Faithful effort in an empty field — someone who won't turn around. The fault is position, not persistence; redirect it. Full love reading
No Game in the Field
Hexagram 32 · Line 4 meaning
"No game in the field."
Hêng is the hexagram of what lasts — and its first teaching is that lasting is not standing still. Thunder and wind endure precisely by moving: a self-renewing cycle, ceaselessly active, constant only in its direction. Where the previous hexagram showed attraction's beginning, this is the marriage: union as an enduring institution, and character as an enduring work.
Hexagram 32 line 4 means persistent effort aimed where nothing lives — hunting a field that yields nothing, year after year. Duration is no virtue when the target is empty. The fault isn't your persistence; it's your position. Let go, withdraw, and redirect the constancy toward ground where the game actually is.
The hunter returns again and again to a field that has never held any quarry — durable effort, entirely misplaced. As the fourth line, near the seat of power but not in it, this is about positioning: the striving is real, the aim is wrong. Forcing an outcome the way doesn't run to, straining to impress or to reach a goal that isn't there, only wears you down. The one field never empty is your own character — the game there is always present, whatever the outer hunt yields.
Do face the evidence honestly: if the field has been barren for years, that is the answer, not a call to try harder. Withdraw, and point your constancy at fertile ground — starting with your own character, where the effort always returns something. Don't confuse loyalty to an empty pursuit with perseverance; that's just misplaced stubbornness. Don't force the outcome the situation refuses to yield. Keep the faithfulness, change the field.
The change toward Hexagram 46
Redirect the effort toward real ground and it begins to rise — the line moves toward Hexagram 46, Pushing Upward, the seedling growing steadily out of the earth. Effort in an empty field goes nowhere; the same devotion planted where the game actually lives climbs by small, sure stages. The direction rewards the honest relocation: stop hunting the barren place, sow in fertile soil, and the constancy that yielded nothing now grows visibly upward.
Faithful effort aimed where nothing lives — the pitch that never lands. Withdraw and redirect the constancy. Full career reading
Redirect, don't persist. If the field yields nothing, withdraw and point the effort somewhere real. Full timing reading
Which field have I been hunting that has never held any game?
Where could this same constancy actually grow something?
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 4 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
Duration Demanded Too Soon
"Seeking duration too hastily brings persistent misfortune. Nothing furthers."
Hexagram 32 line 1 means you are demanding permanence at the very start — the deep result now, the settled state before it's earned. That's a contradiction, and it punishes itself: what endures is built slowly, and rushed, it collapses into disappointment. Focus on the present step and let depth come at depth's pace.
Remorse Disappears
"Remorse disappears."
Hexagram 32 line 2 means your inner strength is rightly matched to the situation — force proportioned to circumstance, neither overreaching nor slackening. In that balance, even past errors dissolve without residue. This is composure held in the middle: nothing accumulates to regret. Stay in that proportion and keep going.
Character Without Duration
"Whoever gives no duration to their character meets disgrace. Persistent humiliation."
Hexagram 32 line 3 means moods, hopes and fears from outside have taken over your inner weather, and a character that fluctuates with circumstance invites continual embarrassment. The subtle culprit is looking aside — comparing, measuring yourself against others. Look straight ahead, attend to the duty in front of you, and let the sideways glances starve.
No Game in the Field
"No game in the field."
Hexagram 32 line 4 means persistent effort aimed where nothing lives — hunting a field that yields nothing, year after year. Duration is no virtue when the target is empty. The fault isn't your persistence; it's your position. Let go, withdraw, and redirect the constancy toward ground where the game actually is.
Whose Constancy?
"Giving duration to character through steadfast following: fortune for the yielding role, misfortune for the leading one."
Hexagram 32 line 5 names two right kinds of constancy and warns against swapping them. Devoted following — trusting others, persevering in support — is a virtue in its place. But if your duty is to lead, decide and adapt, you can't borrow it, or you abandon the duty itself. Know which role the moment assigns you.
Restlessness as a Lasting State
"Restlessness as an enduring condition brings misfortune."
Hexagram 32 line 6 is the hexagram's final inversion: the one thing that must never be made permanent is agitation itself. Perpetual urgency — churning, meddling, taking over out of anger, fear or desire — is duration turned inside out, and it ends in a fall. Cease the churning, stay reserved, and let events disclose the truth.
Read this hexagram in context
Lasting love isn't standing still — it's renewing daily, one direction.
Lasting work isn't standing still — hold the aim, flex the method.
What lasts is renewed, not frozen — hold the aim, flex the rest.
Family lasts by renewing daily, not by standing still.
Lasting wealth isn't standing still — it's steady habit, one direction.
Fix the direction, renew it daily — that is what lasts.
Mastery lasts by renewing daily — one direction, no shortcuts.
A lasting practice isn't fixed — it renews daily, one direction.
Commit to a direction, renew it daily — don't force permanence.
What lasts is renewed daily — fix the aim, adapt the method.
Lasting friendship isn't frozen — it renews, holding one direction.
Hold one direction through the change — renew it daily.
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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 32 in mind
If Line 4 is active in your reading, use the oracle to revisit the full pattern and any additional changing lines in your live situation.