fire deliberately. Refuse the agitation its fuel, quiet the anxious voices, and keep the flame low, steady, and clean.
Tears in Floods
"Tears in floods, sighing and lamenting — and good fortune."
Hexagram 30 line 5 is the one place the I Ching blesses weeping. These are the tears of genuine contrition — the change of heart that arrives at the height of clarity, when you finally see your condition truly. Not despair but its opposite: vanity and fear breaking open, pretence abandoned, sincerity restored. Let the tears do their honest work; peace waits on their far side.
Kill the Ringleaders
"The king sends him forth to chastise. Best then to kill the leaders and take the followers captive. No blame."
Hexagram 30 line 6 is the final discipline, waged inwardly: a campaign against disorder in the personality that strikes the ringleaders — vanity and pride — and spares the followers, the minor habits that reform once their captains fall. Root out the negative emotions at their source, but with measure. And beware the last trap: the martyred good person, which is vanity returned in costume.
Read this hexagram in context
Love burns by what it clings to — tend, don't clutch.
Your drive burns by what it clings to — tend it, don't clutch.
The venture burns by what it depends on — choose durable fuel.
Household warmth burns by what it feeds on — tend it daily.
Money burns by what it feeds on — build on durable fuel.
Clarity is a flame — feed it daily, hold everything else loosely.
Understanding burns by what it clings to — feed it steadily.
Inspiration burns by what it clings to — feed it well.
The answer depends on your fuel — cling to what won't run out.
Clarity is fire: cling to the inexhaustible and tend the flame.
Friendships burn by what they feed on — tend the flame, don't clutch.
Your new life burns by what it clings to — choose the fuel.
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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 30 in mind
If Line 5 is active in your reading, use the oracle to revisit the full pattern and any additional changing lines in your live situation.